About this product
Full description
A sharp blade is the quiet secret behind good pruning. A keen edge slices cleanly through a stem, leaving a neat wound that heals fast and resists disease; a blunt one crushes and tears, leaving ragged cuts that let in rot and make every job harder than it needs to be. Yet sharpening is the one bit of tool care most of us put off — usually because we don't have the right thing to hand. This little tool solves that.
The Burgon & Ball Blade Edge Restorer is a pocket-sized sharpener built to bring a keen working edge back to the cutting tools you use most — secateurs, loppers, hedge shears, topiary shears, and the like. At just 12.5cm long it slips into a pocket or tool pouch, so you can put a quick edge back on your secateurs out in the border or down at the allotment rather than waiting for a workshop session that never quite happens.
At its tip sits a 2cm tungsten carbide file — carbide being far harder than steel, so it cuts a fresh edge quickly and lasts for years. The sharpening tip is housed in a durable casing with a soft, non-slip grip that stays secure even when your hands are gloved or damp, and a protective cap keeps the file clean and stops it nicking your pocket or tool bag between jobs. It's genuinely simple to use — a few strokes along the bevel of the blade is all it takes — and clear instructions are printed on the packaging, so even if you've never sharpened a tool in your life, you can do it with confidence.
Keeping an edge on your tools isn't just about making the work easier, though it does that. It's a small act of looking after the things that look after your garden — and a sharp, well-maintained pair of secateurs will last years longer, and cut far more kindly, than a neglected one.
What it sharpens
- Secateurs — the tool that benefits most from a regular touch-up
- Loppers — for clean cuts on thicker stems and branches
- Hedge shears and topiary shears — keeping long blade edges crisp
- Other straight or curved garden blades that have lost their edge
Please note: this tool is designed for the blade edges of cutting tools and is not suitable for sharpening saw blades.
How to use it
Wipe the blade clean first so you can see the bevel — the angled cutting edge. Holding the tool securely by its non-slip grip, draw the carbide file along that bevel in smooth, even strokes, always working in the same direction and following the existing angle of the edge. A few passes is usually all a regularly maintained blade needs. Most garden blades (secateurs, loppers, shears) are bevelled on one side only, so sharpen the bevelled face and simply remove any burr from the flat back. Finish by wiping the blade and, ideally, adding a light smear of oil to protect it. Sharpen little and often through the season and your tools will never get the chance to go properly blunt.
About Burgon & Ball
Burgon & Ball have been making fine garden tools in Sheffield since 1730 — nearly three centuries of steel-working heritage — and today are endorsed by the Royal Horticultural Society. They've built their reputation on tools that are made properly and made to last, which is exactly the spirit of a sharpener whose whole purpose is to extend the working life of the tools you already own.
About AllotMate
This sharpener is supplied to us through our partners at AllotMate, who curate proper, well-made tools and equipment for gardeners and allotmenteers who'd rather buy once. We work with them through a direct fulfilment arrangement, which means your order ships from their warehouse straight to your door — the same Burgon & Ball tool, slightly faster delivery, and consistent stock.
Specifications
- Length: 12.5cm — pocket-sized
- Sharpening file: 2cm tungsten carbide, long-lasting
- Body: durable casing with soft non-slip grip
- Cap: protective cap to keep the file clean and safe
- For use on: secateurs, loppers, hedge and topiary shears, and similar blades
- Not suitable for: saw blades
- Instructions: printed on the packaging
- Made by: Burgon & Ball (Sheffield, est. 1730)
A well-loved pair of secateurs deserves to be kept sharp — and a tool that keeps your other tools working beautifully is one of the most quietly useful things in any shed.
What's included
printed instructions
Care and use
- Wipe the blade clean so you can see the bevel (angled cutting edge)
- Hold by the non-slip grip and draw the carbide file along the bevel in
smooth, even strokes, always in the same direction, following the existing
angle
- A few passes is enough for a regularly maintained blade
- Most garden blades are bevelled one side only - sharpen the bevelled face,
remove any burr from the flat back
- Wipe the blade and add a light smear of oil to protect it
- NOT for use on saw blades
LOOKING AFTER THE SHARPENER:
- Replace the protective cap after use
- Keep dry; wipe the file clean of metal filings
- The carbide file is hard-wearing and should last many years
Pairs well with
Other products from the potting shed that work alongside this one.



