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Callaway

Callaway Jaws Raw Full Toe Wedge

Versatile202456°-64°

The Jaws Raw Full Toe is Callaway's wedge for the golfer who likes to open the face and hit shots most people avoid. The name tells you the two things that matter most. Full Toe means the grooves run all the way across the face and up into the toe, so when you lay the club wide open for a flop or a bunker shot, you're still catching ball on groove instead of smooth metal. Raw means the face has no plating, so it starts to rust after a few rounds. That rust is intentional. Callaway leaves the striking surface bare to cut glare at address and keep the JAWS grooves biting for longer.

Those JAWS grooves are the aggressive part. They're cut sharp and steep to grab a soft cover and rip spin out of the rough or a wet lie, the exact situations where a lot of wedges give up. Combine that with the forged head, and you get a wedge that feels dense and quiet off the face rather than clicky. It's the kind of feedback that tells you where you caught it.

The loft lineup runs 56, 58, 60, and 64 degrees, and that 64 is the giveaway about who this club is really built for. Most brands stop at 60. Adding a 64 means Callaway expects you to hit specialty shots, short-sided pitches, and steep flops where a normal sand wedge won't get you enough height. This is a short-game tool for a player who already has some skill and wants more shot options, not a rescue club that fixes bad contact.

Callaway Jaws Raw Full Toe Wedge: Key Specs

Category
Versatile
Loft range
56 to 64 degrees
Loft/grind options
4
Model year
2024
MSRP
$159.99

Available Variants

LoftBounceGrindFinish
56°12°WChrome
58°12°WChrome
60°10°WChrome
64°8°WChrome

Loft and bounce are nominal values. Actual specifications may vary.

Technology

Forged

About the Callaway Jaws Raw Full Toe

The full-face groove pattern is the headline. On a standard wedge the grooves stop short of the toe, which becomes a dead zone the moment you open the face. Here the grooves extend edge to edge, so the toe region actually grips the ball on those laid-open lob and bunker shots. The teardrop-ish head shape supports that, sitting comfortably square or wide open depending on what the shot needs. The raw face is the other big design choice, and it changes how you own the club. With no chrome or nickel plating, the striking area oxidizes and takes on a brown patina over time. Callaway's argument is that rust holds spin and kills sun glare, and you don't need to fight it or polish it off. The forged construction underneath gives the head a softer, more muted impact feel than a cast wedge, which matters on the delicate touch shots this club is designed to hit.

Who Should Play the Callaway Jaws Raw Full Toe?

  • Better players who open the face around the green and want grooves that still grab on those laid-open shots
  • Anyone who plays out of thick rough or wet conditions often and needs the aggressive JAWS grooves to hold spin
  • Golfers looking for a high-lofted specialty wedge, especially the 64 degree, for steep flops and short-sided pitches
  • Players who prefer a forged, softer feel and don't mind a raw face that rusts with use

Frequently Asked Questions

Why does the face rust, and is that a bad thing?

It rusts because the face is left raw with no protective plating, and it's completely intentional. Callaway designed it that way to reduce glare at address and, in their view, help the grooves keep spinning the ball. The rust stays on the face and doesn't spread to the chrome body, so it won't affect performance or durability. If you don't like the look, know going in that this wedge is going to develop a brown patina no matter what you do.

What makes the Full Toe different from a regular Jaws Raw wedge?

The grooves. On the Full Toe, the grooves run all the way across the face and up into the toe area, while a standard wedge leaves that toe section smooth. That difference only shows up when you open the face for a flop or a bunker shot. With the face laid wide, contact often happens higher toward the toe, and the full-face grooves mean you're still hitting groove instead of a bare, spin-free surface.

Should I get the 64 degree?

Only if you actually hit short-sided flops and delicate high lobs and can control that much loft. A 64 sends the ball almost straight up with very little roll, which is great when you have no green to work with and dangerous when your contact isn't reliable. If you're not sure, the 60 covers most of what a high-handicap or mid-handicap player needs. The 64 is a specialist's club for someone who already trusts their hands around the green.

Is this a good wedge for a high handicapper?

It can be, but it's not built to hide mishits. The Full Toe rewards players who manipulate the face and make clean contact, and the forged feel gives you honest feedback that a beginner might read as harsh. If you tend to hit your wedges thin or fat, a wider-soled, more forgiving wedge will serve you better. If you're a high handicapper working on your short game and want a club that lets you learn shot-making, the 56 or 58 is a reasonable place to start.

Do the raw face and grooves need special maintenance?

Not really. You don't have to prevent the rust or scrub it off, since that's the whole point of the raw finish. Clean the grooves after your rounds the way you would with any wedge so they keep gripping the ball. Like every wedge, the sharp JAWS grooves will wear down over a couple of seasons of heavy use, and when they do, spin drops off and it's time to replace it.

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