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every week at my forge and workshop(updated)


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ok guys busy week here for me again . lst week mas production this week finnished knives of a slightly higher calibre ! first job of the week socks sent this knife for a refurb . bit of elbow g

Great work Matt, and knives that will last a lifetime with care. Remember lads this is Matts living, not a hobby. Try not to knock him down on price, the knives / blades are worth every penny, and m

boar knife not a true "how to" but just a little write up following the construction of a knife from a file to a "boar knife" i had a similar knife planned but after a pm from a hunting life member

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Proper post for a change

 

Ok I'm rounding up my knife making adventure , as part of that I'm usuing up all the materials I have .

I have a good amount of nickel steel for making pattern welded blades , it needs using so this is the first of the last from me .

 

Started with 25 layer billet of alternating o1 tool steel and nickel steel . The original billet came in at 10.5 lbs , the biggest I've made .

 

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Seen here with the power hammer .

 

 

New forge climbing in temperature .

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The billet beginning to forge weld ,

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Welded up I draw out the steel , you can see I have to work in over lapping heater lengths

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Ready to be chopped and stacked ready for the next weld

 

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Cut and stacked again to give me 150 layers

 

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150 layers ready to be patterned .

 

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Using my knife grinder I cut in a very specific pattern into the billet to get the wanted pattern (my version of ladder pattern)

 

 

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A few stages missing next , but its bought to welding temperature then drawn out .

I have this lot as a result , some of it is no good .

 

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The steel is thermo cycled to reduce grain size the annealed , ground clean and test etched .

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Thats an amazing amount of work and skill going into the production for those knives and you can tell that by looking at the end products. Also the pricing is unbeatable considering the graft put into it.

True craftmanship keep it up mate well done

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Some truly amazing work there, fantastic looking blades and a lot of work gone into them to get to such a high standard, not a simple pattern blade with slightly shaped handle ! This is work of a craftsman indeed, best blades I have ever seen no doubt about it, and the finished articles are stunning, wish I could afford one of them purely as a display piece, you need to keep at the work, you are a maestro sir !

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    • By GruffaloGriff
      This blade is made from motorbike chain hand forged on to a leaf spring core. I have experimented a few times with chain Damascus but this is the cleanest weld yet, not perfect but it has character. Very hard to eliminate all the voids in the chain beating it by hand...even though i spent probably half a day hammering away on it.... I will make a press one day.
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