Can anyone ID this corkscrew please?
Can anyone ID this corkscrew please?
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Discussion

So

Original Poster:

28,176 posts

248 months

Sunday 18th June 2017
quotequote all

Doofus

33,716 posts

199 months

Sunday 18th June 2017
quotequote all
It's a Claude Dozorme Clos Laguiole.

miniman

29,614 posts

288 months

So

Original Poster:

28,176 posts

248 months

Sunday 18th June 2017
quotequote all

Thanks Gents, I knew I could rely upon you.

Any UK suppliers that you know of?

Doofus

33,716 posts

199 months

Sunday 18th June 2017
quotequote all
So said:
Thanks Gents, I knew I could rely upon you.

Any UK suppliers that you know of?
Have you tried Amazon or eBay? Mine was a gift from a champagne house in France, so I've never tried to buy one.

So

Original Poster:

28,176 posts

248 months

Sunday 18th June 2017
quotequote all
Doofus said:
So said:
Thanks Gents, I knew I could rely upon you.

Any UK suppliers that you know of?
Have you tried Amazon or eBay? Mine was a gift from a champagne house in France, so I've never tried to buy one.
Yes. Only suppliers from Aus.

Doofus

33,716 posts

199 months

Sunday 18th June 2017
quotequote all
Why's that a problem?

So

Original Poster:

28,176 posts

248 months

Sunday 18th June 2017
quotequote all
Doofus said:
Why's that a problem?
Timescale for one. Are there taxes involved, even though they are part of the Commonwealth?

Doofus

33,716 posts

199 months

Sunday 18th June 2017
quotequote all
Yes, you'l pay duty, and possibly VAT

miniman

29,614 posts

288 months

Sunday 18th June 2017
quotequote all
Site I linked above, EUR35 shipping to UK.

So

Original Poster:

28,176 posts

248 months

Monday 19th June 2017
quotequote all
miniman said:
Site I linked above, EUR35 shipping to UK.
Ah yes, sorry Miniman.

Hosenbugler

1,856 posts

128 months

Monday 19th June 2017
quotequote all
Uk suppliers: https://www.amazon.co.uk/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=sear...

Only 2 handle variants listed, but maybe thay can get others.

ETA . This supplier seems to stock a wider range : https://www.wineware.co.uk/corkscrews/laguiole-en-...


Ahhh! It appears that the Wineaware link is a different, but similar brand to the OP's request. As info though, seems they offer a considerable range of handle choices.

Edited by Hosenbugler on Monday 19th June 09:49

CardinalFang

681 posts

194 months

Monday 19th June 2017
quotequote all
So said:
Any UK suppliers that you know of?
Poor bit of pagesetting/checking by FT/HTSI there on Saturday - the only unlabelled item on the page. Tut.

Some outdoor/camping shops & some indy wine merchants stock them, plenty of department stores do the steak knives, but online is your best bet for the sommelier knives or full range.

Try: http://www.forge-de-laguiole.com/en/34-sommeliers

Got one on my 40th from a french shop on Kings Rd (Colours de Provence, or something, but closed now anyway) & both my godsons, to be handed on by their fathers when they reach 18, which is now very unlikely - cold dead hands etc... They are truly beautiful tools to hold & use. Surprised they haven't been featured in the "Style under a hundred" section before now. I also managed to snap mine & the repair/return service (with a little help from Google translate) is tip top. Proper little artisan-made heirlooms, with a real history behind them

Began as shepherds knives; the local area being home to a small cottage cutlery/steel industry, where the coldness of the mountain streams made the steel very hard. The handles can have rivets formed into a crucifix so when the men were up in the hills moving flocks to spring pasture, they could keep up their prayers. Original knives had a blade & spike. Spike was to relieve gas pressure, built up when the sheep gorged on fresh pasture. Over time, many of the young men left the countryside & moved to cities like Paris, where they fell into the restaurant/bistro trade. Revisiting Laguiole, some of them had a new design made, dropping the awl/spike & adding a corkscrew, hence the Sommeliers knife. The industry toddled along for decades, fairly under the radar until one of the biggest manufacturers had Philippe Starcke re-design the HQ, roll out some "designer" lines & the PR has grown from there.

Get one! You wont regret it. Lovely little things.



So

Original Poster:

28,176 posts

248 months

Monday 19th June 2017
quotequote all
CardinalFang said:
Poor bit of pagesetting/checking by FT/HTSI there on Saturday - the only unlabelled item on the page. Tut.

Some outdoor/camping shops & some indy wine merchants stock them, plenty of department stores do the steak knives, but online is your best bet for the sommelier knives or full range.

Try: http://www.forge-de-laguiole.com/en/34-sommeliers

Got one on my 40th from a french shop on Kings Rd (Colours de Provence, or something, but closed now anyway) & both my godsons, to be handed on by their fathers when they reach 18, which is now very unlikely - cold dead hands etc... They are truly beautiful tools to hold & use. Surprised they haven't been featured in the "Style under a hundred" section before now. I also managed to snap mine & the repair/return service (with a little help from Google translate) is tip top. Proper little artisan-made heirlooms, with a real history behind them

Began as shepherds knives; the local area being home to a small cottage cutlery/steel industry, where the coldness of the mountain streams made the steel very hard. The handles can have rivets formed into a crucifix so when the men were up in the hills moving flocks to spring pasture, they could keep up their prayers. Original knives had a blade & spike. Spike was to relieve gas pressure, built up when the sheep gorged on fresh pasture. Over time, many of the young men left the countryside & moved to cities like Paris, where they fell into the restaurant/bistro trade. Revisiting Laguiole, some of them had a new design made, dropping the awl/spike & adding a corkscrew, hence the Sommeliers knife. The industry toddled along for decades, fairly under the radar until one of the biggest manufacturers had Philippe Starcke re-design the HQ, roll out some "designer" lines & the PR has grown from there.

Get one! You wont regret it. Lovely little things.
Thanks for a full reply.

In fact it is a father's day gift for my wife to give her father. Lovely though they be, her budget is about £50-60. I am not surprised they are the price they are though - really nice looking tools.

21TonyK

13,124 posts

235 months

Monday 19th June 2017
quotequote all
Its much cheaper and not the same but still very nice and definitely works (several years use both trade and personal).

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Creuset-Accessories-WT-11...

Melman Giraffe

6,794 posts

244 months

Monday 19th June 2017
quotequote all
21TonyK said:
Its much cheaper and not the same but still very nice and definitely works (several years use both trade and personal).

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Creuset-Accessories-WT-11...
I'm sure that is quality

My mum has had her Le Creuset pans for at least 30 years, still in prefect condition. My only criticism is they are blooming heavy

CardinalFang

681 posts

194 months

Monday 19th June 2017
quotequote all
21TonyK said:
Its much cheaper and not the same but still very nice and definitely works (several years use both trade and personal).

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Creuset-Accessories-WT-11...
Nice. OP, could be exactly what you're looking for?

So

Original Poster:

28,176 posts

248 months

Monday 19th June 2017
quotequote all
21TonyK said:
Its much cheaper and not the same but still very nice and definitely works (several years use both trade and personal).

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Creuset-Accessories-WT-11...
Hah! That is the exact one I suggested to her as a more affordable alternative. Thanks for verifying the suitability though.

So

Original Poster:

28,176 posts

248 months

Monday 19th June 2017
quotequote all

Ordered for collection at John Lewis tomorrow.