Thanks man.. Yea, finding copyright free music is a pain in the butt and honestly I got tired of looking and just picked something. lol.. It'll get better as I start making more videos. Promise! :)
This is the first one of those bladesmiths I've seen on UA-cam who doesn't squish 300 layers of steel together.Makes me wonder what the purpose behind that is. I knew Japanese swordsmiths did it to remove impurities but surely the steel plates they make it from are already quite pure in the modern time/
Yes, the steel being used is plenty pure... People make pattern steel because it looks cool when you're done. You use a regular high carbon steel with a high carbon steel that has some nickle added to it, then when you're almost finished you acid etch the blade. The regular high carbon steel will turn various shades of gray to black while the nickle steel will restis the etch, giving the patern of the blade. Honestly, if I had a hydraulic press, I'd probably be doing the same thing. Hand hammering those billets however, holy moly is that a long and exaughsting process!
Awesome knife! You certainly make it look easy, but I know it isn’t! Great job!
Thanks man! Practice makes perfect... I'm still in the practicing phase. lol
Youre knife is more beautiful than the music but anyway 💯👍🏻
Thanks man.. Yea, finding copyright free music is a pain in the butt and honestly I got tired of looking and just picked something. lol.. It'll get better as I start making more videos. Promise! :)
Great job, it's all about the case. It's nice to watch. The knife is pretty. Good luck👍
Thanks for checking it out!
This is the first one of those bladesmiths I've seen on UA-cam who doesn't squish 300 layers of steel together.Makes me wonder what the purpose behind that is. I knew Japanese swordsmiths did it to remove impurities but surely the steel plates they make it from are already quite pure in the modern time/
Yes, the steel being used is plenty pure... People make pattern steel because it looks cool when you're done. You use a regular high carbon steel with a high carbon steel that has some nickle added to it, then when you're almost finished you acid etch the blade. The regular high carbon steel will turn various shades of gray to black while the nickle steel will restis the etch, giving the patern of the blade. Honestly, if I had a hydraulic press, I'd probably be doing the same thing. Hand hammering those billets however, holy moly is that a long and exaughsting process!
Also, thanks for watching! :)
Dope AF results, @creativeguiseproductionsma454! Any food service professional would be proud to own this!
Thanks so much!!!