Scissor Polisher · Ernest Wright
Sheffield, South Yorkshire
Thirteen years on the wheel - the last skilled hand a pair of scissors passes through before it carries the maker’s mark.
Sabino Henda has spent thirteen years at Ernest Wright on the polishing wheel - the last skilled stage a pair of scissors goes through before it leaves the building. By the time a pair reaches him it has been forged, ground, hardened and married together; what it does not yet have is its finish. That is his work: holding the steel to a spinning cloth mop, charged with polishing compound, until the dull grey comes up to a clean bright shine. It is the difference between a tool that works and one that looks like it was made to.
Polishing is dust and judgement. The mop runs fast, the compound and the lifted metal throw a fine black dust into the air, and Sabino works with ear defenders on and a scarf pulled up over his face against it. The pair is held to the wheel by hand, turned and angled so every face and edge takes the same finish, and held a moment too long it will burn or lose its line. Thirteen years is what it takes to do this without thinking about it - to feel when a pair is right and move it on.
His machine is a simple thing and an exacting one: a motor, a spindle, and the cloth mops that do the work, with spares hung on the wall to be swapped in as they wear down. Each mop is dressed and worn to the job, and a polisher knows his wheels the way a grinder knows his stones. It is the quietest-looking station on the floor and one of the hardest to fake - the shine on a finished pair is the most visible thing about it, and it either reads as right or it does not.
This is the archive’s record of Sabino Henda, made at Ernest Wright in Sheffield in June 2026: thirteen years at the polishing wheel, the hand that gives every pair its final shine. Scissor making is on the Heritage Crafts Red List, and the trade depends on each of its stages being held by someone who has done it long enough to do it well. The bright finish on a pair of Ernest Wright scissors is his signature, even though it carries someone else’s name.