Forum rules
Welcome to the Leverguns.Com General Discussions Forum. This is a high-class place so act respectable. We discuss most anything here other than politics... politely.
Please post political post in the new Politics forum.
Spent the last couple days roughing these two knives out. Still need final sanding and shaping a bit on the handles, and then finish applied to the handles. The blades are tear drop Damascus on the bigger knife, and about 100 layer Damascus on the little one. Handles are both ironwood. Very hard to cut, file and sand to shape! Just fun projects while it's cold and rainy here.
Beautiful blades and very nice work, Vall. You're a master of many things. I have a number of Damascus knives but I have bought them all instead of contributing my own labor.
Thanks for the pictures.
.
Those look good, and real. I bought some kitchen steak knives recently, and I have to say are really good for my purposes, which is just to meat or cheese or apples or whatever. What's funny is they have blades that look like they're Damascus but if you notice closely each blade has exactly the same wavy pattern and in exactly the same place, so it's some kind of artifact stamped into the metal or etched into it or something. It doesn't seem to hurt anything but it certainly doesn't seem to make the blades magical either. On the other hand, real Damascus steel blades like yours seem to be particularly awesome, whatever the metallurgic reason is..
It's 2025 - "Cutesy Time is OVER....!" [Dan Bongino]
Thanks!
I can't pound out steel anymore, so I buy blanks and final shape them, and fit wood to them. The ironwood is strong and beautiful, but boy does it take a lot of work. Even sawing it is tough on my wood bandsaw blades. Then rasping it to general shape and lots of hours sanding it smooth before it gets finish. I like heating bee's wax and then dipping the handles in to finish them. It gives a good waterproof finish and makes a dull shine.
Hand hammered Damascus is indeed beautiful. But I have seen some, possible like the kitchen knives mentioned above, where a block of steel is machined hammered into a Damascus pattern then sliced into pieces that are then machined into knife blanks. All done by machines. In fact I had a customer that bought the blocks of "Damascus" then sliced and shaped the blades. The blanks were shipped to China to be finished and handle from heaven only knows where fitted. Pretty, but they didn't have the edge holding capability of true Damascus. Mostly I think because the quality of the steel used was inferior.
Jeepnik AKA "Old Eyes"
"Go low, go slow and preferably in the dark" The old Sarge (he was maybe 24.
"Freedom is never more that a generation from extinction" Ronald Reagan
"Every man should have at least one good rifle and know how to use it" Dad
Nice looking blades. Some blades are nice to look at and useful, too. I am a bit of a knife nut.
D. Brian Casady
Quid Llatine Dictum Sit, Altum Viditur.
Advanced is being able to do the basics while your leg is on fire---Bill Jeans
Don't ever take a fence down until you know why it was put up---Robert Frost