As a blacksmith who has made this kind of blade before, it’s incredibly boring.
Not much forging for this particular piece.
If I were to make another, I’d just buy a bulk piece of carbon steel, say 1075 given the large bulk to it, cut the wedge in, and use an industrial grinder to put most of the edge in, then harden it.
I use a leather welding glove for whatever hand is getting closest to the forge, no glove for the hammer hand since it dulls the feeling I get while forging.
And honestly, I hate forging. I try to do as little as possible. Unfortunately 5 minutes with a hammer can save a hour of grinding.
As I’ve gotten older I do more stock removal. Start with a piece of steel that’s just barely bigger than your desired knife, then cut/grind off anything that isn’t the knife. It’s still a lot of grinding, but takes less work and less chance to burn your face off.
I had a friend get super into it, and started buying all kinds of shit to do stuff at home, and I warned him he needs to watch more uncut smiting videos (not the montage style popular on some YouTube channels) and try for himself if he can since he didn’t live near me to try with mine.
He ended up hating it because he couldn’t keep up with the constant forearm workouts, and refused to start small to build up strength. Tried to dive right in to making a katana. He ended up selling most of his big tools for a profit though.
Hundreds of years ago, material was expensive and labor was cheap. Forging was necessary to make the most out of a finite processed material. Now a days a million cheap blanks for a dollar, it’s cheaper and easier to just grind off excess than take the time to forge the metal.
With The momentum from the fall combined with the weight of the steel itself, you would be surprised how little weight is needed to cut through, say, a T-bone steak.
I mostly just sell my wares locally by word of mouth. Shipping on large or sharp items can be killer
As a blacksmith who has made this kind of blade before, it’s incredibly boring.
Not much forging for this particular piece.
If I were to make another, I’d just buy a bulk piece of carbon steel, say 1075 given the large bulk to it, cut the wedge in, and use an industrial grinder to put most of the edge in, then harden it.
The rest is carpentry.
Removed by mod
It’s not for everyone.
I use a leather welding glove for whatever hand is getting closest to the forge, no glove for the hammer hand since it dulls the feeling I get while forging.
And honestly, I hate forging. I try to do as little as possible. Unfortunately 5 minutes with a hammer can save a hour of grinding.
As I’ve gotten older I do more stock removal. Start with a piece of steel that’s just barely bigger than your desired knife, then cut/grind off anything that isn’t the knife. It’s still a lot of grinding, but takes less work and less chance to burn your face off.
I had a friend get super into it, and started buying all kinds of shit to do stuff at home, and I warned him he needs to watch more uncut smiting videos (not the montage style popular on some YouTube channels) and try for himself if he can since he didn’t live near me to try with mine.
He ended up hating it because he couldn’t keep up with the constant forearm workouts, and refused to start small to build up strength. Tried to dive right in to making a katana. He ended up selling most of his big tools for a profit though.
Hundreds of years ago, material was expensive and labor was cheap. Forging was necessary to make the most out of a finite processed material. Now a days a million cheap blanks for a dollar, it’s cheaper and easier to just grind off excess than take the time to forge the metal.
Get enough weight behind it and it really doesn’t need to be too sharp.
Do you offer a catalog? ;)
With The momentum from the fall combined with the weight of the steel itself, you would be surprised how little weight is needed to cut through, say, a T-bone steak.
I mostly just sell my wares locally by word of mouth. Shipping on large or sharp items can be killer