Ken Onion

Ken Onion (born January 16, 1963) is an American custom knifemaker based in Kaneohe, Hawaii, United States who invented the "SpeedSafe" assisted opening mechanism for Kershaw Knives.[1] Ken Onion was the Premier Knife Designer for Kershaw Knives.[2][3][4]

Kenneth L. Onion
Born (1963-01-16) January 16, 1963
OccupationKnifemaker
Spouse(s)Noel Onion
AwardsBlade Cutlery Hall of Fame

Designs

As a US Marine, Onion devised a helicopter mechanism that was adopted for use by the military.[5] In 1989, Ken’s wife, Noel, made arrangements through a friend for Onion to meet custom knife maker, Stanley Fujisaka.[5][6] The two became friends and Onion learned his basic knifemaking skills from Stanley, building his first knife in 1991.[6] Five years later, in 1996, Doug Flagg, then with Kershaw Knives met Onion while calling on an account for Kershaw and the two discussed an arrangement for the assisted-opening mechanism, which led to a contract.[5][6] This contract led to Kershaw expanding its factory and number of employees to accommodate the demand for these knives.[6]

Onion has since moved on to design knives for Columbia River Knife and Tool, and most recently a knife sharpener with Work Sharp.

Onion holds 36 design patents on different items including locks, mechanisms, and knife designs.[6][7] Most notable of these is the Speed-safe mechanism used by Kershaw Knives. For these many designs and his work throughout the cutlery industry promoting the art of knife making, Onion was inducted into the Blade Magazine Cutlery Hall of Fame at the 2008 Blade Show in Atlanta, Georgia as the 45th and youngest living member.[6]

In 2005, Onion collaborated with Spyderco on the Spyker knife design. In 2010 Onion parted ways with Kershaw Knives to start his own production company and to collaborate with Columbia River Knife and Tool on several designs.[8]

Celebrity knives

An article in Blade Magazine asserts that celebrities, such as Steven Seagal, Steven Tyler, Nicolas Cage, Kid Rock, Pamela Anderson, Wayne Newton, Stephen Lefebvre, Wayne LaPierre and Ziggy Marley collect custom knives made by Onion.[9][10]

gollark: Yes it is. Programming is art when it's potatOS.
gollark: And yet they don't have usable keybords for writing things, sufficiently large screens to do video editing and such without æ, OSes which are designed to allow data sharing between apps for purposes, a sufficiently non-locked-down system for basically any sort of scripting/programming outside of somewhat isolated environments, etc.
gollark: I only do it in emergencies or when heavpoot asks for OIR:EM or something because it's quite irritating.
gollark: Phones are not designed for content creation.
gollark: The solution is of course to replace my calculator's innards with some sort of high end microcontroller with a 2G modem, relabel the buttons, and install SSH on it.

See also

References

  1. Onion, Kenneth L (2000-11-14). "Opening and closing assisting mechanism for folding knife". US Patent and Trade Office. google patents. Retrieved 2007-01-18.
  2. Cascio, Pat(2007). 'Kershaw's Latest Tactical Folders', Knives Illustrated, February 2007
  3. Cascio, Pat(2007). "Ken Onion Knives Stolen", Knives Illustrated, February 2007
  4. Gardner, Jim (2004), "Sweet Onions", Guns Magazine
  5. Ayres, James (2003-09-01). "Cutlery Rejects Turned Gold Mines". 30 (9). Blade Magazine. pp. 58–68.
  6. "Mr. SpeedSafe Joins the Club". Blade Magazine. 2008-07-22. Archived from the original on 2008-08-13. Retrieved 2008-07-24.
  7. Onion, Kenneth L (2002-01-15). "Locking knife blade with moving locking mechanism on blade". US Patent and Trade Office. google patents. Retrieved 2007-01-18.
  8. Searson, Mike (2011-04-01). "The Best Knives of G2". Blade. FW Media Inc. 37 (5): 80–84.
  9. Ewing,Dexter. (2007). "Rock-Star Knifemakers Conclusion", Blade Magazine, February 2007
  10. Cascio,Pat. (2003). "Steven Seagal's Knife", Tactical Knives Magazine, November 2003
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