Let’s see some rare knives. Below is a picture of some rare fun production brand knives I had when I was a buyer and had knives as a one of my categories.
The top knife is a demo knife with clear scales from Kershaw that would show how their speedsafe system works.
The bottom knife is the original prototype of the Emerson trainer series from Kershaw (production knives had blue grips). When Kershaw got the license to do Emerson wave knives, I requested that they start making trainers. Instead of the only Emerson wave trainers that were on the market at $150+, these hit the market at $50-60 and gave a good training option for classes and students.
The middle knife is probably the most rare knife I own. It’s a concept-marked throwing knife from Benchmade. To my knowledge, almost none of these or very few of these exist. They were made for an industry event over a decade ago and I told my buddy from Benchmade that he was going to have to turn a blind eye to me walking away with the knife.
The top knife is a demo knife with clear scales from Kershaw that would show how their speedsafe system works.
The bottom knife is the original prototype of the Emerson trainer series from Kershaw (production knives had blue grips). When Kershaw got the license to do Emerson wave knives, I requested that they start making trainers. Instead of the only Emerson wave trainers that were on the market at $150+, these hit the market at $50-60 and gave a good training option for classes and students.
The middle knife is probably the most rare knife I own. It’s a concept-marked throwing knife from Benchmade. To my knowledge, almost none of these or very few of these exist. They were made for an industry event over a decade ago and I told my buddy from Benchmade that he was going to have to turn a blind eye to me walking away with the knife.



