Bread Lames
The score is when a loaf becomes yours. Precision lames for confident ears and intricate scoring.
The score is when a loaf becomes yours. Precision lames for confident ears and intricate scoring.
Jennifer put in the work. The dough proofed perfectly, shaped with patience, and scored with love. Artistic detail is the difficult, rewarding part of scoring, and it is exactly what our lames are made for. Scored with the UFO Real Bread lame by Jennifer Phillip @she.bakes.bread.
Still deciding? Our Bread Lame Buying Guide compares all four side by side.
Every loaf gets scored for one of two reasons. Expansion scoring is functional: one confident slash controls the expanding dough and gives you a perfect ear instead of a burst loaf. Almost any sharp lame handles it. Decorative scoring is the art: shallow, precise cuts held at a fine angle to create wheat, leaves, and intricate designs. It is the harder skill, and it is where the tool genuinely matters. We build for both, and we obsess over the second.
Tyler invented the circular UFO lame, the round design now copied the world over. There is only one original, and it is still designed and made in our small Connecticut shop by three people, from real American wood and stainless steel. No plastic, no overseas factory, and a warranty behind every tool.
From a clean single slash to an intricate design, a Wire Monkey lame gives you control over every cut. This boule was scored with the Goose by Abigail Yueh.
All of our wood products love an occasional oil bath because we don't use harsh chemicals. Prevent them from drying out with our Wood Lame Care Kit. Whatever you score with, keep fresh blades on hand. A dull blade is the number one cause of a dragging score.
Every lame holds a standard double-edged safety razor blade, and the same blades fit all of them. Keep a pack of fresh bread lame blades on hand.
The UFO for enclosed-blade safety and control, or the Poco for the simplest, most affordable start. The Goose is the most versatile if you want room to grow.
The Goose, held like a pencil, for fine detail, and the Arc for deep curved artistic cuts.
Yes. Check our Stockists first though, a local reseller is often cheaper.
Photography by Charlie Wiskin. In-the-wild bake photos by Jennifer Phillip (@she.bakes.bread) and Abigail Yueh. Thank you for letting us show off your loaves.