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  2. Fiskars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fiskars

    Fiskars Group (natively Fiskars Oyj Abp, formerly Fiskars Oy Ab until 1998), [3] is a Finnish consumer goods company founded in 1649 in Fiskars, a locality now in the town of Raseborg, Finland, about 100 kilometres (62 mi) west of Helsinki. It is one of the oldest continuously operating companies in the World.

  3. Gerber Legendary Blades - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerber_Legendary_Blades

    Gerber Legendary Blades is an American maker of knives, multitools, and other tools for outdoors and military headquartered in Portland, Oregon. Gerber is owned by the Finnish outdoors products company Fiskars. Gerber was established in 1939 by Pete Gerber. Gerber is the "largest maker of knives and multi-tools for the United States armed forces."

  4. Utility knife - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Utility_knife

    Finnish outdoor utility knife, puukko Retractable blade knife with replaceable utility blade A utility knife is any type of knife used for general manual work purposes. [1] Such knives were originally fixed-blade knives with durable cutting edges suitable for rough work such as cutting cordage, cutting/scraping hides, butchering animals, cleaning fish scales, reshaping timber, and other tasks.

  5. X-Acto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X-Acto

    X-Acto is a brand name for a variety of cutting tools and office products owned by Elmer's Products, Inc. These include hobby and utility knives, saws, carving tools and many small-scale precision knives used for crafts and other applications. An X-Acto knife may be called an Exacto knife, utility knife, precision knife, or hobby knife.

  6. Kitchen knife indentation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kitchen_knife_indentation

    Knife indentation is done away from the edge of a kitchen knife.A knife most simply has either a rectangular or wedge-shaped cross-section (sabre-grind v.flat-grind, but may also have concave indentations or hollows, whose purpose is to reduce adhesion of the food to the blade, so producing a cleaner and easier cut.

  7. Lame (kitchen tool) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lame_(kitchen_tool)

    Often the blade's cutting edge will be slightly concave-shaped, which allows users to cut flaps (called shag) considerably thinner than would be possible with a traditional straight razor. A slash on the loaf's surface allows the dough to properly expand in the oven without tearing the skin or crust and also allows moisture to escape from the loaf.