Knife Making - Forging a Small Feather Pattern Damascus Bowie Knife

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  • Опубликовано: 4 янв 2025

Комментарии • 49

  • @martinschroeder8130
    @martinschroeder8130 Год назад +6

    I love how the centerline of the feather is right where the bevels end and the flats begin. That is such a nice detail.

    • @MakeNCreate
      @MakeNCreate  Год назад +2

      Yeah I tried making sure things lined up. Thanks man! :)

  • @ÁnláfBeraslecg
    @ÁnláfBeraslecg Год назад +6

    I finally installed that old forge you gave me! Been making charcoal for the past few days, the last batch came out great!

    • @MakeNCreate
      @MakeNCreate  Год назад +1

      Great to hear man! Send me some pictures when you get the chance! Would love to see what you do with it. Hope you're all doing well.

    • @ÁnláfBeraslecg
      @ÁnláfBeraslecg Год назад

      @@MakeNCreate Being the total noob that I am, I just learned last night that you have to line a charcoal forge before using it. So I'm working on that now. Not sure what material to use yet.

    • @MakeNCreate
      @MakeNCreate  Год назад

      @@ÁnláfBeraslecg not necessarily. If it works fine without it there's no need. I've never lined my coal forge. Start with a nice layer at the bottom and then light on top of that. Once it's going pile more coal on. Never forged with charcoal but it should burn quite fast and hot.

    • @ÁnláfBeraslecg
      @ÁnláfBeraslecg Год назад

      @@MakeNCreate There are arguments against lining the forge for sure. I think I'll will try without the lining. The problem I see is that charcoal is so lightweight I foresee issues with keeping it in a bunch. I might have to use some kind of brick to make a channel that will keep the charcoal under control.

    • @MakeNCreate
      @MakeNCreate  Год назад

      @@ÁnláfBeraslecg You could build a little chimney or hood over/around the fire pot to help keep the coal in place maybe :) Best of luck!

  • @leatherface711
    @leatherface711 Месяц назад

    Beautiful work i have really enjoyed all of your videos and work

  • @vojtechsramek8716
    @vojtechsramek8716 Год назад

    This is a work of art, sir.

  • @MASI_forging
    @MASI_forging Год назад

    What a great design. The knife looks beautiful 😁😁

  • @Gus0046
    @Gus0046 Год назад +1

    Guau que bonito cuchillo!! Buen trabajo. Te felicito 😉

  • @abumadina
    @abumadina Месяц назад

    E.R man.. i love your shop ❤
    Great work as usual

  • @LiamJPenn
    @LiamJPenn Год назад

    Beautiful work!

  • @richardbranton190
    @richardbranton190 Год назад

    Beautiful piece my friend 👍 I've been wanting a hydraulic press but I see your man press works absolutely great. There's no lines to brake or cylinders to go bad I might look into something like this

  • @victorlarignon2814
    @victorlarignon2814 11 месяцев назад

    Great video! I recently discovered a new tool called a froe (a kind of L shaped axe/knife used to split wood), that could be a cool project and a new tool for you 😊

  • @sebastiancastro61
    @sebastiancastro61 Год назад

    Gran trabajo

  • @guillermoalfaro2714
    @guillermoalfaro2714 Год назад +1

    Beautiful 🥰

  • @deivipeichful
    @deivipeichful Год назад

    what a wonderful piece of art. Always doing great job man!

  • @LoneWolf-bd6bo
    @LoneWolf-bd6bo Год назад +1

    Love how the pattern came out. Very beautiful knife ❤ keep up the great content 😊

  • @mikecurtis2585
    @mikecurtis2585 Год назад

    Very nice great work!

  • @awldune
    @awldune Год назад

    It looks sooo good 🤩 I hoped you would say something so I could hear the pride in your voice. No surprise this one's not for sale!

    • @MakeNCreate
      @MakeNCreate  Год назад

      Haha thanks mate. It sold before it was finished :) did think about doing a voice over, just takes extra time. Maybe next time.

  • @timothygamble5565
    @timothygamble5565 Год назад

    Still remember when “making Bilbo Baggins pipe” was brand new

  • @HTSTAAL
    @HTSTAAL Год назад

    Beautiful knife! I'm curious, how do you get rid of the vaseline residue inside of the tang hole before the final glue-up?

    • @MakeNCreate
      @MakeNCreate  Год назад

      Thank you! Cloth on a stick and then acetone or isopropyl alcohol.

  • @john-doe-I
    @john-doe-I Год назад

    I think hole in the tang for brass insert is too big, it weakens the knife.
    For drilling hardened steel I use drill bits for glass/tile (with carbide "spearpoint", brazed on the stem), works just fine, but not very long, 2-3 holes at max and crumble, so stick with cheap ones.

    • @MakeNCreate
      @MakeNCreate  Год назад +1

      I see your point however, this isn't a knife for chopping or heavy work. It's a small bowie that'll be used on hunts. Keep In mind that the tang is softened, completely incased in epoxy, and stabilized with a pin. You'd have to send some serious vibrations through it to break it inside the handle. Cheers mate. Thanks for watching :)

  • @BS-sh9pm
    @BS-sh9pm Год назад

    👍

  • @manbearpig2164
    @manbearpig2164 Год назад

    Why the brass on the tang hole,looks great

    • @MakeNCreate
      @MakeNCreate  Год назад +1

      To make it easier to drill the pin.

  • @williamemerson1799
    @williamemerson1799 Год назад

    Gorgeous ! Where'd you get your fly press?👍🍻

    • @MakeNCreate
      @MakeNCreate  Год назад

      Thank you! I bough it used on facebook marketplace. Made the tooling myself. Cheers!

  • @keithmoore5306
    @keithmoore5306 Год назад

    i see you switched over to propane from coal, propane is one i can't get used too nor do i like all that much! personally i feel propane doesn't get as hot as a coal forge does and it's harder to work by color with propane! by the way i've been meaning to ask, how did you like the coal you had in canada compared to what you used before?

    • @MakeNCreate
      @MakeNCreate  Год назад

      Without knowing your forge it sound like the burner isn't getting enough air or gas. A gas forge should be able to reach forge welding temps fairly easy after heating up for maybe 15-20min or so.
      But I get what you're saying. A gas forge will never have as an intense heat as a coal forge. It took me some time to adjust but I'm very happy with the gas forge. Less black boogers and dust in the lungs. Just cleaner overall.
      In Canada I used actual coal. It was imported from the US. Good stuff. Got very hot.
      The stuff I forged with before was coke, mostly used for heating. Doesn't get very hot, but burns fairly clean.

    • @keithmoore5306
      @keithmoore5306 Год назад

      @@MakeNCreatewell i never got a propane set up the gas one belongs to a guy i know who's been smithing going on 25 years and he's been using this one almost 12 years, he let me use his some to see if i wanted to switch over, no thanks i'll stay solid fuel! ( the dust never bothered me and i don't stay strictly coal i'll burn charcoal yard scrap firewood whatever, that's a major advantage in my book over propane!) but even gil says he thinks propane doesn't heat as well as coal does because it takes longer for the heat to soak in the piece, and as long as he's used it he still finds judging heat treat temps by color with it is a challenge at times due to the refractory glow.

    • @erikcourtney1834
      @erikcourtney1834 Год назад

      Yeah a proper gas forge setup will get as hot as needed. Ive melted 304 stainless steel in mine by accident. Anything over a welding heat is pointless. I have both forges, but only use coal for doing archaeological pieces that won’t fit in the gas forge. Gas is just way more simplistic and I don’t have to babysit. I believe a smith should be able to use both, but hard to do with a poor setup. Hope I didn’t sound like a dick, I’m not trying to be.

    • @keithmoore5306
      @keithmoore5306 Год назад

      @@erikcourtney1834nah not a dick! it might be i'm just used to coal and solid fuels! i admit it i prefer the older ways and things and always have (give me a zippo over a bic lighter a side by side double barrel shotgun over a synthetic stocked semi auto shotgun a flintlock over these inline shotgun primer jobs a M1 carbine over a AR15 flint and steel over a ferro rod an oil cloth tarp over a sil-ny or that cuban stuff axe over a chainsaw and so on any and everyday!!) but i do find solid fuel easier to heat specific spots better than Gil's propane rig will and it's definitely easier to discern colors with a solid fuel job!!

  • @bennylolo
    @bennylolo Год назад +10

    Only OGs can like this comment.