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Argolf

Argolf Lancelot Putter

2025Blade$499

Blade Putter

Argolf builds putters in France and names them after Knights of the Round Table, and the Lancelot is the blade in that lineup. It's a classic heel-toe weighted blade with a full toe hang, which tells you most of what you need to know about who should be looking at it. This putter wants to swing on an arc. If your stroke opens and closes naturally, the Lancelot follows along instead of fighting you.

There's no alignment aid on the top. No dots, no lines, no sightlines cut into the flange. Just a clean topline and the shape of the head to work with. Some golfers hate that. Others have been putting their whole lives off the shape of a blade and don't want a runway painted on top of the ball. The Lancelot is squarely for the second group.

Argolf sits at the premium end of the putter market, machined and finished to a standard that shows up in the price. This isn't a rack putter you grab on a whim. It's a considered piece of equipment for a golfer who already knows the stroke they have and wants a tool that matches it.

Design

Full toe hang is the defining spec here. Hang the Lancelot from the shaft and the toe points nearly straight at the ground, which means the face opens and closes a lot through the stroke. That rotation is exactly what an arc putter needs and exactly what a straight-back-straight-through putter fights against. Match the tool to your motion and this head does the timing for you. The blade shape keeps the weight low and split toward the heel and toe, so mishits off the sweet spot hold their line better than the compact head would suggest. Without an alignment aid, your setup relies on squaring the face by feel and by the leading edge, which is how blade purists have always done it. It rewards a repeatable pre-shot routine and punishes a lazy one.

Who It's For

  • You have a noticeable arc in your stroke and want a putter that complements the face rotation rather than resisting it.
  • Alignment lines on the top of a putter distract you more than they help, and you'd rather aim off the head shape.
  • You're willing to pay for French milling and finish quality and treat a putter as a long-term piece of your bag.
  • You already trust your stroke and don't need training-wheel features to get the face square at impact.

Technology

Heel-Toe WeightingCompact Profile

About Argolf

Argolf brings a distinctive approach to putter design, focusing on quality materials, precision manufacturing, and performance-driven engineering.

Specifications

BrandArgolf
ModelLancelot
Year2025
TypeBlade
Toe hangFull toe hang
Alignment aidNo
MSRP$499

Frequently Asked Questions

What kind of stroke is the Argolf Lancelot best for?
An arc stroke. The full toe hang means the face rotates a lot from takeaway to follow-through, so it suits golfers whose putter naturally opens on the way back and closes on the way through. If you have a straight-back-straight-through stroke, a face-balanced putter will serve you better than this one.
Does the Lancelot have an alignment line?
No. The topline is clean with no dots, sightlines, or aiming aids. You aim it using the shape of the head and the leading edge, which is how blade players have traditionally set up. If you rely on a line to start putts on target, that's worth factoring in before you buy.
Is the Argolf Lancelot a forgiving putter?
For a blade, the heel-toe weighting helps mishits hold their line reasonably well, but it's still a blade. You won't get the stability of a large mallet on strikes away from center. It asks you to find the sweet spot consistently, and it gives you honest feedback when you don't.
Why is Argolf so expensive compared to other putters?
Argolf putters are machined and finished in France to a high standard, and the brand positions itself at the luxury end of the category. You're paying for the milling quality, the materials, and the finish rather than mass production. It's aimed at buyers who want a premium putter, not the best value per dollar.
Who is the Lancelot named after?
Sir Lancelot, one of the Knights of the Round Table. Argolf names its putters after Arthurian knights, which is the throughline across the lineup. It's branding, not performance, but it's part of what you're buying into with the company.

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