Well, I have a marking knife, but it is quite large, thick bladed, and just doesn't fit my hand very nicely... and the Schwarz also had a recent article on dovetail marking knives and that got my creative juices flowing (especially after seeing the prices of $29-$79 for dovetail knives)....
So after the zoo (and our first swim in our pool of the season) I took a bosch jig saw blade and stared at it for a while...
And discovered that the factory shank fits PERFECTLY into a 7mm brass pen tube - the blade even has two wings that hold the blade in place nicely when it is inserted...
I cut off the shank and then used my disk sander and a scrap as a jig to create the point. I then flattened the piece on waterstones and then cut the bevels on my slow speed grinder freehand (I need to figure out a jig if I ever do it again) I then flattened the back and sharpened the blade on waterstones.
I drilled a 7mm hole in some sapele and glued a 7mm brass tube in place. I then turned the handle "closed end style" on the lathe and also turned it "eccentric" with the live center turned off center on 2 axis. This created a wooden butterknife shape at the end while the end nearest the headstock (the brass tube end) remained round. I removed it several times until the handle fit my hand nicely (the flat sits in the crook between the thumb and the hand and it registers nicely) In addition, it will not roll off the workbench because of the oval handle. I then sanded and put a finish on the handle.
this pic kind of shows the oval shape of the handle - the dot on the end is a photographic mutation-- the handle comes to a rounded point.
I put some gell CA glue into the tube and then inserted the blade... I then added 2small wooden toothpick wedges (one on each side) just in case. I then wrapped white yarn around the transition, using thin CA glue to bind it-- this created the necessary transition between the blade and the wood handle. I think I'll use thinner thread (colored perhaps) or fly fishing line if I ever do it again.
Fun and useful project that only took a couple of hours... just thought I'd share the technique as well as the whole thing worked so well with a standard pen kit.
The cork is to keep the business end safe
Thanks for looking
Lawrence