Scissor Maker · Ernest Wright
Sheffield, South Yorkshire
Two blades, made so they touch only at the cutting point. The gap between them is the whole secret - and putting it there is a five-year skill.
Ernest Wright has made scissors in Sheffield since 1902, and of the makers working there today, Neil Wilson is the one the rest look to. He has been at the firm about seven years, but he came up the proper way - apprenticed under Eric Stones and Cliff Denton, two of the old hands - and he now runs the floor. The other makers in the workshop are, in effect, his apprentices. When you want the whole craft explained, you go to Neil, and he will give it to you in more detail than you can hold.
A pair of scissors looks simple and is not. It begins as two halves, each drop-forged in one piece - blade and bow handle together - from a single billet of steel. But the cut does not come from sharpness alone. It comes from the way the two blades are made to meet: each blade is given a slight curve along its length, so that when the pair is closed the two edges touch at only one point, and that point travels from the pivot to the tip as the scissors close. Hold a finished pair to the light and you can see daylight through the middle, between the blades. That gap is deliberate, and getting it right is the whole craft.
Three things are ground into each blade, Neil explained, and all three matter. There is the hollow - the inside face of the blade is ground slightly concave, so the two faces do not drag flat against each other. There is the curve along the length, which sets that travelling point of contact. And there is a slight twist, so the edges are sprung against one another. He does this on belt-driven grinding wheels, the same kind the trade has used for generations, reading the steel by eye and by the colour and shape of the sparks - because hold a blade to the stone a moment too long and the heat draws the temper straight out of it.
Between the rough work and the finish, the blades are hardened and tempered - heated and quenched so the steel will take and hold an edge and resist bending - and then they go to the rumbler. This is a big rotating drum, and Neil lifts its heavy lid to load it: the parts go in with ceramic media and a polishing paste, and the drum turns for hours, tumbling everything against everything until the burrs and the last grinding marks are worn away and the surfaces come out smooth. It is slow, unglamorous, and essential - the difference between a part that looks made and one that looks finished.
Then comes the step the trade is named for. The person who assembles the two halves into a working pair is a putter-togetherer - a title that takes five years to earn and that Ernest Wright still uses in earnest. It is not a matter of dropping a screw through two blades. The putter hammers the precise curve onto each blade, sets the two together, and adjusts them by hand and eye until the pair rides correctly - tight enough that the edges shear cleanly the whole length of the cut, loose enough that they do not bind. Neil sat with a pair, opening and closing it, feeling for the action, tuning it the way you would tune an instrument. This is the moment a pair of Ernest Wright scissors becomes the thing it is, and it is done entirely by a person.
Neil walked me along the models, and there are many: tailor’s shears with their long blades and side-bent handles, dressmaking scissors, household scissors, fine embroidery and lace scissors, kitchen and trimming pairs - each a different length, balance and edge for a different job. They are stamped with the maker’s mark, ERNEST WRIGHT, SHEFFIELD, and they leave in a wooden box with the firm and its founding year burned into the lid. A pair, properly made, is meant to last a working lifetime and be sharpened, not thrown away.
This is the archive’s record of Neil Wilson, the senior maker at Ernest Wright, made over a full day in the Sheffield workshop in June 2026: the grinding, the hardening, the rumbling, and the marriage of the two blades where the gap is the whole secret. Scissor making is on the Heritage Crafts Red List, and Neil is one of the small number who hold it - not only in his own hands, but in the makers he has trained, whose profiles follow this one. The wider record of the workshop itself will come in a separate entry; this page is Neil’s.