EdCaffreyMS
"The Montana Bladesmith"
I can remember a time that the Blade Show was an "enforced" "high end" event. The first few years I attend, it was much more "classy" than now. It was common place to see coats and ties on vendors, and the items offered were basically "juried". I have to admit that over the years things have laxed considerably.... this year, in the terms of how vendors presented themselves, it was more of a "Mall Ninja" feeling, then ever before.
I guess it was only a matter of time. I attended the Eugene OR. show for many years, and for a decade it was the only other knife show to compete with Blade in terms of class, attendance, and knife sales. That however ended when the then show chairman decided he wanted the largest show west of the Mississippi.... and ceased to care about the quality, and focused only on quantity. The show went from 300 tables one year, to 600 the next, and in the haste to fill all the tables, they allowed all manner of "stuff" into the show. It took a couple of years after that, but the knife collectors quit coming because they had to sift through all the junk to find the custom knives, and in turn, many makers dropped the show because there were no collectors there to purchase our knives..... in short it became a "flea market" environment. My last year at that show, I had a lady and 4 kids sitting at the table next to mine.....with a cotton candy machine. I spent more time trying to keep my knives clean from all the cotton candy flying around then I did selling or interacting with possible clients.
I very much hope I'm wrong, but with the opening of a second room at Blade this year, and the descriptions I heard of that room, it points to the same thing happening. That being said, we'll have to see if the new owner has visions of quality or quantity. In terms of being a show's owner, I would suspect that the only concern is making it profitable, and if so, that means stuffing as many paying table/booth holders into the space as possible. IF that is the case, I fear that the Blade Show will eventually suffer the same fate as the Eugene, OR show did.
Of course that is all sheer speculation on my part, and I long for the Blade show to return to what it once was...... the most classy large knife show on the planet, but I also trust my instincts, and have been at this long enough to read the signs.
I guess it was only a matter of time. I attended the Eugene OR. show for many years, and for a decade it was the only other knife show to compete with Blade in terms of class, attendance, and knife sales. That however ended when the then show chairman decided he wanted the largest show west of the Mississippi.... and ceased to care about the quality, and focused only on quantity. The show went from 300 tables one year, to 600 the next, and in the haste to fill all the tables, they allowed all manner of "stuff" into the show. It took a couple of years after that, but the knife collectors quit coming because they had to sift through all the junk to find the custom knives, and in turn, many makers dropped the show because there were no collectors there to purchase our knives..... in short it became a "flea market" environment. My last year at that show, I had a lady and 4 kids sitting at the table next to mine.....with a cotton candy machine. I spent more time trying to keep my knives clean from all the cotton candy flying around then I did selling or interacting with possible clients.
I very much hope I'm wrong, but with the opening of a second room at Blade this year, and the descriptions I heard of that room, it points to the same thing happening. That being said, we'll have to see if the new owner has visions of quality or quantity. In terms of being a show's owner, I would suspect that the only concern is making it profitable, and if so, that means stuffing as many paying table/booth holders into the space as possible. IF that is the case, I fear that the Blade Show will eventually suffer the same fate as the Eugene, OR show did.
Of course that is all sheer speculation on my part, and I long for the Blade show to return to what it once was...... the most classy large knife show on the planet, but I also trust my instincts, and have been at this long enough to read the signs.