You cannot get this great content in ENGLISH from anywhere so authentic! Nobody gives us such great traditional Japanese content better than team Shogo! They really seem like family to me!
I was really happy that he was telling you to put the steel back in the fire when it still had some color. In primitive carbon steel that you don't know the composition of, you can't work it too cold or you can create cracks that will show up during the quench.
yup, old iron is capricious and doesnt like being stretched. we say katanas are made of folded steels, but i've forged old iron bars for an old barn door that were of layered steel. Actually, all of the old iron, in europe, asia, africa, wherever, are all folded. it's the only way to clean your iron and make something solid out of it. So it ressembles a piece of wood, and has directionnal strenght. One solution to work that kind of steel properly is to forge it hot, and not hesitate to re-weld it onto itself.
Shogo, It is actually a life goal for me to make myself a blade using traditional blacksmithing like this. I can not express how proud, and a bit jealous, I am that you were given such an opportunity.
14:58 “Fire flakes” had me chuckling a little bit. Is it possible you were searching for the word “sparks” in that moment, Shogo? In your defense, it’s hard to speak a foreign language when your face is close to a roaring furnace!
I literally just watched this to see your excitement and it was so worth it. As someone who was trained in steel processing for over 3 1/2 years, I could easily follow the steps and understood what each step did to the steal, changing its molucelar set-up. Also isn't it fascinating, that people houndreds of years ago, without microscopes were able to understand what happened to the blade as it was formed, just through trial and error and teaching the next generation, what you have learned over decades of mastering your craft. Also this blacksmith seemed really patient and so nice. He really embraced the old way of learning and teaching something. It can only be done by doing it yourself. Not just watching an expert wield the hammer but experiencing: that your own wrists are not as strong; your precision not being there yet and; your eye not yet capable of seeing and understanding the craft fully (as it was for me years ago). Its humbling and also such an achievement to build something with your own hands. I am glad you had this experience. Enjoy your new knife. I'm sure it will pass down generations as well.
You don't really need a microscope to see the carbon content or the grain tho. High carbon steel shines like silver, will skid a file, and when breaking steel you will see its grains by eye quite clearly. You can also spark test it. with old tools you need to file a hot piece of the steel tho, an old grindstone will rarely produce sparks
Your excitement just shines through this video, looking excited like a child. Definitely something I would like to try if I have a chance to go to Kyoto. Can't imagine all the hard work that goes into a full katana.
Shogo: "What character do you think I had engraved?" Me and my wife: "Harumi." It would have been cool to see the knife presented to her. Great video, such a neat process and it's cool that you get to be hands on through so much of it.
I love hearing the smith speak the blade into existence. It’s not just the heat and hammer but the will of the teacher bringing out the blade. Thank you for sharing.
Imagine all the artisans through the centuries. they must have went through many trials and errors to pass down this beautiful art. can't help but be thankful to them. 本当に感動しました。
Fire is a beautiful element I still remember the shape of the fire when I was in Poland at the Witcherschool and made my first knife. Sadly we didnt had much time like you.
Freaking awesome! I make knives and almost all my knives I make are differentially quenched. It's so awesome to craft beautiful things. That is such an experience and thank you for sharing 😊
My dojo goes every 2 years I believe to Japan. If we do that again (then that's gonna be my 1st time going to Japan) then I will definitely recommend this to everyone there.
Thank you very much so go this was educational entertaining and I love watching it the expressions on your face was priceless dude you're awesome. Again thank you your friend in southern Nevada Nicholas
On a purely surface level Katana are very cool but then you find out the religious aspects of them and they sort of morph into becoming incredibly beautiful.
Thank you for filming and sharing this experience; I got the same happiness as when I have students learning their first knife in my own shop. I love watching people learn the craft.
Your series encouraged me to buy a shinsakuto as opposed to an antique and get into Iaido -at the age of 62! My shinsakuto was made by Seki-Ju Kanetoki in 1977 and is far better suited to my height than most older blades should I ever try tameshigiri. I'm a Canadian bladesmith who regularly tests his blades since I started forging 30 years ago, and I know how much stress cutting will place on a long blade, and I feel that a newer sword will be likely to have fewer stresses due to past use than an older piece- plus I don't feel as nervous about taking a chance at scratching a piece of history.
That was absolutely amazing! Your excitement and enjoyment gave me so much joy to watch. I LOVED every moment of this video!! I would definitely want this experience if/when I get to travel to Japan/Kyoto. ❤️❤️❤️
Loved this! As someone who wants to spend the rest of his years out in retirement making edged items overlooking the ocean, seeing this process up close (without the use of auto-hammers and modern tools) is very encouraging. Thanks everyone!
Amazing! Well done Shogo! Unbelievable number of exciting things to do in Kyoto, this is definitely the community I need to come to when I visit Japan.
I made a tanto from an old logger's buzzsaw maybe 10yrs ago. Cut it out with a plasma cutter, sharpened, shaped, whole bit. Even built the handle... poorly, since the blade points pretty noticeably to the right. Whoops. Still, it's one of my proudest creations: my first live blade. But the experience looked nothing like this. Like, seeing the lightning rope over the entrance to the smith's shop gave me tingles. I would be equal parts frightened and excited to be in a real Japanese shop like Masahiro's. Scared to death of messing something up. Masahiro-san seemed very gracious with his directing you!
This looked super interesting! I love katanas and I'm very interested in seeing their creative process - and by extension the process of weapon making in general. This was amazing to watch! And I have to say.. that slow airing of the flames in the dark and the sound it produces is definitely some unintentional ASMR stuff. Really relaxing.
You did well for your first time and had a great teacher. The first time, I had no teacher (I was going self-teaching; I later took some classes) and melted the steel four times, so There was nothing to be embarrassed about. It takes one year of experience to develop the hammer control needed to hit the target with ease. I always forget Japanese bladesmiths work sitting down, as I am a Western bladesmith who works standing up. 😅And I thought my Grinder area was messy. That is a Nice little tool for applying clay or dirt. I might have to make one, as I have been using my vise to do it. I cheat when I do the quench...I use a hand-held Laser pyrometer Dont supose you remember the weight of the hammers?
Shogo, konichi-wa. The US horse cavalry units found that straight swords from horseback stick in bone much more often, yanking your blade out of the hand. So you will notice that US and Confederate cavalry swords have a heavy curve to cut deeply without nearly the risk of losing your weapon. This makes martial "sense" to me that Katana, Tachi, and Nodachi started with heavy curves during the horse driven battles. As time goes by, more fighting is done on foot, so you need a shorter sword without as much of a curve. I've been doing western martial arts (full armor, full contact, all weapons made of rattan) since the mid 1980's, and swords are my thing. If there is a single book I could recommend to you, it would be "The Book of the Sword" by Sir Richard Burton. (He's a VERY colorful character with an amazing history!)
I made a bigger, survival knife-esque blade with Nakanishi-sensei. It was an exhausting process; just the pushing and pulling of the bellows drained all of my strength, and the hammer was super-heavy. However, the knife came out awesome, and I'm definitely going back to make my own small knife like the one made in the vid.
I think you're mixing annealing with hardening and reheating with tempering. Usually when you anneal something you make it softer, so you can work it with a hammer or other tools (files, bandsanders/saws etc.), hardening is what you did after applying the dirt mixture to the blade, causing it to become extremely hard and brittle - in order to normalize it - you temper it. So it'll remain hard to keep an edge, but not shatter into shards if you hit it. Still an absolutely amazing video, and I'd love to try out those techniques myself.
this is one of the things i wish i could dedicate myself to, in my experience doing manual work like that has always been so freeing!! the only issue would be my sound sensitivity :-( so being able to observe from a sound-controlled distance is really great for me!! thank you for another incredibly well-made video :-)))
Gosh I love swords so much. This will definitelly be on my list on things to do in Japan and especially Kyoto. I am so sad that where I live there aren't any Iaido classes nor smiths... Well except I haven't found them yet
Great job Shogo! You're whole face lights up you're enjoying it so much is fabulous. Now, for your next project, try a traditionally made kobuse or hon san may wakizashi! LOL. Just kidding.... but love seeing you so happy.
@@LetsaskShogo Do it!!!! You will not regret it!!!!! You set the parameters for what you like and want. I keep thinking of that picture of the Nao Shizu blade I sent you on instagram! That screams "SWORD."
so the steel is folded for the same reason potters wedge clay! that makes way more sense than what people on the english internet tend to say. (melt and squeeze out impurities. this stops making sense when you realize steel is an alloy and carbon is an impurity) it's so neat seeing how different materials are treated similarly. glass also needs to be reheated to remove internal stress before use! it's so nice seeing such a patient teacher~ hopefully he'd be just as patient with a language barrier
This is all very nice but every JRPG fan knows that the only way to obtain any half-decent katana is to hunt down and decimate the local wildlife until some creature drops one.
well aside from being x anime otaku, fire and steel are really man romance, i worked in steel files industries (if you see the part where nakani-san do some finishing to the handle after engraving 'harumi'), and the process in making steel files itself not deviated from steel and fire and moreso artisan thank you for the content shogo its really exciting watching you create something that you like and for now representing us dealing (playing) with fire and steel
this was nice to watch! very interesting and cool process! but 1 question, what are the cattles in the background's purpose in all of this? you can hear them at 29:02 🥰😂
Hi Commenters and @letsaskshogo. This video was a delight and my wife and I are hoping to also enjoy the experience in March. One question we had which was not clear is. is there English translation available to understand the instructions or do you need to organise an interpreter to also join? Please continue to make your wonderful videos and best wishes from Ireland.
I would LOVE to do something like this next time I'm in Japan (which is sooner rather than later I hope). But my Japanese is rudimentary at best. Is this still something I'd be able to do? Great video again Shogo. Thank you!
✅Make Your Reservation Here [Masahiro Katana Workshop]: wabunka-lux.jp/experiences/en_masahiro/?ref=shogo
You cannot get this great content in ENGLISH from anywhere so authentic! Nobody gives us such great traditional Japanese content better than team Shogo! They really seem like family to me!
Ikr
I was really happy that he was telling you to put the steel back in the fire when it still had some color. In primitive carbon steel that you don't know the composition of, you can't work it too cold or you can create cracks that will show up during the quench.
Ohhh so that's the reason why! Thank you so much for teaching me✨
cool!
yup, old iron is capricious and doesnt like being stretched. we say katanas are made of folded steels, but i've forged old iron bars for an old barn door that were of layered steel. Actually, all of the old iron, in europe, asia, africa, wherever, are all folded. it's the only way to clean your iron and make something solid out of it. So it ressembles a piece of wood, and has directionnal strenght. One solution to work that kind of steel properly is to forge it hot, and not hesitate to re-weld it onto itself.
Shogo, It is actually a life goal for me to make myself a blade using traditional blacksmithing like this. I can not express how proud, and a bit jealous, I am that you were given such an opportunity.
Katanas are so freaking cool!!! I don't just say that as a weeb, I say that as a lover of Japan!
I am with you man
@@otakuoppai3898 same
I say the same thing, but as a lover of swords.
Is your PFP the guy from jujutsu Kaisen?
😐😐
14:58
“Fire flakes” had me chuckling a little bit.
Is it possible you were searching for the word “sparks” in that moment, Shogo?
In your defense, it’s hard to speak a foreign language when your face is close to a roaring furnace!
I literally just watched this to see your excitement and it was so worth it.
As someone who was trained in steel processing for over 3 1/2 years, I could easily follow the steps and understood what each step did to the steal, changing its molucelar set-up.
Also isn't it fascinating, that people houndreds of years ago, without microscopes were able to understand what happened to the blade as it was formed, just through trial and error and teaching the next generation, what you have learned over decades of mastering your craft.
Also this blacksmith seemed really patient and so nice. He really embraced the old way of learning and teaching something. It can only be done by doing it yourself. Not just watching an expert wield the hammer but experiencing: that your own wrists are not as strong; your precision not being there yet and; your eye not yet capable of seeing and understanding the craft fully (as it was for me years ago).
Its humbling and also such an achievement to build something with your own hands.
I am glad you had this experience. Enjoy your new knife. I'm sure it will pass down generations as well.
You don't really need a microscope to see the carbon content or the grain tho. High carbon steel shines like silver, will skid a file, and when breaking steel you will see its grains by eye quite clearly. You can also spark test it. with old tools you need to file a hot piece of the steel tho, an old grindstone will rarely produce sparks
Your excitement just shines through this video, looking excited like a child.
Definitely something I would like to try if I have a chance to go to Kyoto. Can't imagine all the hard work that goes into a full katana.
Shogo: "What character do you think I had engraved?"
Me and my wife: "Harumi."
It would have been cool to see the knife presented to her. Great video, such a neat process and it's cool that you get to be hands on through so much of it.
I love hearing the smith speak the blade into existence. It’s not just the heat and hammer but the will of the teacher bringing out the blade. Thank you for sharing.
Naming your piece Harumi with all the three waves was heartwarming 🥰
He is such a great teacher
Man, seeing Shogo have so much fun is a treat on its own, but seeing such an interesting place too? You guys are spoiling us! 😆💖
I luv that. The additional 200g was your emotions. That's beautiful
Was an emotional video,every blade made have it's own soul. (Bows to you)
I literally love this as a whole. Amazing content and amazing blacksmithing and learning all in one.
Imagine all the artisans through the centuries. they must have went through many trials and errors to pass down this beautiful art. can't help but be thankful to them.
本当に感動しました。
Fire is a beautiful element I still remember the shape of the fire when I was in Poland at the Witcherschool and made my first knife. Sadly we didnt had much time like you.
Freaking awesome! I make knives and almost all my knives I make are differentially quenched. It's so awesome to craft beautiful things. That is such an experience and thank you for sharing 😊
So much craftmanship, feeling, observation, practice, patience and soul involved. It's amazing.
Just that smile on your face at the beginning says it all
This is something I've been watching a lot of lately. Not an easy thing to do!
Notare hamon is my favorite because I have always lived by the sea.
through your videos you showed me many cool places, I want to visit when comming to japan. This one is now on place 1 of my list
It was absolutely amazing✨
He's so happy there 💗 the fire looks cool too
The glowing forge and the flying sparks gave me a "Princess Mononoke" vibe. That was awesome, thank you !
wow! i would love to have this experience as well. someday, Shogo! someday!
My dojo goes every 2 years I believe to Japan. If we do that again (then that's gonna be my 1st time going to Japan) then I will definitely recommend this to everyone there.
This makes me so happy I could cry
You did a great job. Your heightened energy is infectious. I need to go to this wonderful place and sweat a little.
What an experience! I'd so love to make my own katana or tachi. Congratulations!
Thank you! My son and I can’t wait to do this when we visit.
Thank you very much so go this was educational entertaining and I love watching it the expressions on your face was priceless dude you're awesome. Again thank you your friend in southern Nevada Nicholas
Imagine how cool it would be to be a katana blacksmith! It seems like an awesome experience that anyone would want to do for a living!
On a purely surface level Katana are very cool but then you find out the religious aspects of them and they sort of morph into becoming incredibly beautiful.
Shogo san. Only in your video explained details of making katana. Thank you for the such valuable content.
What a amazing experience you miar have Shogo, learing na old tradicional tecnic 😍😍😍
Thank you for filming and sharing this experience; I got the same happiness as when I have students learning their first knife in my own shop. I love watching people learn the craft.
The looks like the most amazing experience. I definitely want to do this when I visit
Your series encouraged me to buy a shinsakuto as opposed to an antique and get into Iaido -at the age of 62! My shinsakuto was made by Seki-Ju Kanetoki in 1977 and is far better suited to my height than most older blades should I ever try tameshigiri. I'm a Canadian bladesmith who regularly tests his blades since I started forging 30 years ago, and I know how much stress cutting will place on a long blade, and I feel that a newer sword will be likely to have fewer stresses due to past use than an older piece- plus I don't feel as nervous about taking a chance at scratching a piece of history.
That was absolutely amazing! Your excitement and enjoyment gave me so much joy to watch. I LOVED every moment of this video!! I would definitely want this experience if/when I get to travel to Japan/Kyoto. ❤️❤️❤️
This is absolutely one of the best experiences we've ever done before! I'll remember this day forever✨
This was so cool to watch!
Loved this! As someone who wants to spend the rest of his years out in retirement making edged items overlooking the ocean, seeing this process up close (without the use of auto-hammers and modern tools) is very encouraging. Thanks everyone!
I am so envious . Thank you for sharing such an amazing experience .
Amazing! Well done Shogo! Unbelievable number of exciting things to do in Kyoto, this is definitely the community I need to come to when I visit Japan.
I made a tanto from an old logger's buzzsaw maybe 10yrs ago. Cut it out with a plasma cutter, sharpened, shaped, whole bit. Even built the handle... poorly, since the blade points pretty noticeably to the right. Whoops. Still, it's one of my proudest creations: my first live blade. But the experience looked nothing like this. Like, seeing the lightning rope over the entrance to the smith's shop gave me tingles. I would be equal parts frightened and excited to be in a real Japanese shop like Masahiro's. Scared to death of messing something up. Masahiro-san seemed very gracious with his directing you!
Buen trabajo amigo. Hermosa experiencia. Me gusto mucho el video. Gracias. 👍👍👍👍
This is awesome, you guys did a amazing job 🗡🔥
Great teacher and great student!
Your long form content is really underrated!
It was a joy watching you learn blacksmithing. So many disciplines so little time to master.
Ah, so this is a citizen of the sword smith village. The clip of Shogo holding the Nichirin in the beginning is so cool!
It was a privileged to see the process performed by a master swords maker! Thank you so much, Shogo san!
Lord you're killing me, i love forges, im gona save this vid for the future
That was so cool in making your knife.
It’s a beautiful process!
That was the best video ever I enjoyed that so much I love watching Gitana being made or knife in general I love it❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️⚔️✌️
Wow Shogo what an experience thanks for sharing this with the world.
The dedication that he had is amazing and how easy he can move the heavier hammer
Just started the video but am super excited!!!
I loved watching your experience in making this beautiful blade, well done!
I enjoy Your videos very much,I am grateful. Thank You.
This looked super interesting! I love katanas and I'm very interested in seeing their creative process - and by extension the process of weapon making in general. This was amazing to watch! And I have to say.. that slow airing of the flames in the dark and the sound it produces is definitely some unintentional ASMR stuff. Really relaxing.
You did well for your first time and had a great teacher. The first time, I had no teacher (I was going self-teaching; I later took some classes) and melted the steel four times, so There was nothing to be embarrassed about. It takes one year of experience to develop the hammer control needed to hit the target with ease. I always forget Japanese bladesmiths work sitting down, as I am a Western bladesmith who works standing up.
😅And I thought my Grinder area was messy.
That is a Nice little tool for applying clay or dirt. I might have to make one, as I have been using my vise to do it.
I cheat when I do the quench...I use a hand-held Laser pyrometer
Dont supose you remember the weight of the hammers?
Shogo, konichi-wa. The US horse cavalry units found that straight swords from horseback stick in bone much more often, yanking your blade out of the hand.
So you will notice that US and Confederate cavalry swords have a heavy curve to cut deeply without nearly the risk of losing your weapon.
This makes martial "sense" to me that Katana, Tachi, and Nodachi started with heavy curves during the horse driven battles. As time goes by, more fighting is done on foot, so you need a shorter sword without as much of a curve.
I've been doing western martial arts (full armor, full contact, all weapons made of rattan) since the mid 1980's, and swords are my thing. If there is a single book I could recommend to you, it would be "The Book of the Sword" by Sir Richard Burton. (He's a VERY colorful character with an amazing history!)
The fact that you made the hamon pattern symbolize your children and engraved 晴 into the blade is so heartwarming
I made a bigger, survival knife-esque blade with Nakanishi-sensei.
It was an exhausting process; just the pushing and pulling of the bellows drained all of my strength, and the hammer was super-heavy. However, the knife came out awesome, and I'm definitely going back to make my own small knife like the one made in the vid.
I think you're mixing annealing with hardening and reheating with tempering.
Usually when you anneal something you make it softer, so you can work it with a hammer or other tools (files, bandsanders/saws etc.), hardening is what you did after applying the dirt mixture to the blade, causing it to become extremely hard and brittle - in order to normalize it - you temper it. So it'll remain hard to keep an edge, but not shatter into shards if you hit it.
Still an absolutely amazing video, and I'd love to try out those techniques myself.
That was such an exciting glimpse into the work of a blade smith. This was a fun video to watch guys! Thanks!
Hi Shogo-san, would you consider a lecture covering what swordsmiths and types of swords did the Shinsengumi use?
I really enjoyed this video. Thank you
OMG! You had to wait for the colors to change in the heated metal! That is HARD!
This must have been an awesome experience. I hope I can do this someday. 🙂
this is one of the things i wish i could dedicate myself to, in my experience doing manual work like that has always been so freeing!! the only issue would be my sound sensitivity :-( so being able to observe from a sound-controlled distance is really great for me!! thank you for another incredibly well-made video :-)))
Perfect work. Congratulations!!!
Gosh I love swords so much. This will definitelly be on my list on things to do in Japan and especially Kyoto.
I am so sad that where I live there aren't any Iaido classes nor smiths... Well except I haven't found them yet
Great job Shogo! You're whole face lights up you're enjoying it so much is fabulous. Now, for your next project, try a traditionally made kobuse or hon san may wakizashi! LOL. Just kidding.... but love seeing you so happy.
Thank you so much Scott! But I'm seriously considering making a custom katana✨
@@LetsaskShogo Do it!!!! You will not regret it!!!!! You set the parameters for what you like and want. I keep thinking of that picture of the Nao Shizu blade I sent you on instagram! That screams "SWORD."
I am a traditional rare Mocotaganak crooked knife maker. Sensai teaches so well
Really loving this video! The whole process of creating this sword is amazing!
so the steel is folded for the same reason potters wedge clay! that makes way more sense than what people on the english internet tend to say. (melt and squeeze out impurities. this stops making sense when you realize steel is an alloy and carbon is an impurity) it's so neat seeing how different materials are treated similarly. glass also needs to be reheated to remove internal stress before use!
it's so nice seeing such a patient teacher~ hopefully he'd be just as patient with a language barrier
This is all very nice but every JRPG fan knows that the only way to obtain any half-decent katana is to hunt down and decimate the local wildlife until some creature drops one.
AWESOME video and experience! i love it.
I definitely wanna go there. May Japan fully open up soon ^_^
That's the coolest butter knife I've ever seen in my life
It was so nice to see this , thank you so much for sharing ! ♥
Nice Knife Shogo-san
Would love to have a chance to be able to try this
well aside from being x anime otaku, fire and steel are really man romance, i worked in steel files industries (if you see the part where nakani-san do some finishing to the handle after engraving 'harumi'), and the process in making steel files itself not deviated from steel and fire and moreso artisan thank you for the content shogo its really exciting watching you create something that you like and for now representing us dealing (playing) with fire and steel
Another well done & informative vid about my favorite of blades. Btw, where did you get those tabi boots?
Very well done.
this video is amazing! Dear Shogo, please consider this question: how long should the nakago be compared to the tsuba?
Wow this is so cool!!! Man I really love Japanese culture. I hope some day I can visit Japan
this was nice to watch! very interesting and cool process! but 1 question, what are the cattles in the background's purpose in all of this? you can hear them at 29:02 🥰😂
I really love katana, i make my own katana with bamboo and use it for iaido training
That's actually really cool
I'm 13 so i don't have money for buying bokken😅
Pure Art right there!
I'm jealous! xD
Another great video thanks shogo
I would love to do this.
Thank you!
Thanks.
Hi Commenters and @letsaskshogo. This video was a delight and my wife and I are hoping to also enjoy the experience in March. One question we had which was not clear is. is there English translation available to understand the instructions or do you need to organise an interpreter to also join? Please continue to make your wonderful videos and best wishes from Ireland.
Did you need the translator? I'm going in September!
I would LOVE to do something like this next time I'm in Japan (which is sooner rather than later I hope). But my Japanese is rudimentary at best. Is this still something I'd be able to do? Great video again Shogo. Thank you!