In 1929, this entity marketed a brand of safety razors, which were advertised in the national press. For example, The Bystander, 4 December 1929, featured the company’s ‘Reaper Razor’. This was a safety razor, which had a Sheffield hollow-ground blade, and was advertised as the ‘emphatic British reply to the American Safety Razor Invasion’. The razor’s novelty was that it was supplied complete, without replacement blades, but with a patent strop-honing device with selected hide strop, and tube of strop dressing, in a pigskin case. ‘No more blades to buy’ was the advertising slogan. It was to be sold through leading stores, such as Gamage’s and Harrods. But the razor seems to have flopped. The Sheffield Razor Co Ltd was at Sheffield Road, Tinsley, which suggests that the manufacturer was Sheffield Steel Products Ltd. The latter had a Stores division at the same address at Tinsley. The ‘REAPER’ mark was also owned by Sheffield Steel Products.