July 11, 2018 | 1 Comment The other day I finally figured out how to sharpen my hook knife and so I took a shot at making a spoon. In the end it turned out a little bit leaky. In this process I realized that I needed a decent carving knife for the outside. So that’s what I made. First I used my jigsaw with a metal cutting blade to rough out the blanks. A boquet of blanks Then I ground the profile and bevel on a belt sander clamped down to a workbench. After sanding to 120 grit I hardened it. Yesterday I tempered it in the oven at 400F. Theoretically this should put the hardness around 62-63 RC for 1095 steel, but I have not confirmed this. After tempering I looked closely and saw something funny. I don’t know if you can see it, but there is a wavy line at the tip of the blade that looks like it extends down the edge. This is most likely a hamon. Now this is hilarious to me. It generally takes a bit of work to put a hamon on a knife, but here it appears that I created one by accident. I hardened this with a mapp torch and a pile of firebrick. I didn’t feel like pulling out the 2 torches I use to evenly heat bigger blades, so I ended up heating the edge to a higher temperature than the spine. So when I quenched it there was some differential hardening, resulting in this hamon. Next I sanded the blade. I started on a handle/case combo. I’ll fit it all at once and then saw it in half to separate the case from the handle. I will probably sand and polish this some more before etching in ferric chloride to bring out the hamon. This is going to be the most pretentious carving knife ever. Part 2