Thirty years in the profession and eight years as
president of the prestigious American Knifemakers Guild. The career of this
craftsman from a family of Italian Immigrants has been truly faultless. Frank
Centofante learned knife making from his father in Florida. When he started in
the profession in 1970, he made straight models that were not particularly
original. At a knife show he meet Bob Loveless, who fascinated him. He
understood that in order to stand out from the competition he needed to develop
a style all of his own. So he abandoned straight knives to devote himself to
folding ones.
With Ron Lake the star of this game, he took his
inspiration from the latter’s models, not for the interframe, which is quite
difficult to produce, but for the type with the switchblade pump at the back of
the handle.
Since the shape of Loveless blades were
characteristic and very much in vogue, Centofante asked him to make him some
that he could then mount on his folding frames. A series was thus developed
with much success.
Centofante then designed several models that
affirmed his style before launching himself into the production of liner locks
when they became fashionable, a genre that he would never leave.
His production was characterized by the quality
of the mechanisms, a range of only a few models and selected materials for the
handles, notably fossilized mammoth ivory.
In 1991, he left Tampa, Florida to establish
himself in Madisonville, Tennessee where his son joined him so that the
Centofante style would carry on for many years. His son is currently an airline
pilot and he does show up at a few knife shows each year.
Frank Centofante was born May 3, 1936 and passed
away on September 8, 2009 in Madisonville, Tennessee. There was a memorial
service for him later on in Rhode Island.
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