Loved watching the whole process but what made this so special was listening to the outdoor sounds in the background . The birds chirping , an owl and of course the howl of a wolf or wolves .
That's awesome! I got to restore a knife last year that was passed down to my Pop. It was originally a butcher's knife forged in England in the early 1900's, but had been in a fire of some sort; the tang was melted and was missing a heap of useable pin holes so I had to turn it into a hidden tang knife. It probably hadn't been used in 60+ years but still held an incredible edge and was hard enough that I didn't have to re-heat treat it.
the author does like to from scratch, shaping and trimming wood from large blocks into fine finished products. ruclips.net/user/postUgkxD-QRFQz730FJEh4f9BYSf-nkIMIC9hL_ as another reviewer mentioned, most projects require a lot of high-dollar equipment that most of us dont have the room or budget for. But, knowing how to do these things, even if we wont be able to practice the full stack project, is still great.
Let's say that your knife was well heat treated at first. Depending on the process and the metal type, we can safely say that harden was between 50 to 60 HRC. And already temper one or two times. So the austenite is now fixed and the steel is no longer under stress. As you heat the metal again, you destroy that tempering process, even past 200 degrees. As we can see, you were close to 400 degrees, maybe more as we can see a slight red at the end of your heating process. So now your knife is considered no longer hardened, almost no austenite, back to martensite, and a big grain structured steel. Probably under 30 HRC... The only thing you could have done is redo the heat treat process. But due to the decarburation, you will never have the same hardened quality then at the start.
@@ITBR_Restoration no troubles. Heat treatment of steel is quite a complicated subject. It's expected to make mistakes at first. However knife making community can be quite harch and incomprehensive towards mistake like that. And can bring you some hate for no real reason, just to warn you.. Great job anyway!
Too hot is when you start to see colors on the blade. Too hot to touch would be around 150ish degrees Fahrenheit whereas just “too hot” in general is pretty much anything over 300 Fahrenheit.
When I think I dont have enough tools I'm going to remember that this guy RIP cut a 6in piece of wood on a vise that was shaking with a push cut hand saw.
Это просто отвал башки!!! Мы с сыном любим ваши видеоролики, не заметно проходит время. Ваша фишка в том, что вы из подручных материалов даруете новую жизнь старым вещам! Золотые руки 🙌🏻
Не часто увидишь на ютубе мастеров, которые работают по-старинке. Вместо лентопильного станка - ручная ножовка, вместо гриндера - болгарка, круги на липучке и пара струбцин. Респект от простых пацанов из глубинки.
My first time watching your channel. I like that you used simple, inexpensive tools that most people have. I was both disappointed and pleased that you left some pitting and didn't restore the knife to "like new" condition. The handle scales are gorgeous. Job well done.
Thanks for support! I will now try to explain with the final scene. According to RUclips analytics, 10 percent of viewers watch the finale, and the longer it lasts, the worse the video rating becomes. Therefore, many authors do not delay the end of the video. If you want, I will publish a photo of the knife in the "Community" especially for you?
I'm an old guy and through my foggy memory I recall a factory knife with that shape guard. I believe it's a Rigid, and I think they were made in Colorado
I’ve done little to no knife builds/restorations,but is this where I chime in and tell you everything you did wrong 🤣 Beautiful work a pleasure to watch
I love the pitting that was left, looks old and new at the same time. What an intriguing choice of wood too. I haven't heard of stabilized wood before, that's really neat
Excellent refurbishment/ restoration, I like it, nice paint, hammered finish works well on machines and the double rubber sealed bearing was an excellent choice also . Thanks for the video
Looks awesome! Definitely softened the steel quite a bit by heating it that much though. It'll probably be around 45-50HRC. If its a simple high carbon steel, tempering is usually done around 250C, anything beyond that will get it pretty soft. Should still be quite tough, just might go dull quite fast.
Awesome video as always! Just a tip, next time you build a knife put a pin in the hole after you drill the first pin hole. I realize you had everything clamped up but you still run a high risk of everything shifting and the holes not lining up. 👍🏼
I’m a girl never fully understanding what’s going on, but that was incredibly satisfying and I loved the difference! That wood definitely was the best choice
Excellent craftsmanship. I personally did not like the modern blue part put in with the wooden parts. Should have been something like dark grey or dark brown even. Black or perhaps white would work too, if you wish it to stand out.
@@tribeofshugbazz I personally disagree with that. It's a very different contrast, a plain plastic green. Better match than bright red or yellow obviously though.
I love the blue and yellow in the wood and the natural pitting in the blade. A nice, stark contrast from the beautifully crafted handle and those special pins for holding the grip scales on top it off perfectly. :) Beautiful knife. I'm definitely subscribing. :)
Beautiful work on the handle , funny , in the beginning when you tapped on the blade , my son said " Dad l think it's lunch time ... " great work on this knife.
To blue with boiled linseed oil you need to heat it up past the smoke point which is about 110C. Going to 200C will ensure ample temperature. 400C is way too high, so I hope it didn't ruin the steel tempering.
@@ITBR_Restoration hey just so you know the temperature scale you may ne looking at for tempering sounds like it's for high alloy stainless steel. This blade was more than likely carbon steel which tempers at a much lower temperature 200c to 232c. That blade and the colors you went to tell me that the blade is not very hard.
Hej! To jest drewniany blok z drewna jesionowego! Chodzi o specjalny płyn do impregnacji. Możesz dowiedzieć się więcej na ten temat, wyszukując „Stabilized Wood” na RUclips.
Nice work! I like to bevel the sides of the front of the scales before gluing them on. It's a lot easier. I also tape off the sides of the blade to keep the glue from going on it. Don't squeeze the clamps too hard, you squeeze too much epoxy out. I like to drill holes in the steel and dimples into the wood. It provides better adhesion.
You could really hear the difference in that steal. That there was a good stuff. It's not that still that everyone is using today. You absolutely did a fantastic job. I really loved the handle. I love wood with those types of colors in them. I must definitely hit the like and subscribe button. I am looking forward to watching more of your videos.
No bandsaw dude? When you broke out the handsaw to cut that gorgeous wood I was like TF he doing? Lol. Some work to clean up the pitting on the blade would have been worthwhile to match that beauty handle. Nice work tho.
@@pootmahgoots8482 "Nice" tools is subjective. You can spend way too much on things you can get much cheaper and do the same job. My bandsaw cost me $125. Not out of most folks budgets lol. If it was a lathe or CNC, well...
@@krob5375 expense is both relative and subjective to the individual. $125 could be chump change for others while it could be the determining factor of whether or not someone can eat for the week. I don't know where RITBR lives in terms of country but he does have subtitles that are in Cyrillic so he might be in Ukraine or Russia where he can't just go to a store and pick up all the tools to make his job easier. I could be completely off though, I'm not sure.
Oh I get it now..so he was trying to blue it? So his instructions probably didn’t take knife edge into consideration.. did it keep an edge or did the process destroy edge retention? For the future I would just buy chemical gun blue it’s cheap enough. Nice video bro
Beautiful knife even with the pitting on the blade and the handle is amazing I love the colour ( do you know what wood it is and what was used to dye it) I would be concerned about the hardness though after being heated so far and quenched the way it was but it looks great even if it won’t be the sharpest
You're right! Perhaps this is not the sharpest knife on RUclips))) But I really like these pits on the blade, and this handle !!! This wood is ash. If you search youtube for "wood stabilization" you will find a lot of videos of what this process looks like!
@@ITBR_Restoration thanks that really helps I’m fairly new to knife making and I looked at the wood stabilisation videos on RUclips and it was very interesting I hope to see more of these handle types Thanks from Australia 🇦🇺
I think that you did a fantastic restoration on this knife. The handle is absolutely gorgeous. You have a great eye for detail. Thanks for sharing. I enjoyed watching this video. I am going to subscribe 😀
Lovely result, you did a great job on this. I did shudder a bit when i watched you holding it directly below the saw when you were cutting the timber for the handle though. Hope your finger injury healed quickly! 😮
Brilliant work, love how the handle turned out 👌🏼
Thanks! The handle turned out great
@@ITBR_Restoration ㄱㄱ?
@@ITBR_Restoration 3
Pooo@@ITBR_Restoration
@@현호하 f
When that wood oil went on that handle just popped! Truly beautiful!
❤❤❤
Loved watching the whole process but what made this so special was listening to the outdoor sounds in the background . The birds chirping , an owl and of course the howl of a wolf or wolves .
And I thought it was my son.
Молодец отличная рукоять и в общем нож удался спасибо за видио
That's awesome! I got to restore a knife last year that was passed down to my Pop. It was originally a butcher's knife forged in England in the early 1900's, but had been in a fire of some sort; the tang was melted and was missing a heap of useable pin holes so I had to turn it into a hidden tang knife. It probably hadn't been used in 60+ years but still held an incredible edge and was hard enough that I didn't have to re-heat treat it.
the author does like to from scratch, shaping and trimming wood from large blocks into fine finished products. ruclips.net/user/postUgkxD-QRFQz730FJEh4f9BYSf-nkIMIC9hL_ as another reviewer mentioned, most projects require a lot of high-dollar equipment that most of us dont have the room or budget for. But, knowing how to do these things, even if we wont be able to practice the full stack project, is still great.
I love this work, especially because he shows us how it’s done with basic tools, the kind most of us have in our sheds.
Hello! Thanks for support.
Let's say that your knife was well heat treated at first. Depending on the process and the metal type, we can safely say that harden was between 50 to 60 HRC. And already temper one or two times. So the austenite is now fixed and the steel is no longer under stress.
As you heat the metal again, you destroy that tempering process, even past 200 degrees.
As we can see, you were close to 400 degrees, maybe more as we can see a slight red at the end of your heating process.
So now your knife is considered no longer hardened, almost no austenite, back to martensite, and a big grain structured steel. Probably under 30 HRC...
The only thing you could have done is redo the heat treat process. But due to the decarburation, you will never have the same hardened quality then at the start.
Thanks, I'll keep that in mind for my next project!
I'm just learning. And learned a lot from helpful comments like yours. thanks again!
@@ITBR_Restoration no troubles. Heat treatment of steel is quite a complicated subject. It's expected to make mistakes at first.
However knife making community can be quite harch and incomprehensive towards mistake like that. And can bring you some hate for no real reason, just to warn you.. Great job anyway!
@@elliotmartin2045 Thanks for warning)
@@elliotmartin2045 I've always been told if it's to hot to touch then it's to hot. Is that an accurate statement?
Too hot is when you start to see colors on the blade. Too hot to touch would be around 150ish degrees Fahrenheit whereas just “too hot” in general is pretty much anything over 300 Fahrenheit.
Beautiful work. The wood really makes it special and the pitting left behind is a nice touch. Glad it's back to a functional condition.
Thank you! It was interesting to read your opinion!
When I think I dont have enough tools I'm going to remember that this guy RIP cut a 6in piece of wood on a vise that was shaking with a push cut hand saw.
😁😁😁😁🙈🙈🙈
@@ITBR_Restoration tenacity!
@@Joseph-Colin-EXP I bought myself a miter saw. I'll show it in the next video👍.
@@ITBR_Restoration nice
How do you know he's dead ?
Круто!!! Очень круто!!! ✔️👍👍👍👑 "Мраморная" ручка просто суперская!!! Я влюбилась в ваш нож! ♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️✔️
Спасибо 💐💐💐
Думаю, что мое вчерашнее видео, так же Вам понравится 😊
You were correct, the handle is beautiful and you did a good job restoring this. Thanks for the video.
Thank you for viewing and commenting!
love the selection of handle stock. great to see results with simple workshop setup
👍👍👍Thanks for support!
Это просто отвал башки!!! Мы с сыном любим ваши видеоролики, не заметно проходит время. Ваша фишка в том, что вы из подручных материалов даруете новую жизнь старым вещам! Золотые руки 🙌🏻
Спасибо вам! И сыну привет!!!
@@ITBR_Restoration а что за трек?
@@ОлександрТодосюк-ц9с В описании к видео есть название👍
Кто эти люди ,и где они находтся ,сквозь его роботу слышны вои или собак или волков , где это ?
@@КЕРБА-м2е думаю это задумка автора, чтоб вам было интереснее смотреть 😉
Не часто увидишь на ютубе мастеров, которые работают по-старинке. Вместо лентопильного станка - ручная ножовка, вместо гриндера - болгарка, круги на липучке и пара струбцин. Респект от простых пацанов из глубинки.
🤘🤘🤘Спасибо!
Люблю когда люди делают своими руками, очень интересно и красиво.
Love the Handel color.
Perfect restoration preserving the “old look” of blade! Great did!
thanks for the support🙌
На обработке ручки пропиткой пустил слюни.красивая фактура и подкладка в тему!
Красавчик!
🤘🤘🤘Спасибо!
My first time watching your channel. I like that you used simple, inexpensive tools that most people have.
I was both disappointed and pleased that you left some pitting and didn't restore the knife to "like new" condition.
The handle scales are gorgeous.
Job well done.
Thank you for your sincere feedback!
Заготовки на ручки можно было и не оплачивать, перевернул и вся проблема решена
@@СергейСоловьев-ц8р тогда изначальный рисунок древесины не будет совпадать.
Ох ты...Какой удачный дизайн у этой ржавой железки! Стоит того, чтобы этот шедевр реанимировать! Мастеру -- Салют!
Great restoration and nicely filmed.
Please have a longer section showing the finished product so we can enjoy your work.
Thanks for support!
I will now try to explain with the final scene.
According to RUclips analytics, 10 percent of viewers watch the finale, and the longer it lasts, the worse the video rating becomes. Therefore, many authors do not delay the end of the video.
If you want, I will publish a photo of the knife in the "Community" especially for you?
That handle is incredible.
I'm an old guy and through my foggy memory I recall a factory knife with that shape guard. I believe it's a Rigid, and I think they were made in Colorado
Thank you! It was interesting to read your opinion!
Complimenti bel lavoro .
Putting the oil on is always my favorite part that’s when the real beauty of the handle comes out and you can see it for what it truly is nice job
This is also my any stage in the work!
I’ve done little to no knife builds/restorations,but is this where I chime in and tell you everything you did wrong 🤣
Beautiful work a pleasure to watch
I love the pitting that was left, looks old and new at the same time. What an intriguing choice of wood too. I haven't heard of stabilized wood before, that's really neat
You were right. Gorgeous handle!
You're handles are perfect. I watch knife restoration just for handle
Обожаю такие видосы перед сном. Ни каких разговоров, только звуки 😁 Автор молодец!
По англицки рассказывает, переводчик надо включить. А надписи на флаконах по русски.
Excellent refurbishment/ restoration, I like it, nice paint, hammered finish works well on machines and the double rubber sealed bearing was an excellent choice also . Thanks for the video
I was so looking forward to seeing what that wood looked like finished. Worth the wait! Unusual and gorgeous.
I really like the blue inserts and the pins you used on the handle! !! !!!
I love these inserts too!👍
Браво мастеру! Дал вторую жизнь ножу, сделанному с любовью и знанием дела предыдущим мастером из хорошо закаленного металла. Класс! 👍👏
👍👍👍
3:20 now that’s a man that’s proud of his wood 🧍🏻♀️
Absolutely Beautiful and Awesome blade!!! You have an amazingly beautiful blade!!!
Thanks for support.
Glad you liked it!
Excellent choice of wood for the scales! She’s a real beauty.
I really liked it too! Thanks!
Looks awesome! Definitely softened the steel quite a bit by heating it that much though. It'll probably be around 45-50HRC. If its a simple high carbon steel, tempering is usually done around 250C, anything beyond that will get it pretty soft. Should still be quite tough, just might go dull quite fast.
Thanks for the support and advice! I will definitely check the hardness of the metal as soon as possible!
@@opinionsvary Thanks for the helpful tips!👍
Happy birthday ulit nak♥️♥️♥️God Bless You always🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻
theres always a fucking smartarse that knows or professes to know more than anyone else
Well done. Especially for having minimalist tools 🔧. Shows you don't need a shop full of tools to do amazing things. 👍
Yes you are right. Thank you!
Awesome video as always! Just a tip, next time you build a knife put a pin in the hole after you drill the first pin hole. I realize you had everything clamped up but you still run a high risk of everything shifting and the holes not lining up. 👍🏼
Thanks for the support and great advice!
I was worried for minute because of how big that handle was. It turned out sweet!
I really enjoyed this restoration! Nice to see someone work with the same tools i already have in my garage…well done!
Thank you. I have a goal. I want to show the audience that you can do what you love with minimal tools.
@@ITBR_Restoration you succeeded! “Subscribed”!
Beautiful!! Congratulations!!!
Bravo! Beautiful restoration and gorgeous handle.
Thanks for appreciating my work.
Now I am making a belt grinder, and in the future I will process all the handles and blades on it.
Wow , what a craftsman. Thanks Bearhunter5
Thanks)))
I’m a girl never fully understanding what’s going on, but that was incredibly satisfying and I loved the difference! That wood definitely was the best choice
Tara, Thank you for watching and commenting.
I'm glad you liked the result!
OoOiaiaiaiiauaaaàiws
@@ITBR_Restoration izIoIO
Absolutely beautiful!
Excellent craftsmanship. I personally did not like the modern blue part put in with the wooden parts. Should have been something like dark grey or dark brown even. Black or perhaps white would work too, if you wish it to stand out.
Thanks for the support!
This was my first knife repair experience. I think if you look at my later videos you will find them interesting.
@@ITBR_Restoration Thanks, I will.
How come your English is so good? Do you have someone helping you out as it's such a large channel these days?
I liked how the blue spacer matched with the tones of the handle. It made the blue in the wood stand out.
@@tribeofshugbazz I personally disagree with that. It's a very different contrast, a plain plastic green. Better match than bright red or yellow obviously though.
The new multi pin rod you pinned the handle with is nice and the wood color is great. Nice work. When your finger gets sore you can soak it in cider.
Класный нож!А рукоять вообще супер! 👍 и подписка однозначно)
Благодарю за поддержку👍👍👍
One of the most beautiful restorations I’ve ever seen . Period.
🤗🤗🤗 Thanks!!!
I love the blue and yellow in the wood and the natural pitting in the blade. A nice, stark contrast from the beautifully crafted handle and those special pins for holding the grip scales on top it off perfectly. :) Beautiful knife. I'm definitely subscribing. :)
Thanks for commenting and subscribing😉
nobg! NBC's
Gorgeous work!
Beautiful work on the handle , funny , in the beginning when you tapped on the blade , my son said " Dad l think it's lunch time ... " great work on this knife.
Funny situation)))
Lord have mercy. Not going to lie dude, that is hands down one of the most beautiful knives I've ever seen. I cried a little. Lmao
What? Are you serious?
If yes, then I am very pleased to read this!
@@ITBR_Restoration I did. It's the beauty in the knife. You did such an amazing job dude
@@BobMarley-dk9hn Thank you!
@@ITBR_Restoration you're incredibly welcome. And you sir, are incredibly talented. These knives turn out breathtakingly beautiful. This is art
This would be much more interesting to watch if you had explained what you were doing, materials you used, how the de-rusting process worked etc.
If others didn’t
@@front2d168 If what others didn’t what?
@@SandyL0uise if others didn’t gigachad scream
@@front2d168 jesse what the fuck are you talking about
What a beautiful piece of fine craftmanship..
To blue with boiled linseed oil you need to heat it up past the smoke point which is about 110C. Going to 200C will ensure ample temperature. 400C is way too high, so I hope it didn't ruin the steel tempering.
thanks, everything is fine with the hardening! hardening can be lost if heated above 600C.
@@ITBR_Restoration hey just so you know the temperature scale you may ne looking at for tempering sounds like it's for high alloy stainless steel. This blade was more than likely carbon steel which tempers at a much lower temperature 200c to 232c. That blade and the colors you went to tell me that the blade is not very hard.
Ю
FY. Buang
Buang
Very nice work without many tools love that! Congratulations
Thanks for support. You're right, it was a simple repair, without complex equipment and tools.
That handle is a thing of beauty!! Great restoration and overall craftsmanship 👍🙏👏
Thanks for the support! I'm still learning the art
Turned out beautiful.
Thank you! I also enjoyed it very much!
@@ITBR_Restoration you're very welcome. Keep doing what you are doing you're doing great.
Great looking knife RITBR! Would love to see you make a sheath for the blade in the future! 🔪
Thanks!
I would be interested in experience in the manufacture of scabbards!
Absolutely beautiful knife handle and you made it look so easy, well done great job
Thanks! I fell in love with this wooden block at first sight!
@@ITBR_Restoration I can see why it’s a lovely piece of wood so many colours within it
You started off with some pink lemonade I see. I like the color of the handle
Как всегда по красоте 🔥🔥🔥
Благодарю!😉
That pitting adds so much character to the blade. that handle is icing on the cake .. awesome job!
Thanks! I also really like these pits from corrosion!
Na prawdę najpiękniejszy uchwyt jaki w życiu widziałem 😳👍 z czego jest ten materiał? Chyba nie z drewna?
Hej! To jest drewniany blok z drewna jesionowego!
Chodzi o specjalny płyn do impregnacji.
Możesz dowiedzieć się więcej na ten temat, wyszukując „Stabilized Wood” na RUclips.
@@ITBR_Restoration łał! Powiem Ci że szczerze mnie zaskoczyłeś, spodziewałem się bardziej jakiegoś sztucznego materiału. Dziękuję za odpowiedź. 🙂
I didnt expect to like the look of the blue spacers in the handle but I love it! The title is true it’s gorgeous
Nice work! I like to bevel the sides of the front of the scales before gluing them on. It's a lot easier. I also tape off the sides of the blade to keep the glue from going on it. Don't squeeze the clamps too hard, you squeeze too much epoxy out. I like to drill holes in the steel and dimples into the wood. It provides better adhesion.
Beautiful 👏👏👏
You could really hear the difference in that steal. That there was a good stuff. It's not that still that everyone is using today.
You absolutely did a fantastic job. I really loved the handle. I love wood with those types of colors in them.
I must definitely hit the like and subscribe button. I am looking forward to watching more of your videos.
Thanks. It was great to read your comment!
In the near future there will be another knife, an older one, and it will have a more beautiful handle!
Looks amazing
No bandsaw dude? When you broke out the handsaw to cut that gorgeous wood I was like TF he doing? Lol. Some work to clean up the pitting on the blade would have been worthwhile to match that beauty handle. Nice work tho.
Thanks!!!
Ies
Not everyone has the money to afford all of the nice tools.
@@pootmahgoots8482 "Nice" tools is subjective. You can spend way too much on things you can get much cheaper and do the same job. My bandsaw cost me $125. Not out of most folks budgets lol. If it was a lathe or CNC, well...
@@krob5375 expense is both relative and subjective to the individual. $125 could be chump change for others while it could be the determining factor of whether or not someone can eat for the week. I don't know where RITBR lives in terms of country but he does have subtitles that are in Cyrillic so he might be in Ukraine or Russia where he can't just go to a store and pick up all the tools to make his job easier. I could be completely off though, I'm not sure.
Did anyone else hear the wolf howl in the background? Just made the video that much better!
Did you hear that too???
Wow that was excellent. Looks pretty cool 👍 very nice job. What happened to the finger ?
That handle is incredible
Thanks!
Bandaged finger - the result of non-compliance with safety precautions😁😁😁
@@ITBR_Restoration so you had a boo boo. Safety First Remember.
Beautiful!!!
❤❤❤
A work of art!
🙏🙏🙏
Just found your videos! Subbed and can't wait to go through them all and learn everything I can about this. Thanks mate! Keep it up! ☺️
👋👋👋
Beautiful handle. Cruddy looking blade.
Excelente vídeo. Restauração fantástica e um trabalho meticuloso.
Obrigado pela visualização e feedback!
Beautiful handle love it
Thank you! There are several more videos on the channel with beautiful handles! I will be glad if you take a look!
Ótimo trabalho 🤝🤝🤝
muito obrigado🙏🙏🙏
Ficou linda, parabéns!
Obrigado por assistir!!!😉
Gorgeous!
👍👍👍
over tempered that blade, went way past blue, ideal colour for tempering is straw coloured, and no need to heat that much to blue with oil
Wow
Thanks! I had other information regarding the temperature for bluing in oil.
Oh I get it now..so he was trying to blue it? So his instructions probably didn’t take knife edge into consideration.. did it keep an edge or did the process destroy edge retention? For the future I would just buy chemical gun blue it’s cheap enough. Nice video bro
@@williamjones7851 thought you were replying to me for a minute lol
@@williamjones7851 go away you know nothing, it is a subject I know about because as it happens I forge blades
great outcome ,
I saw you letf out the sharpening part. Maybe I can help you out with that next time ; )
👌👌👌
Beautiful knife even with the pitting on the blade and the handle is amazing I love the colour ( do you know what wood it is and what was used to dye it) I would be concerned about the hardness though after being heated so far and quenched the way it was but it looks great even if it won’t be the sharpest
You're right! Perhaps this is not the sharpest knife on RUclips))) But I really like these pits on the blade, and this handle !!!
This wood is ash. If you search youtube for "wood stabilization" you will find a lot of videos of what this process looks like!
I hope I was able to answer your question.
I did not make this bar, I bought it from an experienced craftsman (about $ 10)
@@ITBR_Restoration thanks that really helps I’m fairly new to knife making and I looked at the wood stabilisation videos on RUclips and it was very interesting I hope to see more of these handle types
Thanks from Australia 🇦🇺
Wow! piece of art!
I think that you did a fantastic restoration on this knife. The handle is absolutely gorgeous. You have a great eye for detail. Thanks for sharing. I enjoyed watching this video. I am going to subscribe 😀
Thanks for the kind words!
And for the subscription too)))
@@ITBR_Restoration You're very welcome
Kkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkķkkkkkkkkkkkkkkķkķ
:-P:-P:-P:-P;-) 990х
:-P:-P:-P:-P;-) 990х
That handle was amazing colors workmanship wish I had that talent
Like the way you left the blade too gave it character
Awesome video
Основное, это клинок. Его качество.
That blue inlay sets it off.. good choice (y)
Thanks! I really liked it too!
That's actually a great shape for a knife.
WOOW AMAZING..
😉Thanks!
Beautiful. Very good!!
super video👍👍👍👍
Thanks!!!!
Beautiful job 😊
Lovely result, you did a great job on this. I did shudder a bit when i watched you holding it directly below the saw when you were cutting the timber for the handle though. Hope your finger injury healed quickly! 😮
Turned out nice, especially the handle
The handle is awesome
Thanks!