A good part of my collection of user drawknives. The first small one with red handles was made by my father during slack time at the defense plant he worked in the 1940s. Handles are of some early very hard lucite, he turned on a lathe, the blade was made from a broken shaper blade. I used it a lot when I was a kid. The next up, looking kind of pathetic, came out of a junk box of my uncles. Have every reason to think it was once my great grandfathers, which would be the only item I have from him. Next up looking rather stout is a name brand, sorry I don't recall and its cold out there now. The company that always had 1840? on their logo. I rescued it from a neighbors barn just before he took down the outbuildings with a bulldozer. The top one is one of two I have with adjustable angle handles. No idea who made it, but unscrew the nuts, and the handles and blade ends are serrated to hold at any angle. The big one underneath is one I actually paid money for at an antique shop. If I recall the blade is close to 20 inches, probably for cleaning off bark? Have a few more, and use 3 of those often. Great for truing up rough wood for the turning lathe.