I’ve always been captivated by watching skilled craftsmen, but this is on a different level. It was an absolute joy to watch you pour your soul into this masterpiece. Thank you for sharing.
@@huruukko9419 Thats where your wrong, the European sword makers where very advanced, after all their swords had to cut though plate mail and not just cloth such as the middle eastern and Asian swords. There is a-lot of noise about the Japanese katana sword but if you research it the middle ages sword makers where much better. I think there even may be a few doco's on this platform that may help. Thanks for the chat.
@@adamtaylor7412 no they were NOT. In fact you have it completely the wrong way around. Medieval European swords were generally made of from single pieces of sheet steel, relying simply on weight to smash and create blunt force trauma. They didn't 'cut through' plate mail, they smashed it open or simply just shattered your ribs through sheer weight of force. Japanese and Korean swords on the other hand were made not only of folded steel jackets but with a different harder steel at its core sandwiched between softer steels, which they were doing literally many centuries before Europeans, and were 'cutting weapons', but they also flexed. This was due to its hard core/soft outer production, and also differential heat treatment. Basically you are talking rubbish you have just made up in your head.
When the sword was assembled and “done” but not quite finished I thought “damn that looks good” but when you did the final polishing, giving the guard, spacer and pommel that deep dark but super reflective look my jaw was left hanging. That display of the actual finished weapon was nothing short of euphoric.
That's the 'bluing' that guns used to get, like the PPK or the HiPower or a S&W .44 magnum. Nowadays Glocks/etc. have a different treatment that's more durable. But bluing is much much prettier. It wears off though, over time/usage/rubbing.
Yep, my reaction also, exactly. I made a comment before i finished to watch, before the final stage, saying how mindblowingly beautiful it was. I should have wait, the final result is just unreal.
The fact that there is no ads in a 40 minute long masterpiece of a video just tells how much you care not only about a perfect product but also a perfect video. Honestly so inspiring.
With the gaming industries from now a days, i wouldn't call it a loot-drop... I'd rather call it a "check out our in-game store, you might like this new skin for your swords. For $79,99" type a sword for the rest of your game. 😂
This is without a doubt the most beautiful blade I’ve ever seen. Completely blown away by your level of craftsmanship. I had not heard of your channel until you popped up on my recommends. I honestly thought it was click bait at first but after watching this I think the blade should be in a museum. Seriously, amazing work.
If you like how swords are crafted, you should check out the documentary on how the last samurai sword was crafted with the old technique, you're going to be blown away.. and YES! I agree this sword is a masterpiece as much as an oeuvre d'art.
I don’t know how this got recommended to me but this was one of the most beautiful goddamned pieces of art I’ve ever seen. I feel like this thing is worth well over $100k, the person who bought this definitely got a bargain.
yea I was blown away too, I wonder who it's for? It's both very functional and very beautiful, but there aren't warlords who need such an item anymore?
@@trif55 swords were traditionally very much the ornament and status symbol. Fires, spears, boats, axes, horses, archers won wars on the battlefield. Famines and plagues are the devil's arms. Swords require skill to use effectively, they mark out the professional, and were for duelling and display, and working in tight spaces. They were always a status symbol, the implement of honour, and are still present in the regalia of the military. If necessary, they'll get used. They're totally serviceable, as is this one, and won't run out of ammunition. Should not be confused with the dagger, gladius, cutlass or machete. Those are for chopping anything and everything, as much a tool as an item of battlefield weaponry. The samurai favoured swords which have never tasted blood as items of honour and beauty. A murder-stained blade was not favoured for open display. A sword that could kill but doesn't is a beautiful thing indeed.
The whole time watching this, I kept thinking to myself that this is the most beautiful sword I have ever seen in my life, and I’m so happy to come to the comments after watching the video and see that so many people feel the same way. This thing is spectacular!
This is the first time I’ve seen one of your videos and to be honest, I thought the title was “clickbait”. For me, owning something like that sword is an unobtainable dream. It is easily one of the most beautiful things I’ve ever seen. I’m not sure any one man, or woman can own something like that. Something that beautiful and well made belongs in a museum somewhere for all of us to admire. You sir, are more an artist and a true craftsman. You’re on a level that’s completely out of this world. Thank you very much for sharing your gift with us.
@@TacoMonster4eva We live in 2022, I would NOT want to fight with ANY sword "for real". Especially if I where a fucking monarch with bodyguards and police and army on call.
@@TacoMonster4eva ya that sword is 100% decorative only, or for use in absolute emergencies only. Sneeze on that thing wrong and it scratches real bad, and almost all its value is gone.
I got lost in the awe of witnessing surgical beauty and once in a lifetime craftsmanship, intertwine into a reality escaping video. thank you for sharing your passion.
When I see craftsmanship this detailed, all I can think about is imagining offering it to a King or Queen as a symbol of peace/goodwill. This is truly breathtaking! ❤
@@dunhillsupramk3 Maybe, but is what they usually got (and get) and the rest of us are free to "scavenge for the crumbs and be thankful for it", it's been this way since the dawn of men and it's not likely to change any time soon, deal with it and welcome to the real world.
@@dunhillsupramk3 if it means sealing a deal where those dictators and monarchs wont be invading killing raping and destroying your country for next 20-30 years why not ?
This world is rapidly passing away and I hope that you repent and take time to change before all out disaster occurs! Belief in messiah alone is not enough to grant you salvation - Matthew 7:21-23, John 3:3, John 3:36 (ESV is the best translation for John 3:36) if you believed in Messiah you would be following His commands as best as you could. If you are not a follower of Messiah I would highly recommend becoming one. Call on the name of Jesus and pray for Him to intervene in your life - Revelation 3:20. Contemplate how the Roman Empire fulfilled the role of the beast from the sea in Revelation 13 over the course of 1260+ years. Revelation 17 confirms that the beast is in fact Rome. From this we can conclude that A) Jesus is the Son of God and can predict the future or make it happen, B) The world leaders/nations/governments etc have been conspiring together for the last 3000+ years going back to Babylon and before, C) History as we know it is fake. You don't really need to speculate once you start a relationship with God. Can't get a response from God? Fasting can help increase your perception and prayer can help initiate events. God will ignore you if your prayer does not align with His purpose (James 4:3) or if you are approaching Him when "unclean" (Isaiah 1:15, Isaiah 59:2, Micah 3:4). Stop eating food sacrificed to idols (McDonald's, Wendy's etc) stop glorifying yourself on social media or making other images of yourself (Second Commandment), stop gossiping about other people, stop watching obscene content etc. Have a blessed day!
I have never seen a more perfect video ever. The craqftsmenship going into this sword and then making such an insane video about it. The music always fits and seeing you enjoying to create this masterpiece made my day. Thank you for the effort.
His work reminds me of when I went to see the Faberge egg collection when it visited London - I literally did not know perfection could reach that level. I thought my Rolex watch was super special, I realised it was mass produces sh!t. Is $65k for a sward a lot fo money - YES. Is it a lot for one of the finest creation of humanity - NO, its dirt cheap
@@DuBstep115 it is the most unique sword to be made in modern time and technology master smith is not a plain title like the steel of the gods is not equivalent to the steel of peasants it is a masterpiece of only a skilled blacksmith.
This is like Elven work out of Tolkein. Otherworldly in execution. Kyle's experience from forging Damascus into patterns and knowing they will bloom as he imagines is incredible.
I can imagine this being done in medieval times but taking a very skilled craftsman 10 years or more to complete, i am not sure if they had the right technology to do all of that even if it took long enough tbh.
@@sadek__4952 it was more common for smiths of the medieval period to have many more helping hands than smiths of today, given that it was a bigger industry. a smith with several apprentices, a lot of skill, and specialty tools, could probably get it done in a reasonable time. there are some amazing looking swords and armor sets from the 15th and 16th century.
Nah! This is work worthy of Telchar of Nogrod. It is said that In the tempering of steel alone of all crafts the Dwarves were never outmatched even by the Noldor. This guy outmatched them.
Watching what a dedicated craftsman can do has always fascinated me. I'll be 62 at the end of this month and am looking forward to taking some classes on knife making. My 18 year old nephew is a self taught blacksmith and started at about 14 years old as well. I hope to be able to work with him one day as a hobby for me, but perhaps a career for him. I sent him this video a few minutes ago and he too believes this is one of the most amazing swords ever made! Thank you so much for sharing your talent and hard work with us.
65k just isn't enough. Craftsmanship of this level is extremely rare and should be appreciated. People pay stupid amounts of money for painting. This isnt just art, its science, its almost magic. You did an amazing job. Bravo
This is pure art. It really made me appreciate the blacksmiths of old. Throughout the entire process, I kept thinking... "This is with modern machinery, and it's taking 4 months. How did the blacksmiths of ancient times do this? How long would it have taken?"
Nhờ sự chính xác của thước đo, máy cắt, máy hàn mới có thể tạo ra những hoa văn như vậy. Nhưng thanh kiếm này chỉ đẹp và dùng cho nghi lễ thay vì chiến đấu được, cần phải có một lõi kim loại đồng nhất và xuyên suốt chiều dài ở bên trong mới tăng cường độ dẻo dai của thanh kiếm
Well, to be honest, they didn’t. They did a lot of incredible things, but the processes he uses in this video are entirely dependent on access to modern machinery. Anything even close to this would have been done very differently.
In the blade category, this may be the wildest project I have ever seen. For an ancient instrument of death, it's the most beutiful piece I have ever seen. Very impressed by your skill.
The level of attention to details is border line insane...the build looks so good that the final product almost looks like a graphic design or a computer generated image almost too perfect. Truly amazing guys, thank you for sharing this masterpiece.
It looks like a laser etched hologram, but better. But the fact that it is a completely functional durable folded steel blade. It is just mind blowing.
Kyle, you come across as being a really likeable sort of guy who really knows his stuff and is happy to share. Thanks, mate. Great video and absolutely beautiful sword.
@@EinfachFredhaftGaming I keep hearing reference to this katana can someone post a link I could Google and look for it but a link would be helpful for everybody
So it takes a lot for me to actually make comments on a video , but I am absolutely blown away by your craftsmanship. The level of detail and dedication you put into your craft along with the video speaks volumes about you as a person. Keep it up man you should be proud
@@KyleRoyerKnivescan u please tell me how u gun blue ur parts I have a 1911 that I’m absolutely in love with but the Finnish is terrible and nobody wants to tell me how they get that gloss black bluing if u don’t mind me asking what do u use I would really appreciate some help
I have no words. Absolute legend. And as a man with strong passions for crafting, though not in this area, I loved seeing how much you love and care about this.
Okay yes this sword is just amazing. You definitely earned that title of master but can we also talk about how amazing the cinematography and analogy’s of this video. Not gonna lie the “disappearing and turning into fiery red sparks” Lind was low key beautiful. You can tell how passionate you are about your work
When he pulls out the measuring tools and starts to take care of fractions of milimeters you know it's something else Such a fantasy of a blade, hats off
I had to pick my jaw up off the ground after seeing this. This is such an incredible blend of engineering and art and metalworking and it comes together in a way that's honestly priceless
I've been watching videos like this for years (thanks Forged in Fire) now. I have never had one in which the process and the outcome gripped me on such an emotional level. You could feel the patience and passion from Kyle, the quality of the video and music in it was top notch. Then there's the finished masterpiece. That is the most stunning sword I have seen. Just inspiring, you should be proud.
Kyle, I've been watching you about a year now man and I gotta say: your work is ALWAYS gorgeous. Your attention to detail is phenomenal. You videos are also top notch bro. Keep em coming.
Can we take a second to appreciate how good this is as a video? The camera work and editing are awesome and I'm sure there was just tons of footage to edit down. And goddang that sword belongs in an art gallery.
Sir that is the most beautiful sword I’ve ever seen in my life and the person who commissioned it got a deal at that price. I don’t often watch a 30 plus minute video of someone making something but I enjoyed every second Thank you
Uncle James? Lol probably not but you and my estranged uncle have the same name, the very fact you wrote more than a few words let's me know you're not him haha
I have been a huge fan of "Forged in Fire" over the years, and have seen every episode. Thought I've seen everything possible, you sir, have just surpassed anything I have seen. Truly a master craftsman.
Often they make sword shaped objects because they are going to be severely tested. They are very good weapons but are often over built and thus not very nimble or alive in the hands. I sincerely doubt this gorgeous weapon would survive their torture tests as well, but it would be far more functional in an actual sword fight because it’s built like a weapon and not like a weapon shaped object designed to survive severe abuse.
@@john-paulsilke893 tbf weapons need to survive abuse, they hit other swords, chain mail, ect. so to say they wouldnt be good weapons is kinda weird, its the oposite imo, those were made for combat and this was made mostly to be ornamental. especially with how the balance point is 6 inches past the guard, most swords are in the 2-4inch area, so this thing is definitely unwieldy compared to one made with cutting in mind Amazing craftsmanship for an ornamental sword but id probably pick something off Forged in Fire 10 out of 10 times
@@brertt8350 While I agree that fighting swords need to stand up to abuse, your point about balancing is wrong. The place you want to put your balance point depends on the usage of the sword. The further your balance point, so long as you can still accelerate the blade properly, the more of a cutter it is. And It's funny you talk about having cutting in mind, because while cut and thrust swords have a balance point in the 2-6 inches range (mostly depending on how much they lean towards one or the other and if they're made for one or two hands), dedicated cutters such as sabers often have their balance point in the 5-8 inches range depending on various factors such as period, and if it was meant for use on horse back. On the other end of the spectrum, you have dedicated thrusters that would sometimes have their point of balance behind the guard to make the point as nimble as possible. This is very much a cut first blade. It's absolutely usable for thrusting, but this is far from something like a type XV blade. And at 47 inches of total length it's very much more of a two handed longsword than a hand and a half.
@@nickp3173 I mean like, in the middle of a war like in the middle ages for example when wars would be like once every like 2 months they do take their time but not several weeks.
What a masterpiece!!! I have never seen a craftman working with such genuine passion, love for the details and so accurate...The sword is absolutely extraordinary, stunning...I can just take my hat off in front of this man and shake his precious hand 😳😳😳 Best congratulation to you from Italy. Maestro Kyle
@@tx6088 If so, he has my apologies; I just have never seen a sward this clean before. If you found this build as good eye candy here is another one that is just as incredible: ua-cam.com/video/J433f6Yrd0g/v-deo.html
As a sword owner and seeing many master craft blades yours are on an entirely different level. The gild inlay with the bluing makes this a piece of art, and getting a symmetrical Damascus pattern is impressive this is a blade fit for a king, if you could find a king fit for it. This blade is for no mere mortal, it is legendary and there can be only one for whom this blade was for!
@@shouldhavenotshouldof2031 Mastering the fallacy of Should with that name right there. 💪😎👍 And your answer to whom the "only one" is... That's priceless. 😂
Considering people buy shitty paintings that a 3 year old could make for millions of dollars i’m surprised this piece went for only 65k. This was hands down the most beautiful sword i’ve seen. Everything on this is pure art. Amazing work!
There’s nothing better than watching someone who is good at what they love doing. The end product is unreal. I think this is coolest thing I’ve seen on UA-cam.
That person got a bargain at $65,000. That is a museum piece, I’ve watched a lot of UA-cam videos in my life on making things from guitars to jewelry to knives and swords. I can say without a doubt this is the most beautiful thing I have ever seen made. You sir are a genius with unbelievable talent.
It comes out to approx. $50/hr, minus the cost of materials which probably knocks it down to the low 40s. Extremely fair for this level of craftsmanship.
It’s about $180,000 a year for a shop plus whatever the other two are producing. Not a huge amount really. Probably make about $400,000 a year from his shop and that pays for super expensive gear, moderately expensive materials and very expensive staff. Saving some money by attaching it to their home, be even then for the skills involved and investment of supplies it’s not a huge amount. The sword is fairly priced for the work involved, the man is a master craftsmen.
@@john-paulsilke893 you say that yet a proffesionaly crafted katana imported from Japan made in the old ways by an actual sword master is almost 6 to 12 unless it hold historical significance I'm not trying to downplay his skills but it goes to show how broken the US currency and inflation rate really really is.
@@Thiccness_Is_Delicious spotted the weeb that probably cross dresses as a troll. you are trying to downplay his skills don’t even lie lmao. comparing a katana made the old fashioned way; which is definitely easier, doesn’t take as long to make; to a custom made, and highly finished long sword is no comparison at all. The katana wouldn’t have the same level of finish, or show, and display the same level of damascus artwork. Keep dreaming of your katana weeb. Edit: katanas can be nice, but they are nothing like this long sword. Imo katanas look cheap, but I’ll agree that there’s nothing like a mirror polished fine made katana with artwork; like a golden dragon in between the wraps. Still wrong to compare, because they’re in different leagues.
@@Thiccness_Is_Delicious America can be a land where limited editions of a pocket knife can regularly retail for $1,000 and still sell out. That has nothing to do with inflation. It’s what people are willing to pay, and people can afford it. Don’t knock America saying bs about inflation when we are the best country on earth to live in. I’m not defending the lost causes that live in this country, but it is what it is. A huge long sword like this is worth it to the right collector. I imagine a rich dude who thinks he’s a Viking, or anyone that is rich and is into long swords would love to hang this on his wall. It’s the holy grail to them. The top of the crop, and no long sword can be made better.
Ive never seen such beautiful craftsmanship - this is an unbelivably stunning piece of art. Made by people, for who this job is not a job, but a vocation.
One of the things I find amazing about this is the fact that no one step or action is overly difficult given a bit of training. The thing that makes the difference is doing EVERY step to perfection, in order, with absolute attention to detail. Truly masterful work.
I so rarely comment on yt, but man, this is by far the most beautiful creation I've seen. True masterpiece, impecable craftsmanship. Not sure how you could even put a price tag on it:)
Watching this video felt like watching a complete movie style insane masterpiece. Perfect camera work, video editing, background music, voice over and what not.
I never really get that "Wow" sensation, but I was taken back by the damascus reveal. Absolutely caught me off guard having those stars so well spaced and isolated in a pattern.
That sword is simply spectacular and mesmerising. It’s not one of, but THE most beautiful thing I’ve seen someone create… whoever owns that should be inspired every solitary day of their life. I’m in awe.
That tiled mosaic pattern is absolutely brilliant. Your craftsmanship and method is unrivaled by anyone I’ve seen on UA-cam. The amount of effort you put into simply making sure the billet and pattern are done to perfection is enviable, to put it mildly.
I am not in the forging trade, but I am fascinated by the craft and have seen many knife and swordmaking videos, but oh boy, this one is just mesmerizing. I caught myself uttering a loud 'wow' a couple of times after seeing how incredibly fine and detailed your work is. I must say that YT is a real phenomenon. Where else would we be able to watch such a captivating 40min long video of pure master craftsmanship?
I remember following this build when it first started. It was what drew me to your channel and have been loving it since. Your attention to detail is simply uncanny. You are an amazing bladesmith and an absolute master of your craft.
I remember watching this series as it came out, itching for the next part every week. I hope one day you make another sword 😍. Beautiful work as always Kyle, congrats!!!
I got teary-eyed. It's SO beautiful. Best looking blade I've ever seen. The off-white bone looking handle with lines in it isn't doing it for me, but every single other aspect is incredible beyond belief.
Hey thanks I felt the same way about ivory until I actually held it in my hands. It’s texture, iridescence, and feel are like none other. You’ll see. Glad you’re here. Dad
No just blades, it's the best looking man-made object I've ever seen. I've never been so attracted to a thing in my life, my heart actually started to beat faster lol. I need to start practicing historical swordfighting, so I have an excuse to buy a sword that's at least 10 % as beautiful as this.
Wow indeed. A true labour of love that turns into a work of art. I mean I was blown away at the 1st etching let alone the final result. That pattern is incredible and your level of craftsmanship is 2nd to none. Congratulations mate keep up the work.
Imagine making such a sword during medieval times, surely people would think you're some sort of magician and your blades have special powers ! Joke aside, this is an astonishing masterpiece like no other. Thank you for sharing, it was a pleasure to watch the entire process and witness you putting your soul into this project.
I don't know how common of a skill it is. But, my jaw dropped when i saw the semi-random/semi-intentional Damascus pattern...🤯 You are an artist, a craftsman, an expert metal worker..👏🏼 I enjoyed watching this big time!!! Kepp'em coming...🙋🏻♂️🙏🏼 ❤️❤️❤️
That damascus pattern was incredible! Truly a spectacularly beautiful piece. I love how he took one bar and cut and turned it just right to make distinctly different patterns all chaining through each other perfectly. Bravo Sir!!
Scottish gunmakers can approach this quality. David McKay Brown's builds of the Dickson Round Action shotgun were the highest quality of precision engineering combined with supreme functionality and sheer beauty - that I've ever seen. If that Roger sword had sold for double or treble the price declared I'd have been surprised - not at all. Sir, you are an artist on top of all the other specialisms displayed in this weapon's creation. Thankyou for making the video I just watched, entranced by your perfectionism. That's perhaps more rare today than it's ever been.
With all due respect, raise your price! You have a gift of craftsmanship! I’m confident people would pay way more if you include a link to this video to your listing! Your obsession to detail and perfection is a disciple in itself! Love this video keep up the wonderful work!!
Saw every second of the making you put on the tube here. This mashup of metal, Gold, ivory, chemicals, sweat and maybe blood and tears is a piece of Art!! That is not blacksmithing, that is sculpting Metal. Glad that everything turned out good for the whole royer Clan. You people are deserve way more subscribers and publicity!! All the best from Germany!!! 🙋🏼♂️😎
I can’t believe the Damascus pattern you were able to achieve with this sword. That and all the other touches had me blown away. It’s surreal to see something so perfect be made by a human being. Congrats dude! Amazing work.
This is THE most stunning piece of art and weaponry in one i have ever seen. Ive watched ALOT of smiths forge weapons of all kinds. This was hands down the best one ive seen in 20 years and was an absolute pleasure to watch from beginning to end. And in all honesty, im jealous af i dont own this! Whom ever owns it i hope is displaying it for the world to see! Be proud of yourself! Absolutely amazing!
arguably one of the most beautiful blades ever forged in modern day, I just wish your makers mark had a little more finesse to it than just plain ALL CAPS block letters
@@FOFBASS1 then in that case he should have hidden his makers mark on the tang like most great smiths. But since the makers mark is not hidden it would only be right to put a little more finesse into it than just BIG (it is not even subtle) plain ALL CAPS block letters
This world is rapidly passing away and I hope that you repent and take time to change before all out disaster occurs! Belief in messiah alone is not enough to grant you salvation - Matthew 7:21-23, John 3:3, John 3:36 (ESV is the best translation for John 3:36) if you believed in Messiah you would be following His commands as best as you could. If you are not a follower of Messiah I would highly recommend becoming one. Call on the name of Jesus and pray for Him to intervene in your life - Revelation 3:20. Contemplate how the Roman Empire fulfilled the role of the beast from the sea in Revelation 13 over the course of 1260+ years. Revelation 17 confirms that the beast is in fact Rome. From this we can conclude that A) Jesus is the Son of God and can predict the future or make it happen, B) The world leaders/nations/governments etc have been conspiring together for the last 3000+ years going back to Babylon and before, C) History as we know it is fake. You don't really need to speculate once you start a relationship with God. Can't get a response from God? Fasting can help increase your perception and prayer can help initiate events. God will ignore you if your prayer does not align with His purpose (James 4:3) or if you are approaching Him when "unclean" (Isaiah 1:15, Isaiah 59:2, Micah 3:4). Stop eating food sacrificed to idols (McDonald's, Wendy's etc) stop glorifying yourself on social media or making other images of yourself (Second Commandment), stop gossiping about other people, stop watching obscene content etc. Have a blessed day!
Great mind man, katanas are my favourite weapon mainly because im obsessed with the Japanese culture but a Damascus Katana will be soo beautiful and amazing
@@Mike-om4tv A weeb is obsessed with anime / manga. Not even liking, but seriously being obsessed (usually wearing clothes with anime things or having posters / figurines of certain characters) Hence why my profile pokes fun at them, since it's pretty weird. I like anime, but definitely not to that degree. Someone obsessed with the culture might just be really interested in the history of Japan, which isn't weird, seeing that it is a really interesting and broad subject.
Objectively wrong. The term 'weeaboo' originated on 4chan a virtual aeon ago, back in the day the slur used to be 'wapanese' (Wannabe Japanese) and generally referred to anyone who obsessed over Japan, or anyone who might be described as a 'Japanophile' (as opposed to taking a casual or academic interest, for example if you think Japan is the most glorious country in the world with more advanced tech than anyone else, or if you think katanas can cut through steel because they're the bestestest weapon... then you're a weeaboo) The mods and admins, being giant weebs, of course didn't like this and added a word filter turning all instances of 'wapanese' to 'weeaboo', but the joke's on them -- it stuck and even after the filter was removed they kept calling people weeaboos. This later got abbreviated to 'weeb', now most weebs like anime and/or manga far more than they probably ought to, but it's by far not the only distinguishing factor of a weeaboo. TL;DR weeb refers to anyone who idolizes Japan/has an unrealistic view of Japan.
65k for a sword is still insane. I don't care what level of craftsmanship it has, the lord god could hand forge it and 65k would still be overcharging.
@thalmorjusticiar1 You can't be serious? Someone in modern times caring enough to pattern Damascus steel the way this Master Craftsman does? Besides, the Lord God Himself created everything this Master has in his shop, and blessed him with a skill but a rare few posses! Given the time, tools, materials, expenses, and expertise in the 4 MONTHS of making this exquisite masterpiece, I'd say the buyer feels he's getting a "steel!"
@@The_new_guy2803 you're really overselling the time spent. he wasn't hammering for 4 months, it took 4 months from start to finish, which means well under a month of actual labor assuming he's doing other pieces to, y'know, buy food and utilities. damascus is a science, it's not complicated to do if you understand topography, and he clearly has experience with damascus. not to mention that tons of blacksmiths in "modern times" (irrelevant article, by the way) specialize in specifically pattern damascus. the 24 carat gold inlay is singlehandedly carrying the price, every other material is standard for weapon smithing. I'm not discounting the smith, blacksmithing is skilled labor despite what many believe, and he's an excellent craftsman, however damascus is not a lost art and only marginally increases the value of a piece. it's by no means a "steel," as you so elegantly put it. for the record, I was being facetious about not buying a sword from god, I'd certainly buy it and resell it to the vatican for billions.
I’m actually surprised it went for such a “low” price. This was literally a kingly blade. Considering it is also art (and ridiculous ink-blot paintings can go for over a million dollars) I sincerely thought it would sell for triple that price or far better. Anyway, I’m happy for the gentleman, and look forward to seeing his next sword project.
@@thefattesthagrid but working for over 4 months more than full time and only getting 65k that you don’t even get to keep for yourself is kinda low. This is such a skilled craftsman, I kinda can’t believe how cheap that is.
@@julius4858 I mean it's up to you what your going to charge for your work. Just don't expect anyone to buy it. Also 65k for a single job is pretty op. That's a whole years salary for some ppl.
I firstly intended to watch this video to chill and take a nap. Suddently I was trapped in the process of making this godlike sword. It's amazing to see someone putting so much effort and passion into something. Fellows, we are witnessing a living legend of swords crafting, and lucky me I watched this video, because this sword will be soon studied in history and arts in universities around the world. Than you Kyle for sharing this amazing process, it's priceless...
There’s still 7 mins left of this video and as I’m watching this I honestly can’t believe you only got $65k for it. This sword is a work of art and I’m surprised you didn’t get at least a couple hundred thousand for it. If I had that kind of money to spend I would literally ask you to make the Master Sword from Ocarina of Time and The Sword of Truth from the Sword of Truth series by Terry Goodkind. If I ever get rich you’re who I’m contacting lmao. Absolutely stunning.
Considering how this roughly ballparks to $48 an hourly rate, and for a completely one off piece of art that can never be duplicated (it can be replicated but you’ll never match everything exact), yes I’d argue $65,000 is a steal of a deal and whoever is buying a $65k piece of art could most likely afford more. Assuming I was in the wealth class to buy it, I would pay up to $150k ish give or take for something this unique
If you worked it out at 48 an hour that's very poor business. I thought the same as you ,far too cheap ,equipment to maintain ,tools ,materials , wages to pay ,bills ....should have been in the ball park of 150-200 that thing would sell possibly for more at an auction with the right buyers/collectors .
@@MPD90 you are obsessed with this idea but idea is different: Materials, tools + 1000 hours of such Craftsman work (approximately) should cost MUCH more. From my point of view this project is unprofitable if we speak about money
I’ve always been captivated by watching skilled craftsmen, but this is on a different level. It was an absolute joy to watch you pour your soul into this masterpiece. Thank you for sharing.
def, this guy is a god
a savants' thirst for knowledge is relentless!
You cant lockpick a sword, dont even try
@LockPickingLawyer I watch your channel often. Good content. 👋
omggggg it's just commercial after freaking commercial..... dislike button.
In 50 thousand years, this will be in a museum as an example of the work of one of the most skilled sword smiths of the olden days.
I see it more as the culmination of 5000 years of swordmaking. I truly think this is the pinnacle of the art, and I can't imagine a better made sword.
50 thousand? Damn😂😂
not really. with this much machine grinding instead of true hammerforging it can't even be mentioned on the same page as old masterworks
@@theannouncer5538 Neanderthals lived 650,000 years with pretty substantial technology including fire and spear-making.
@@BPFACTS88 so? its so beutiful and why not use new technology?
This is a type of sword that gets passed down through the generations within a family. Then over time ends up in a museum. Excellent work.
agreed
It would need some historical significance for a museum. More likely pawned/auctioned off by its inheritors to a private collector.
pretty sure you couldnt make that kind of sword in medieval ages
@@huruukko9419 Thats where your wrong, the European sword makers where very advanced, after all their swords had to cut though plate mail and not just cloth such as the middle eastern and Asian swords. There is a-lot of noise about the Japanese katana sword but if you research it the middle ages sword makers where much better. I think there even may be a few doco's on this platform that may help. Thanks for the chat.
@@adamtaylor7412 no they were NOT. In fact you have it completely the wrong way around. Medieval European swords were generally made of from single pieces of sheet steel, relying simply on weight to smash and create blunt force trauma. They didn't 'cut through' plate mail, they smashed it open or simply just shattered your ribs through sheer weight of force. Japanese and Korean swords on the other hand were made not only of folded steel jackets but with a different harder steel at its core sandwiched between softer steels, which they were doing literally many centuries before Europeans, and were 'cutting weapons', but they also flexed. This was due to its hard core/soft outer production, and also differential heat treatment. Basically you are talking rubbish you have just made up in your head.
I have seen several ‘making a sword’ videos and never felt so much passion and care from the maker. Congratulations, it was beautiful.
You need to watch Jesse Hu, stupid good craftsmanship
When the sword was assembled and “done” but not quite finished I thought “damn that looks good” but when you did the final polishing, giving the guard, spacer and pommel that deep dark but super reflective look my jaw was left hanging. That display of the actual finished weapon was nothing short of euphoric.
Yeah
Totally agree I was blown away.
Same, every word.
That's the 'bluing' that guns used to get, like the PPK or the HiPower or a S&W .44 magnum. Nowadays Glocks/etc. have a different treatment that's more durable. But bluing is much much prettier. It wears off though, over time/usage/rubbing.
Yep, my reaction also, exactly. I made a comment before i finished to watch, before the final stage, saying how mindblowingly beautiful it was. I should have wait, the final result is just unreal.
The fact that there is no ads in a 40 minute long masterpiece of a video just tells how much you care not only about a perfect product but also a perfect video. Honestly so inspiring.
I guess when you get paid $65,000 for less than 6 months' worth of work, you don't need to worry so much about ad revenue 🤣
literally just got an ad stop glazing
Mate, the video is the ad you dunce, hahaha 😂
@@harjutapaconsidering the work it took thats not that much
@@projectdeus9561 No you didn't. I didn't get a single ad and I literally watched every second of it. Stop glazing.
That is by far the best looking sword i have ever seen created on UA-cam or anywhere else. Nice work!!!
agreed
thank u sm :)
The iconic loot drop you use for the rest of the game
And kind of kills your motivation to keep playing. You peaked (love your stuff even though your stuff is about a different kind of Damascus).
Like the 4 GA Grandfather sword in Diablo 4.
With the gaming industries from now a days, i wouldn't call it a loot-drop... I'd rather call it a "check out our in-game store, you might like this new skin for your swords. For $79,99" type a sword for the rest of your game. 😂
Honestly never seen better craftsmanship in my life. That sword is stunning.
This is without a doubt the most beautiful blade I’ve ever seen. Completely blown away by your level of craftsmanship. I had not heard of your channel until you popped up on my recommends. I honestly thought it was click bait at first but after watching this I think the blade should be in a museum. Seriously, amazing work.
Yeah
yeah same for me
Check out the video making the heretic sword….come back and see if your answer changes hehe…
If you like how swords are crafted, you should check out the documentary on how the last samurai sword was crafted with the old technique, you're going to be blown away.. and YES! I agree this sword is a masterpiece as much as an oeuvre d'art.
Check out tyrell knifeworks damascus katana its another unbelievable peice
I don’t know how this got recommended to me but this was one of the most beautiful goddamned pieces of art I’ve ever seen. I feel like this thing is worth well over $100k, the person who bought this definitely got a bargain.
Hey thanks
Glad you’re here my friend
Dad
yea I was blown away too, I wonder who it's for? It's both very functional and very beautiful, but there aren't warlords who need such an item anymore?
@@trif55 I think he auctions then off, so someone who has a lot of cash to spend and wants a beautiful piece of art
@@Chris-rn9zx he said he was commissioned to build it. someone put in that order.
@@trif55 swords were traditionally very much the ornament and status symbol. Fires, spears, boats, axes, horses, archers won wars on the battlefield. Famines and plagues are the devil's arms. Swords require skill to use effectively, they mark out the professional, and were for duelling and display, and working in tight spaces. They were always a status symbol, the implement of honour, and are still present in the regalia of the military. If necessary, they'll get used. They're totally serviceable, as is this one, and won't run out of ammunition.
Should not be confused with the dagger, gladius, cutlass or machete. Those are for chopping anything and everything, as much a tool as an item of battlefield weaponry.
The samurai favoured swords which have never tasted blood as items of honour and beauty. A murder-stained blade was not favoured for open display.
A sword that could kill but doesn't is a beautiful thing indeed.
The whole time watching this, I kept thinking to myself that this is the most beautiful sword I have ever seen in my life, and I’m so happy to come to the comments after watching the video and see that so many people feel the same way. This thing is spectacular!
Thanks jeremy
Glad you’re here
Dad
Arthur would set the world ablaze just to get his hands on this sword. imagine his blacksmith had been able to watch this clip
wow
This is the first time I’ve seen one of your videos and to be honest, I thought the title was “clickbait”.
For me, owning something like that sword is an unobtainable dream. It is easily one of the most beautiful things I’ve ever seen.
I’m not sure any one man, or woman can own something like that. Something that beautiful and well made belongs in a museum somewhere for all of us to admire.
You sir, are more an artist and a true craftsman. You’re on a level that’s completely out of this world.
Thank you very much for sharing your gift with us.
Not all clickbsits are bait and switch... 😁
Calm down buddy lol
@@BKoyuncu85 nothing wrong with praising those who deserve it. There's enough negativity around, don't add to it.
@@brycefalloway hahah bro i love it its just a little much was havin fun no negativity
@@BKoyuncu85the amount that you contradict yourself in one comment😂 yes you were negative for no reason, your jealousy is showing still 2 years later
I feel like it's hard to find a blade worthy of a king.
You made a blade for which you'd have to find a worthy king.
Absolutely stunning work.
He's gotta stick it in a rock so that only the worthy can pull it out
Absolutely!
This probably the most beautiful sword currently on Earth
For the king to hang it on the wall though, you wouldn’t want to go fight for real with that sword.
@@TacoMonster4eva We live in 2022, I would NOT want to fight with ANY sword "for real". Especially if I where a fucking monarch with bodyguards and police and army on call.
@@TacoMonster4eva ya that sword is 100% decorative only, or for use in absolute emergencies only. Sneeze on that thing wrong and it scratches real bad, and almost all its value is gone.
I got lost in the awe of witnessing surgical beauty and once in a lifetime craftsmanship, intertwine into a reality escaping video. thank you for sharing your passion.
This man has his Damascus better planned out than most people have their lifes figured out.
*Lives
@@UltraGamma25 ppl gonna reply to you saying its fine or leave him alone etc
@@UltraGamma25 its fine, leave him alone
@@UltraGamma25 it’s fine, leave him alone
@@UltraGamma25 its fine or leave him alone etc
When I see craftsmanship this detailed, all I can think about is imagining offering it to a King or Queen as a symbol of peace/goodwill. This is truly breathtaking! ❤
you want to offer this work of art to dictators and monarchs?? that would be a waste....
@@dunhillsupramk3 Maybe, but is what they usually got (and get) and the rest of us are free to "scavenge for the crumbs and be thankful for it", it's been this way since the dawn of men and it's not likely to change any time soon, deal with it and welcome to the real world.
@@dunhillsupramk3 if it means sealing a deal where those dictators and monarchs wont be invading killing raping and destroying your country for next 20-30 years why not ?
I was thinking the same, this is indeed an old days royalty kind of god sword 👌
@@dunhillsupramk3 They're talking about back in the medieval times when stuff like that was commonplace.
I've watched this for 40min straight, and I still feel like I missed the part where making this was possible...
That is just unreal and incredible 🙌
39.42
Jk
@@danathompson4103 Nice one
@@danathompson4103 39.41
This world is rapidly passing away and I hope that you repent and take time to change before all out disaster occurs! Belief in messiah alone is not enough to grant you salvation - Matthew 7:21-23, John 3:3, John 3:36 (ESV is the best translation for John 3:36) if you believed in Messiah you would be following His commands as best as you could. If you are not a follower of Messiah I would highly recommend becoming one. Call on the name of Jesus and pray for Him to intervene in your life - Revelation 3:20.
Contemplate how the Roman Empire fulfilled the role of the beast from the sea in Revelation 13 over the course of 1260+ years. Revelation 17 confirms that the beast is in fact Rome. From this we can conclude that A) Jesus is the Son of God and can predict the future or make it happen, B) The world leaders/nations/governments etc have been conspiring together for the last 3000+ years going back to Babylon and before, C) History as we know it is fake. You don't really need to speculate once you start a relationship with God.
Can't get a response from God? Fasting can help increase your perception and prayer can help initiate events. God will ignore you if your prayer does not align with His purpose (James 4:3) or if you are approaching Him when "unclean" (Isaiah 1:15, Isaiah 59:2, Micah 3:4). Stop eating food sacrificed to idols (McDonald's, Wendy's etc) stop glorifying yourself on social media or making other images of yourself (Second Commandment), stop gossiping about other people, stop watching obscene content etc. Have a blessed day!
30:00
I have never seen a more perfect video ever. The craqftsmenship going into this sword and then making such an insane video about it. The music always fits and seeing you enjoying to create this masterpiece made my day. Thank you for the effort.
That sword is probably one of the most beautiful things I've ever seen.
Would look 100x better if it did not have damascus blade.
His work reminds me of when I went to see the Faberge egg collection when it visited London - I literally did not know perfection could reach that level.
I thought my Rolex watch was super special, I realised it was mass produces sh!t.
Is $65k for a sward a lot fo money - YES. Is it a lot for one of the finest creation of humanity - NO, its dirt cheap
For real, it's almost unbelievable that a human being could make this, it's incredible.
@@DuBstep115 it is the most unique sword to be made in modern time and technology master smith is not a plain title like the steel of the gods is not equivalent to the steel of peasants it is a masterpiece of only a skilled blacksmith.
@@austinthompson5648 Meh still ugly, I hate damascus on non middle east blades like long sword.
This is like Elven work out of Tolkein. Otherworldly in execution. Kyle's experience from forging Damascus into patterns and knowing they will bloom as he imagines is incredible.
I was just thinking the same thing!
I can imagine this being done in medieval times but taking a very skilled craftsman 10 years or more to complete, i am not sure if they had the right technology to do all of that even if it took long enough tbh.
Aragorn sitting here with sword envy haha.
@@sadek__4952 it was more common for smiths of the medieval period to have many more helping hands than smiths of today, given that it was a bigger industry. a smith with several apprentices, a lot of skill, and specialty tools, could probably get it done in a reasonable time. there are some amazing looking swords and armor sets from the 15th and 16th century.
Nah! This is work worthy of Telchar of Nogrod. It is said that In the tempering of steel alone of all crafts the Dwarves were never outmatched even by the Noldor. This guy outmatched them.
Holy hell this isn't even blacksmithing anymore, it's majestic art! 😍Absolutely incredible!
If you like this, you should watch the whole series :)
Maybe some magic too. LOL
Majestic indeed!
He was done blacksmithing after the first 20 or so days lol
Technically, this kind of work is called whitesmithing.
Watching what a dedicated craftsman can do has always fascinated me. I'll be 62 at the end of this month and am looking forward to taking some classes on knife making. My 18 year old nephew is a self taught blacksmith and started at about 14 years old as well. I hope to be able to work with him one day as a hobby for me, but perhaps a career for him. I sent him this video a few minutes ago and he too believes this is one of the most amazing swords ever made!
Thank you so much for sharing your talent and hard work with us.
65k just isn't enough. Craftsmanship of this level is extremely rare and should be appreciated. People pay stupid amounts of money for painting. This isnt just art, its science, its almost magic.
You did an amazing job. Bravo
This is pure art. It really made me appreciate the blacksmiths of old. Throughout the entire process, I kept thinking... "This is with modern machinery, and it's taking 4 months. How did the blacksmiths of ancient times do this? How long would it have taken?"
They wouldn’t make something like this, even ceremonial blades would never be this intricate in terms of metalwork
Nhờ sự chính xác của thước đo, máy cắt, máy hàn mới có thể tạo ra những hoa văn như vậy.
Nhưng thanh kiếm này chỉ đẹp và dùng cho nghi lễ thay vì chiến đấu được, cần phải có một lõi kim loại đồng nhất và xuyên suốt chiều dài ở bên trong mới tăng cường độ dẻo dai của thanh kiếm
You’d be surprised how much of the process in later periods was water powered.
Well, to be honest, they didn’t. They did a lot of incredible things, but the processes he uses in this video are entirely dependent on access to modern machinery. Anything even close to this would have been done very differently.
They didn’t. Lol
In the blade category, this may be the wildest project I have ever seen. For an ancient instrument of death, it's the most beutiful piece I have ever seen. Very impressed by your skill.
Thanks Jim
It's an instrument of life, Jim, but not as we know it.
It's a beautiful piece, I wouldn't mind putting it up for display somewhere. It definitely makes for an interesting conversation piece.
@@KyleRoyerKnives Its value is way over $100k
@@cybyrd9615 $65,000 is a very fair price. The buyer got one heck of a deal. The next sword like this needs to be $80,000
The level of attention to details is border line insane...the build looks so good that the final product almost looks like a graphic design or a computer generated image almost too perfect. Truly amazing guys, thank you for sharing this masterpiece.
Hey thanks
It looks like a laser etched hologram, but better.
But the fact that it is a completely functional durable folded steel blade.
It is just mind blowing.
Kyle, you come across as being a really likeable sort of guy who really knows his stuff and is happy to share. Thanks, mate. Great video and absolutely beautiful sword.
This is, by FAR, the best Damascus Steel pattern I've EVER seen
AGREE IT IS TOO MUCH
@@EinfachFredhaftGaming I keep hearing reference to this katana can someone post a link I could Google and look for it but a link would be helpful for everybody
Absolutely bananas
Meh, it's too busy.
39:23 65 thousand dollars for a sword where the art is off center? LMAO.
The amount of effort and time on a single sword is unreal. Keep up the good work!
Hey thanks
So it takes a lot for me to actually make comments on a video , but I am absolutely blown away by your craftsmanship. The level of detail and dedication you put into your craft along with the video speaks volumes about you as a person. Keep it up man you should be proud
Hey thanks Thumper. May God bless you and your crew my friend.
Dad
@@KyleRoyerKnivescan u please tell me how u gun blue ur parts I have a 1911 that I’m absolutely in love with but the Finnish is terrible and nobody wants to tell me how they get that gloss black bluing if u don’t mind me asking what do u use I would really appreciate some help
What an absolutely stunning piece of workmanship. Total respect Kyle...this ranks with anything in a museum anywhere that I have seen. Fantastic !!
I have no words. Absolute legend. And as a man with strong passions for crafting, though not in this area, I loved seeing how much you love and care about this.
Don't think I've ever seen a sword made this good and with such exquisite detail, and I've seen hundreds of videos like this. Truly unbelievable
That works - Sword of the Year
It's even more impressive
It took him almost a year
Okay yes this sword is just amazing. You definitely earned that title of master but can we also talk about how amazing the cinematography and analogy’s of this video. Not gonna lie the “disappearing and turning into fiery red sparks” Lind was low key beautiful. You can tell how passionate you are about your work
@@TheBosama .... 🤣
Words can't describe this beautiful sword the craftsmanship is second to none loved the video.
When he pulls out the measuring tools and starts to take care of fractions of milimeters you know it's something else
Such a fantasy of a blade, hats off
I had to pick my jaw up off the ground after seeing this. This is such an incredible blend of engineering and art and metalworking and it comes together in a way that's honestly priceless
Hey thanks
I've been watching videos like this for years (thanks Forged in Fire) now. I have never had one in which the process and the outcome gripped me on such an emotional level. You could feel the patience and passion from Kyle, the quality of the video and music in it was top notch. Then there's the finished masterpiece. That is the most stunning sword I have seen. Just inspiring, you should be proud.
I agree 100% with your sentiments! I've come back and watched this build three times.
Kyle, I've been watching you about a year now man and I gotta say: your work is ALWAYS gorgeous. Your attention to detail is phenomenal. You videos are also top notch bro. Keep em coming.
Can we take a second to appreciate how good this is as a video? The camera work and editing are awesome and I'm sure there was just tons of footage to edit down. And goddang that sword belongs in an art gallery.
I thought this too. This is TV level editing and narrating. I'm falling asleep but didn't wanna skip to the end bc it's good as a video too 😂
Sir that is the most beautiful sword I’ve ever seen in my life and the person who commissioned it got a deal at that price.
I don’t often watch a 30 plus minute video of someone making something but I enjoyed every second
Thank you
Uncle James? Lol probably not but you and my estranged uncle have the same name, the very fact you wrote more than a few words let's me know you're not him haha
I have been a huge fan of "Forged in Fire" over the years, and have seen every episode. Thought I've seen everything possible, you sir, have just surpassed anything I have seen. Truly a master craftsman.
That show kind of sucks because everything is so rushed. A true master takes his time and makes it perfect, ie. Kyle.
Often they make sword shaped objects because they are going to be severely tested. They are very good weapons but are often over built and thus not very nimble or alive in the hands. I sincerely doubt this gorgeous weapon would survive their torture tests as well, but it would be far more functional in an actual sword fight because it’s built like a weapon and not like a weapon shaped object designed to survive severe abuse.
@@john-paulsilke893 tbf weapons need to survive abuse, they hit other swords, chain mail, ect. so to say they wouldnt be good weapons is kinda weird, its the oposite imo, those were made for combat and this was made mostly to be ornamental. especially with how the balance point is 6 inches past the guard, most swords are in the 2-4inch area, so this thing is definitely unwieldy compared to one made with cutting in mind
Amazing craftsmanship for an ornamental sword but id probably pick something off Forged in Fire 10 out of 10 times
@@brertt8350 While I agree that fighting swords need to stand up to abuse, your point about balancing is wrong. The place you want to put your balance point depends on the usage of the sword. The further your balance point, so long as you can still accelerate the blade properly, the more of a cutter it is. And It's funny you talk about having cutting in mind, because while cut and thrust swords have a balance point in the 2-6 inches range (mostly depending on how much they lean towards one or the other and if they're made for one or two hands), dedicated cutters such as sabers often have their balance point in the 5-8 inches range depending on various factors such as period, and if it was meant for use on horse back. On the other end of the spectrum, you have dedicated thrusters that would sometimes have their point of balance behind the guard to make the point as nimble as possible.
This is very much a cut first blade. It's absolutely usable for thrusting, but this is far from something like a type XV blade. And at 47 inches of total length it's very much more of a two handed longsword than a hand and a half.
@@nickp3173 I mean like, in the middle of a war like in the middle ages for example when wars would be like once every like 2 months they do take their time but not several weeks.
What a masterpiece!!! I have never seen a craftman working with such genuine passion, love for the details and so accurate...The sword is absolutely extraordinary, stunning...I can just take my hat off in front of this man and shake his precious hand 😳😳😳 Best congratulation to you from Italy. Maestro Kyle
A sword so beautiful that if were to walk around with it on ancient times, people would straight up think its enchanted.
If you look at historic swords even fancy late medieval ones you'll see the etching, etc., is actually fairly crude on close inspection.
and then theyre try to kill you for it :/
@@darthkek1953 Crude, it is immaculate!?
@@An_Attempt i think he meant old swords, not the one in the video...
@@tx6088 If so, he has my apologies; I just have never seen a sward this clean before. If you found this build as good eye candy here is another one that is just as incredible: ua-cam.com/video/J433f6Yrd0g/v-deo.html
As a sword owner and seeing many master craft blades yours are on an entirely different level. The gild inlay with the bluing makes this a piece of art, and getting a symmetrical Damascus pattern is impressive this is a blade fit for a king, if you could find a king fit for it. This blade is for no mere mortal, it is legendary and there can be only one for whom this blade was for!
Thanks
The man with $65,000
@@shouldhavenotshouldof2031 Mastering the fallacy of Should with that name right there. 💪😎👍
And your answer to whom the "only one" is... That's priceless. 😂
🥴
Haha "if you can find a king fit for it." There are no kings for for a blade like this. This is the blade of a God lol
I can't think of anything more beautiful I've seen made. Wow. That inspires me to get back into my ring making! Thanks!
ive seen prob a thousand videos of people making swords but this one is easily the most beautiful sword ive ever seen
Considering people buy shitty paintings that a 3 year old could make for millions of dollars i’m surprised this piece went for only 65k. This was hands down the most beautiful sword i’ve seen. Everything on this is pure art. Amazing work!
I agree. I thought it would be worth another 20k at least. PERFECT craftsmanship. All the hand detailed work.
The ven diagram of people who want a sword, and have the money to buy this piece of art, is relatively small.
I was surprised as well. I thought this would easily go for at least 100k.
Something is OFF with the high-end art world. Like money-laundering or tax-avoidance or something sketchy.
He should have made this into an nft and sold it for a milli
The fact that it only took four and a half months and not four years for something of this level of craftsmanship to be created is mind bending.
Without all the power tools I think it could’ve taken 4 years instead of 4 months
Power tools are pretty freaking cool
@@BisexualPlagueDoctor Agreed.
Four and a half months to make it - 20 years to know how to make it in four and a half months
also 3 p[eople working on it. prolly would of taken half a year to a year solo
@@Tsnafu
Craftsmanship at its finest. You can also see the passion from start to finish. You sir, are an inspiration to all of us!
You are not just a sword smith. You are a jewelry maker.
Your attention to detail is unrivaled.
So incredibly impressed! 👍
There’s nothing better than watching someone who is good at what they love doing.
The end product is unreal. I think this is coolest thing I’ve seen on UA-cam.
That person got a bargain at $65,000. That is a museum piece, I’ve watched a lot of UA-cam videos in my life on making things from guitars to jewelry to knives and swords. I can say without a doubt this is the most beautiful thing I have ever seen made. You sir are a genius with unbelievable talent.
A car made by hand is awesome too. That one guy who builds toy Bugattis for his kid out of wood . Check him out.
Actually there's a crew building a Bugatti at Nhet TV. Worth checking
Absolutely the most gorgeous intricate sword I've ever seen. Enjoyed every minute. True talent and gift.
This is among the most beautiful swords ever to be crafted. I'm insanely jealous of the man who got to bring that home!
At first I thought that was an expensive sword and when I finished watching, I felt $65k was a bargain and it should be priced many time over!
It comes out to approx. $50/hr, minus the cost of materials which probably knocks it down to the low 40s. Extremely fair for this level of craftsmanship.
It’s about $180,000 a year for a shop plus whatever the other two are producing. Not a huge amount really. Probably make about $400,000 a year from his shop and that pays for super expensive gear, moderately expensive materials and very expensive staff. Saving some money by attaching it to their home, be even then for the skills involved and investment of supplies it’s not a huge amount. The sword is fairly priced for the work involved, the man is a master craftsmen.
@@john-paulsilke893 you say that yet a proffesionaly crafted katana imported from Japan made in the old ways by an actual sword master is almost 6 to 12 unless it hold historical significance I'm not trying to downplay his skills but it goes to show how broken the US currency and inflation rate really really is.
@@Thiccness_Is_Delicious spotted the weeb that probably cross dresses as a troll. you are trying to downplay his skills don’t even lie lmao.
comparing a katana made the old fashioned way; which is definitely easier, doesn’t take as long to make; to a custom made, and highly finished long sword is no comparison at all.
The katana wouldn’t have the same level of finish, or show, and display the same level of damascus artwork.
Keep dreaming of your katana weeb.
Edit: katanas can be nice, but they are nothing like this long sword. Imo katanas look cheap, but I’ll agree that there’s nothing like a mirror polished fine made katana with artwork; like a golden dragon in between the wraps. Still wrong to compare, because they’re in different leagues.
@@Thiccness_Is_Delicious America can be a land where limited editions of a pocket knife can regularly retail for $1,000 and still sell out. That has nothing to do with inflation. It’s what people are willing to pay, and people can afford it. Don’t knock America saying bs about inflation when we are the best country on earth to live in. I’m not defending the lost causes that live in this country, but it is what it is.
A huge long sword like this is worth it to the right collector. I imagine a rich dude who thinks he’s a Viking, or anyone that is rich and is into long swords would love to hang this on his wall. It’s the holy grail to them. The top of the crop, and no long sword can be made better.
the client for this sword got an absolute steal/bargain ..... the detail and craftsmanship is unparalleled. Congratulations on such exquisite work!
Ive never seen such beautiful craftsmanship - this is an unbelivably stunning piece of art. Made by people, for who this job is not a job, but a vocation.
One of the things I find amazing about this is the fact that no one step or action is overly difficult given a bit of training. The thing that makes the difference is doing EVERY step to perfection, in order, with absolute attention to detail. Truly masterful work.
I’m really glad this is one long video and not a 20 part series. It was so satisfying and relaxing that it made my headache go away
I so rarely comment on yt, but man, this is by far the most beautiful creation I've seen. True masterpiece, impecable craftsmanship. Not sure how you could even put a price tag on it:)
thank u sm
@@talalzahid2241why are you saying thank you, you didn’t make it lol
@@BisexualPlagueDoctor i dont understand
Watching this video felt like watching a complete movie style insane masterpiece. Perfect camera work, video editing, background music, voice over and what not.
I never really get that "Wow" sensation, but I was taken back by the damascus reveal. Absolutely caught me off guard having those stars so well spaced and isolated in a pattern.
Mad skills
That sword is simply spectacular and mesmerising. It’s not one of, but THE most beautiful thing I’ve seen someone create… whoever owns that should be inspired every solitary day of their life.
I’m in awe.
Hey thanks Will. It’s overseas
Merry Christmas
Dad
That tiled mosaic pattern is absolutely brilliant. Your craftsmanship and method is unrivaled by anyone I’ve seen on UA-cam. The amount of effort you put into simply making sure the billet and pattern are done to perfection is enviable, to put it mildly.
Hey thanks my friend
Dad
I am not in the forging trade, but I am fascinated by the craft and have seen many knife and swordmaking videos, but oh boy, this one is just mesmerizing. I caught myself uttering a loud 'wow' a couple of times after seeing how incredibly fine and detailed your work is. I must say that YT is a real phenomenon. Where else would we be able to watch such a captivating 40min long video of pure master craftsmanship?
Cinematography, labor, everything was 10/10 with this. Literally THE BEST sword smithing I have ever witnessed.
I honestly think, this is one of the most stunning swords I’ve ever seen. Seriously your work is exceptional. Well done!!
Thanks Mark
This is easily the most gorgeous piece of craftsmanship I have ever seen.
I don’t have the words to praise your work. This is on a surreal level. You forged a legend.
I remember following this build when it first started. It was what drew me to your channel and have been loving it since. Your attention to detail is simply uncanny. You are an amazing bladesmith and an absolute master of your craft.
Hey thanks
The surface finish makes this look so unreal, like a completly flawless 3d render. Such amazing work!
Your art elevates us as a species. I have watched these multiple times. Thank you.
Hey Thanks my friend
Dad
His art elevates him, the rest are just watching.
The cinematic footage of grinding the front spacer ... So peaceful.. SUBSCRIBED!!!
Your dad is definitely a genius teaching you all this! It’s awesome to see someone doing what he loves like nobody else.wonderful vid
I remember watching this series as it came out, itching for the next part every week. I hope one day you make another sword 😍. Beautiful work as always Kyle, congrats!!!
I got teary-eyed. It's SO beautiful. Best looking blade I've ever seen. The off-white bone looking handle with lines in it isn't doing it for me, but every single other aspect is incredible beyond belief.
Hey thanks
I felt the same way about ivory until I actually held it in my hands. It’s texture, iridescence, and feel are like none other. You’ll see.
Glad you’re here.
Dad
No just blades, it's the best looking man-made object I've ever seen. I've never been so attracted to a thing in my life, my heart actually started to beat faster lol. I need to start practicing historical swordfighting, so I have an excuse to buy a sword that's at least 10 % as beautiful as this.
This was more then art, this was magical.
Never ever have I seen a sword like this, build by real craftmanship. Wauw!
Wow indeed. A true labour of love that turns into a work of art. I mean I was blown away at the 1st etching let alone the final result. That pattern is incredible and your level of craftsmanship is 2nd to none. Congratulations mate keep up the work.
Hey thanks
Chao
Team Royer
Imagine making such a sword during medieval times, surely people would think you're some sort of magician and your blades have special powers ! Joke aside, this is an astonishing masterpiece like no other. Thank you for sharing, it was a pleasure to watch the entire process and witness you putting your soul into this project.
Man I was literally thinking that, back then he would have been given land and a castle for it ahahah
I don't know how common of a skill it is.
But, my jaw dropped when i saw the semi-random/semi-intentional Damascus pattern...🤯
You are an artist, a craftsman, an expert metal worker..👏🏼
I enjoyed watching this big time!!!
Kepp'em coming...🙋🏻♂️🙏🏼
❤️❤️❤️
The music that kicks in at 7:30 is the new anthem of legendary weapon construction. A most montage’ worthy piece.
A compliment to whoever put your film together. Top notch filming and editing. Cable documentary quality. GJ
That damascus pattern was incredible! Truly a spectacularly beautiful piece. I love how he took one bar and cut and turned it just right to make distinctly different patterns all chaining through each other perfectly. Bravo Sir!!
Thanks
Scottish gunmakers can approach this quality. David McKay Brown's builds of the Dickson Round Action shotgun were the highest quality of precision engineering combined with supreme functionality and sheer beauty - that I've ever seen. If that Roger sword had sold for double or treble the price declared I'd have been surprised - not at all. Sir, you are an artist on top of all the other specialisms displayed in this weapon's creation. Thankyou for making the video I just watched, entranced by your perfectionism. That's perhaps more rare today than it's ever been.
With all due respect, raise your price! You have a gift of craftsmanship! I’m confident people would pay way more if you include a link to this video to your listing! Your obsession to detail and perfection is a disciple in itself! Love this video keep up the wonderful work!!
Saw every second of the making you put on the tube here. This mashup of metal, Gold, ivory, chemicals, sweat and maybe blood and tears is a piece of Art!! That is not blacksmithing, that is sculpting Metal.
Glad that everything turned out good for the whole royer Clan. You people are deserve way more subscribers and publicity!! All the best from Germany!!! 🙋🏼♂️😎
Hey thanks Ralph
May God bless Germany, you, and your crew my friend
Dad
That’s truly something to behold, whoever commissioned it must be beyond thrilled
I can’t believe the Damascus pattern you were able to achieve with this sword. That and all the other touches had me blown away. It’s surreal to see something so perfect be made by a human being.
Congrats dude! Amazing work.
Been watching for a while and definitely the best craftsmanship I've ever seen. I would love to own a piece. Truly works of art.
This is THE most stunning piece of art and weaponry in one i have ever seen. Ive watched ALOT of smiths forge weapons of all kinds. This was hands down the best one ive seen in 20 years and was an absolute pleasure to watch from beginning to end. And in all honesty, im jealous af i dont own this! Whom ever owns it i hope is displaying it for the world to see! Be proud of yourself! Absolutely amazing!
arguably one of the most beautiful blades ever forged in modern day, I just wish your makers mark had a little more finesse to it than just plain ALL CAPS block letters
Exactly what I was thinking
Less is more my friend. Less is more.
@@FOFBASS1 then in that case he should have hidden his makers mark on the tang like most great smiths. But since the makers mark is not hidden it would only be right to put a little more finesse into it than just BIG (it is not even subtle) plain ALL CAPS block letters
@@akeyasa2228 ah yes, mosaic damascus steel blade fluted ivory grip 24k gold inlay guard diamond tipped pommel... the very definition of "simplicity" indeed
This world is rapidly passing away and I hope that you repent and take time to change before all out disaster occurs! Belief in messiah alone is not enough to grant you salvation - Matthew 7:21-23, John 3:3, John 3:36 (ESV is the best translation for John 3:36) if you believed in Messiah you would be following His commands as best as you could. If you are not a follower of Messiah I would highly recommend becoming one. Call on the name of Jesus and pray for Him to intervene in your life - Revelation 3:20.
Contemplate how the Roman Empire fulfilled the role of the beast from the sea in Revelation 13 over the course of 1260+ years. Revelation 17 confirms that the beast is in fact Rome. From this we can conclude that A) Jesus is the Son of God and can predict the future or make it happen, B) The world leaders/nations/governments etc have been conspiring together for the last 3000+ years going back to Babylon and before, C) History as we know it is fake. You don't really need to speculate once you start a relationship with God.
Can't get a response from God? Fasting can help increase your perception and prayer can help initiate events. God will ignore you if your prayer does not align with His purpose (James 4:3) or if you are approaching Him when "unclean" (Isaiah 1:15, Isaiah 59:2, Micah 3:4). Stop eating food sacrificed to idols (McDonald's, Wendy's etc) stop glorifying yourself on social media or making other images of yourself (Second Commandment), stop gossiping about other people, stop watching obscene content etc. Have a blessed day!
This sword is absolutely incredible. I'd like to see you take a stab at forging a damascus katana. It would look amazing!
Great mind man, katanas are my favourite weapon mainly because im obsessed with the Japanese culture but a Damascus Katana will be soo beautiful and amazing
@@sgg_02x weeeeeb
@@Mike-om4tv A weeb is obsessed with anime / manga. Not even liking, but seriously being obsessed (usually wearing clothes with anime things or having posters / figurines of certain characters) Hence why my profile pokes fun at them, since it's pretty weird. I like anime, but definitely not to that degree. Someone obsessed with the culture might just be really interested in the history of Japan, which isn't weird, seeing that it is a really interesting and broad subject.
@@sgg_02x weeb
Objectively wrong. The term 'weeaboo' originated on 4chan a virtual aeon ago, back in the day the slur used to be 'wapanese' (Wannabe Japanese) and generally referred to anyone who obsessed over Japan, or anyone who might be described as a 'Japanophile' (as opposed to taking a casual or academic interest, for example if you think Japan is the most glorious country in the world with more advanced tech than anyone else, or if you think katanas can cut through steel because they're the bestestest weapon... then you're a weeaboo)
The mods and admins, being giant weebs, of course didn't like this and added a word filter turning all instances of 'wapanese' to 'weeaboo', but the joke's on them -- it stuck and even after the filter was removed they kept calling people weeaboos. This later got abbreviated to 'weeb', now most weebs like anime and/or manga far more than they probably ought to, but it's by far not the only distinguishing factor of a weeaboo.
TL;DR weeb refers to anyone who idolizes Japan/has an unrealistic view of Japan.
I thought 65k for a sword was insane. But the amount of time that took and the amazing detail. Your buyer certainly got a 1 of a kind amazing sword!
65k for a sword is still insane. I don't care what level of craftsmanship it has, the lord god could hand forge it and 65k would still be overcharging.
@thalmorjusticiar1 You can't be serious? Someone in modern times caring enough to pattern Damascus steel the way this Master Craftsman does?
Besides, the Lord God Himself created everything this Master has in his shop, and blessed him with a skill but a rare few posses!
Given the time, tools, materials, expenses, and expertise in the 4 MONTHS of making this exquisite masterpiece, I'd say the buyer feels he's getting a "steel!"
@@The_new_guy2803 you're really overselling the time spent. he wasn't hammering for 4 months, it took 4 months from start to finish, which means well under a month of actual labor assuming he's doing other pieces to, y'know, buy food and utilities.
damascus is a science, it's not complicated to do if you understand topography, and he clearly has experience with damascus. not to mention that tons of blacksmiths in "modern times" (irrelevant article, by the way) specialize in specifically pattern damascus.
the 24 carat gold inlay is singlehandedly carrying the price, every other material is standard for weapon smithing.
I'm not discounting the smith, blacksmithing is skilled labor despite what many believe, and he's an excellent craftsman, however damascus is not a lost art and only marginally increases the value of a piece. it's by no means a "steel," as you so elegantly put it.
for the record, I was being facetious about not buying a sword from god, I'd certainly buy it and resell it to the vatican for billions.
@@thalmorjusticiar1 8-12 hours a day, yeah no its worth it
@@thalmorjusticiar1There are people who paid over 100G for a sword nowhere near this level of craftsmanship!
I’m actually surprised it went for such a “low” price. This was literally a kingly blade. Considering it is also art (and ridiculous ink-blot paintings can go for over a million dollars) I sincerely thought it would sell for triple that price or far better.
Anyway, I’m happy for the gentleman, and look forward to seeing his next sword project.
Exactly my thought. It should be at least 150k
@@lokikokoko5833 I thought that if he would sell that for $65k -he might make me one for 70 lol
@@lokikokoko5833 only gems and shit will let the pricing go up that high.
@@thefattesthagrid but working for over 4 months more than full time and only getting 65k that you don’t even get to keep for yourself is kinda low. This is such a skilled craftsman, I kinda can’t believe how cheap that is.
@@julius4858 I mean it's up to you what your going to charge for your work. Just don't expect anyone to buy it. Also 65k for a single job is pretty op. That's a whole years salary for some ppl.
There are no words to describe this art that you have made. This is beyond ‘making a long sword’. Brilliant!!!
I firstly intended to watch this video to chill and take a nap. Suddently I was trapped in the process of making this godlike sword. It's amazing to see someone putting so much effort and passion into something. Fellows, we are witnessing a living legend of swords crafting, and lucky me I watched this video, because this sword will be soon studied in history and arts in universities around the world. Than you Kyle for sharing this amazing process, it's priceless...
I don't like watching long videos but this is the best video I've come across in a long time. Such skill and mastery. Awesome work amazing blade.
There’s still 7 mins left of this video and as I’m watching this I honestly can’t believe you only got $65k for it. This sword is a work of art and I’m surprised you didn’t get at least a couple hundred thousand for it. If I had that kind of money to spend I would literally ask you to make the Master Sword from Ocarina of Time and The Sword of Truth from the Sword of Truth series by Terry Goodkind. If I ever get rich you’re who I’m contacting lmao. Absolutely stunning.
same bro except I priced it half a mil.
@@MPD90 who hurt you?
Considering how this roughly ballparks to $48 an hourly rate, and for a completely one off piece of art that can never be duplicated (it can be replicated but you’ll never match everything exact), yes I’d argue $65,000 is a steal of a deal and whoever is buying a $65k piece of art could most likely afford more. Assuming I was in the wealth class to buy it, I would pay up to $150k ish give or take for something this unique
If you worked it out at 48 an hour that's very poor business.
I thought the same as you ,far too cheap ,equipment to maintain ,tools ,materials , wages to pay ,bills ....should have been in the ball park of 150-200 that thing would sell possibly for more at an auction with the right buyers/collectors .
@@MPD90 you are obsessed with this idea but idea is different:
Materials, tools + 1000 hours of such Craftsman work (approximately) should cost MUCH more.
From my point of view this project is unprofitable if we speak about money