Deer Antler Lamps

 

ADK Antler Products offers the finest in handmade deer antler table lamps.  Our

Our Deer Antler Lamps have been painstakingly hand crafted with all Real deer shed antlers. Our deer antler lamps are constructed using all new UL listed hardware. Wiring is all run with in the antlers. Our antler lamps are not your average lamp, as much care was put into the design and symmetry of the final product. 

The lamp is switched on or off by a brass socket and pull string. The brass pull string ends in an deer antler tip. This antler lamps are made from beautiful deer antlers. Lamps are made from 3-10 antlers each and are natural sheds.

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Deer Antler Knives

 

ADK Antler Knives are the most beautiful antler knives you will find anywhere.  We pride ourselves on the beautiful lines and symmetry of our antler handle knives.  We use the most beautiful antlers to make our antler knives and have sold hundreds and hundreds of our knives because of this. 

Our deer antler knives are made using 100% real deer antlers.  They are carved, sanded and polished to an unbelievable finish.  Many liken the amazing finish on these to finished soap stone and can hardly believe they are real antlers.  ADK Antlers has pioneered and set the standard for antler knives because of the quality, design and finish of our antler knives.  Many try to replicate our knives because of their popularity.

Our knife blades are made of 440c stainless steel and vary in size in length from 3 inches to over 12 inches in length.  This insures your knife will be free of rust, marks and will last forever.  

Hunters, collectors and knife enthusiast all over the world flock to purchase ADK Antler Knives.  Our knives sell in the US, Canada, France and many other countries due to the beauty and elegance the knives capture.

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Antler History

Antlers are the horn-like appendages of most deer species, mainly grown by males. Each antler grows from an attachment point on the skull. While an antler is growing it is covered with a “skin” called velvet which supplies oxygen and nutrients to the growing bone; once the antler has achieved its proper size, the velvet is lost and the antler's bone dies. This dead bone structure is the mature antler. Antlers are shed after each mating season.

The earliest recorded use of antler is in ancient Chinese Traditional Medicine. They were ground and used in tonics to treat various ailments.

During the Roman period, antlers are used for decorative and practical purposes such as loop fasteners. Antlers were also given to returning legionaries as trophies for participation in successful campaigns.
From the Early Iron Age well into the Middle Ages some of the objects made from antler were needles, buckles, fasteners, and combs. The ones still existing today date mainly from the 9th-11th century and were found in Vikings settlements.

Native Americans used antlers to create handles for knives and hide scrapers, spear points, bracelets, combs, hairpins, and figurines.

During the Medieval period buttons and beads appear in Europe. Then with the advent of candles, there came a need for candle holders and antlers were used for that purpose as well. Before long, hand held candle holders lead to hanging candelabras. They adorned castles throughout many countries including Germany, England and Scotland.

Today antler chandeliers are as popular as ever. Their timeless beauty transcends styles and trends

Associated with aristocracy, antlers have adorned European castles and hunting
lodges for centuries. Today, furnishings and accessories made from antlers are
featured in fine homes throughout the world and are a reflection of grace and elegance.

Antlered Deer, Elk and Moose and most other antlered animals shed, or drop, their antlers
each year, and in their place grow new ones. These sheds are like fingerprints, and are as
unique as the animals that shed them. The beauty in every antler is what inspires our art.

Antlers are strong and solid and are art by themselves. Antlers are bony outgrowths that develop from and are attached to two protuberances called pedicles on top of the skull. While antlers are growing they are covered by a furry skin covering called velvet. The growing antlers and the velvet are supplied with oxygen and nutrients by a network of blood vessels. Growth and hardening of the antlers is completed in late July or August.

In August, increased production of testosterone cuts off the blood supply to the antlers and velvet. The velvet dies, dries up, and peels away. Further removal of velvet from antlers occurs during the rut. Among the testosterone-induced rut activities of the male, which begin in late August or September, is the thrashing of antlers against sapling trees and shrubs which rubs off the velvet and polishes the antlers while staining them. Next time you are hiking in the woods, you may see some signs of some antlered animals on trees where the bark is rubbed off.

The reduced daylight of winter diminishes testosterone production; this causes the shedding, or dropping, of antlers. Mature males shed them in February-March and younger males may retain theirs until May depending on what part of the country you live in. New antlers begin to grow within days after old ones drop.

Antlers are the fastest growing tissue known in the world. Caribou males and females both grow antlers; this is the only member of the deer family that this occurs. Horns and antler are not the same, true antler is calcified tissue. Horn, found on sheep, goat antelope and buffalo, are actually hairs growing off the head of these animals and "mold" into the form of the horn. Most horns do not shed. Antlers are a renewable resource and shed-horn hunting is a common activity throughout the world, providing antlers to many markets without causing harm to the animal. An adult moose can carry a 60 pound set of antlers.

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