Another way of getting your hands on lots of knives, scissors, cleavers etc to practice on is to volunteer to sharpen all the knives at food banks and church’s. I was literally given wastepaper baskets full of great practice material. Knives in terrible condition that looked like they’d been sharpened on bricks, with tips used as pry bars or screwdrivers and none that the owners were gonna get too worried about (or notice) if I rounded a tip or ground off more than I should. It’s a win, win, win. They got razor sharp knives for free and I got lots of practice on what will be the worst blades I’m ever likely to see. I also sharpen toenail clippers for a nun that cares for the feet of people for free to help her out and get practice on sharpening different styles of clippers.
I've been a sharpening hobbyist for a few years. This is definitely a well thoughtout video with great info. He clearly did a lot of research before getting into this but a few details show his overall lack of background knife experience. Like any trade skill, you will always get better over time. A high quality strop is one of the best investments. There are many ways to remove different types of rust. Always keep practicing.
Definitely did a lot of research before getting into it. As far as experience goes, you’re absolutely right 👍 Since making this (not posting), I’ve got a decent 10+ months of experience in the Sharpening space. Getting ready to post more tips and things I’ve learned over the course of the year and growing the business. Also, strops are awesome 🔪 happy Sharpening!
I'm been in to free hand professional sharpening for a long time. I mostly deal with pocket knives, I really need to expand in to doing more kitchen knife work.
@@thechumpsbeendumped.7797 I called on a few local restaurants/takeaway and did quite well, I was passing them anyway going to work, I got at least 2 knives , one gave me 3 that were about a foot long . I’ve took it no further, but I think I might get a larger belt sander setup as the little one I have eats the belts
If I managed to charge that price in Croatia, I would be a millionaire now, the season lasts from September to December and I sharpen up to 100 pieces a day, I use everything, Tormek and stone wheels and CBN, belt grinder, and manually on stone if necessary it depends on the knife. It takes 4-5 minutes per knife, sometimes more, and it is priced at 1.5 euros
Also, diamond, lapping compounds will give you different grit strops and only need to be applied Theoretically once the level they achieve is unparalleled the single most beneficial addition to my sharpening routine period.
Hi I really liked the information in this video, I’m just a few years out from retirement and I’m looking for a side hustle that I can turn into a small business. I really look forward to seeing more of your videos and your info on 1x30 sharpening, I’ve not heard of this until it was mentioned earlier in this comment section.
good video. im considering doing this on the side as im already pretty competent on whetstones, but i have no idea how i would go about setting prices. obviously all knives are different shapes and sizes may be really beat up and require an extra level of work beyond a simple sharpening (perhaps some bad chips or a wonky profile.) i have an idea what i would charge per knife size, but id hate to surprise the customer with extra cost if i had to go way above and beyond on a particular knife.
@@AC-wl7ve check out my latest video I made for 2024. It’ll give you a good idea of what you can get going and if you want to talk a bit more shoot me a message anytime on Instagram! 👋@sharperbymichael
Typically, I tell a customer it will be “x” amount for a rust removal or repair after having seen the blade (either via photo or in person). All blades I wash Pre Sharpening and Post Sharpening. If there is minor rust I don’t even mention it or any change in pricing, I just remove it.
Could you help me and what is the price of setting up a page for me thanks so much getting out of prison and something is really love to start doing to give back to my community.
You could definitely start sharpening mower blades and yard tools! Some bladed tools however, I wouldn't really do Kitchen Blades with it. Maybe EDC/Pocket knives!
Hi! 👋 I’ll be posting update videos soon answering questions like these but to answer you, mostly residential and at this point I know how sharp I can get blades without testing however I do take complimentary videos for my customers using paper tests 👍 I’ll be investing in a Bess tester soon!
@@SharperByMichael What angle do you sharpen household knives to? We've researched manufacturers specifications when possible and try to get them to that angle.
Just make your own strop.... a piece of MDF and a couple dollars worth of leather to make you a 3x12 inch strop. That thin cheap leather on those pre-made strops is to soft. Get you a bottle of diamond emulsion (like mine avaliable on Knafsale for 23 dollars for 1.7oz) it's 100x better then wax alox compound.
Shoot me a message on Instagram @SharperByMichael - Fiverr fee's are way too high now unfortunately so I will be most likely forever on "vacation" www.fiverr.com/michaelfromecom - Happy to help you out though!
@@SharperByMichael thanks. have you had any problems with people not paying? i imagine you can automate invoice reminders and stuff if you use a CRM like jobber
@@BnibroC69 never had a problem with it - it was a major “concern” of mine and now I will sometimes tell customers to pay me once they have gotten home and had a chance to use the blade. I used crms like Housecall Pro and I’ve found it to be way less stressful strictly dealing in cash, check and payment apps. I have only had a handful of customers that absolutely needed to pay via credit card. I keep the crm on hand incase I need to process cards but I’m about to phase it out completely.
Hi Gary! 👋 dive into it! It’s a whole “world” in itself as I’m sure you could imagine given your tool and cutter grinding experience. A lot of people have blades that need fresh edges! Best of luck in your endeavors.
IMPORTANT: Do not remove "rust" from knives, this is a protective kind of rust called "patina", if you remove it, the red rust will come and ruin the knives.
You should remove the rust from a knife, especially if it's used for culinary purposes..right? I heard this somewhere but it was something like there's more ways to force a Patina than there is to skin a cat lol
@@SharperByMichael there are many types of iron rust, yellow, red, grey, back and others, having different chemical compositions like FeO, Fe2O3 (hematite), Fe3O4 (magnetite) and others, perhaps you should do some serious research about this topic and then you will come to a sensitive and informed conclusion, seriously. I do also sharpen knives in Australia as a part time job and would never use any toxic substance like rust oleum, it should never be in contact with food preparation items. I appreciate that you make videos, but before make one please inform yourself about dangers and considerations. I am not an expert but I like to read and inform myself before I do stupids things, yes I have made many mistakes in my life, I am an older guy. The reason a patina is forced (in many ways) onto a knife is to add a grey-black rust to the knife that prevents the nasty red rust. Knives with a patina cause no harm to food, in excess may cause food to taste bad.
@rybird7564 i didn't realize you were replying to my OLD video LOL. Watch my new vid, much better. Let's resume our conversation there! ruclips.net/video/J8QdcoZzXIw/видео.html
@@redangrybird7564 I think the people that actually care about the quality information or that are looking to help, will actually read the first sentence of the video description or look at the comments - then realize there's a new video - I’ll keep this one up for history’s sake 👍
Nice that a demonstrably amateurish sharpener has the confidence to instruct others. My one piece of advice would be to subdivide the video into more segments.
Hahaha hahaha bro I just died reading this, did you see the size of his wet stone????! Lmaooooo and the cheap ass compound he put on that strop without working it into the leather lmaaaoooooo he straight up started a business for teaching people something he has no idea about lmao
I also started my business in 22, and also with Work Sharp, but the war slowed me down a lot. and our prices for sharpening are five times less. but nevertheless, if not for my equipment, I would probably die of hunger now.
I run a sharpening shop that's sharpens and fixes just about everything. It's nice that you have people interested in this trade, and it is fruitful. But you're very far off how efficient you should be to actually make good money relative to your time. The ken onion is just not a commercial machine, unfortunately. And you're gonna start losing money if you use that for lawn mower blades. A tip to you and your viewers, 1x30 sharpening machines unlock crazy profits.
You are doing so well with this (to me) minimal about of $ and equipment investment is surprising. I was thinking I would need a much bigger investment. I have a worksharp already and maybe I just need to get better at it. Home or a mobile knife business is another option I am looking at. Flea markets with the exposuer from that I think will make me even more successful. I am going to watch this several times to make sure I got all the information. Very good.
Thank you, Jim! You can definitely get some amazing results (quickly too) with the Worksharp. I do home (transitioned from mobile) and I’m going to be expanding into b2b. I appreciate you taking the time to comment - feel free to join our Discord community (link in description) we’d love to have you in!
My experience, and that of many other sharpeners, is Farmers Markets are much better than flea markets. Higher volume and you can get more money for your work. People at flea markets are always looking for cheap and often do not understand value enough to pay for it.
Really bad idea to soak wood handled knives in the sink like that. I also would never use steel wool on a customers knife unless they asked me to and they wanted a rough satin finish.
AJ, I appreciate you taking the time to comment. You are correct! Since posting this, I've learned several things: Don't soak, only wash. I've now started applying Boiled Linseed Oil to all wooden handles after washing. & Steel Wool. I've stopped using it and switched to using soft sponges. Just curious, what do you personally use (cleaner) to clean blades? I'll be uploading new videos soon with updates/changes.
Hey guys, I posted a NEW 2024 video: ruclips.net/video/J8QdcoZzXIw/видео.html🔥
I recommend watching that one.
Another way of getting your hands on lots of knives, scissors, cleavers etc to practice on is to volunteer to sharpen all the knives at food banks and church’s. I was literally given wastepaper baskets full of great practice material. Knives in terrible condition that looked like they’d been sharpened on bricks, with tips used as pry bars or screwdrivers and none that the owners were gonna get too worried about (or notice) if I rounded a tip or ground off more than I should. It’s a win, win, win. They got razor sharp knives for free and I got lots of practice on what will be the worst blades I’m ever likely to see. I also sharpen toenail clippers for a nun that cares for the feet of people for free to help her out and get practice on sharpening different styles of clippers.
I've been a sharpening hobbyist for a few years. This is definitely a well thoughtout video with great info. He clearly did a lot of research before getting into this but a few details show his overall lack of background knife experience. Like any trade skill, you will always get better over time.
A high quality strop is one of the best investments.
There are many ways to remove different types of rust.
Always keep practicing.
Definitely did a lot of research before getting into it.
As far as experience goes, you’re absolutely right 👍
Since making this (not posting), I’ve got a decent 10+ months of experience in the Sharpening space.
Getting ready to post more tips and things I’ve learned over the course of the year and growing the business.
Also, strops are awesome 🔪 happy Sharpening!
Thanks for the video! I will starring my business asap, also having a culinary background, i say you did a great job! Thank you
I'm been in to free hand professional sharpening for a long time. I mostly deal with pocket knives, I really need to expand in to doing more kitchen knife work.
Kitchen knives are so much easier!
This is a sign, I was thinking of doing this as a side line
100% - you should! 🔪
How’s it going?
@@thechumpsbeendumped.7797 I called on a few local restaurants/takeaway and did quite well, I was passing them anyway going to work, I got at least 2 knives , one gave me 3 that were about a foot long .
I’ve took it no further, but I think I might get a larger belt sander setup as the little one I have eats the belts
Me too. Enjoy sharpening my own knives and sharpen my family and friends too. Hmmmm. This could be a nice side income.
Hey bro. Where to find some kind of mails. Like you give back knife to client in mails with
a ruler. Thank you
@@Ethnoworldshop I can send you a direct link, send me a DM on IG!
If I managed to charge that price in Croatia, I would be a millionaire now, the season lasts from September to December and I sharpen up to 100 pieces a day, I use everything, Tormek and stone wheels and CBN, belt grinder, and manually on stone if necessary it depends on the knife. It takes 4-5 minutes per knife, sometimes more, and it is priced at 1.5 euros
WOW 😮 maybe watch my new video it might help ruclips.net/video/J8QdcoZzXIw/видео.htmlsi=Rqs1_W3YdFMgMjyW
How did you sharpening scissors ? Is it on work sharp 😮?
@@Ethnoworldshop Kitchen & Fabric scissors yes, any convex shears like grooming shears I use a flat hone.
Are you starting up a small business? 💪
U think i can start a gig with a wicked edge pro pack 3?
Watch my newest video...I highly, highly recommend the WS Elite! Wicked edge may be a bit slow imo but still definitely profitable.
Also, diamond, lapping compounds will give you different grit strops and only need to be applied Theoretically once the level they achieve is unparalleled the single most beneficial addition to my sharpening routine period.
Hi I really liked the information in this video, I’m just a few years out from retirement and I’m looking for a side hustle that I can turn into a small business. I really look forward to seeing more of your videos and your info on 1x30 sharpening, I’ve not heard of this until it was mentioned earlier in this comment section.
What do you think about the work sharp professional precision adjust?
I think it’s a good system, just a bit slow imo for the volume I currently do!
ruclips.net/video/J8QdcoZzXIw/видео.htmlsi=Rqs1_W3YdFMgMjyW
Came here from discord. I am so stoked to dive into this this evening! Thank you Michael🙏
✊ I’m happy to help! Looking forward to seeing your journey & thank you for taking time out of your day to comment 🙏 We will chat soon!
good video. im considering doing this on the side as im already pretty competent on whetstones, but i have no idea how i would go about setting prices. obviously all knives are different shapes and sizes may be really beat up and require an extra level of work beyond a simple sharpening (perhaps some bad chips or a wonky profile.) i have an idea what i would charge per knife size, but id hate to surprise the customer with extra cost if i had to go way above and beyond on a particular knife.
@@AC-wl7ve check out my latest video I made for 2024. It’ll give you a good idea of what you can get going and if you want to talk a bit more shoot me a message anytime on Instagram! 👋@sharperbymichael
What is your opinion about using an electric pull through knife sharpener like a Chefs Choice 15XV as a first sharpener?
I would say do not use it.
ruclips.net/video/J8QdcoZzXIw/видео.htmlsi=Rqs1_W3YdFMgMjyW
Also Pet and human shears!!!! Diamond plate in under 10 mins
Ken onion MK1 or MK2 elaborate please
Do you up-sell for rust removal? Or “deep cleaning?”
Typically, I tell a customer it will be “x” amount for a rust removal or repair after having seen the blade (either via photo or in person). All blades I wash Pre Sharpening and Post Sharpening. If there is minor rust I don’t even mention it or any change in pricing, I just remove it.
Could you help me and what is the price of setting up a page for me thanks so much getting out of prison and something is really love to start doing to give back to my community.
Shoot me a message on Instagram ✅ @sharperbymichael
Get a "Dura-Gold" rust eraser, it will remove rust off knife blades in a min or so. Works fabulous and super quickly.
Very intrigued and interested. Where would one even begin to learn how to sharpen knives?
Check my 2024 sharpening business video!
I was gifted a workforce mk.2 sharpener. Would i be able to start a side hustle with it?
You could definitely start sharpening mower blades and yard tools! Some bladed tools however, I wouldn't really do Kitchen Blades with it. Maybe EDC/Pocket knives!
What is most of your business comprised of - household knives or commercial knives? How do you measure the sharpness of the knives after sharpening?
Hi! 👋 I’ll be posting update videos soon answering questions like these but to answer you, mostly residential and at this point I know how sharp I can get blades without testing however I do take complimentary videos for my customers using paper tests 👍 I’ll be investing in a Bess tester soon!
@@SharperByMichael What angle do you sharpen household knives to? We've researched manufacturers specifications when possible and try to get them to that angle.
Just make your own strop.... a piece of MDF and a couple dollars worth of leather to make you a 3x12 inch strop. That thin cheap leather on those pre-made strops is to soft. Get you a bottle of diamond emulsion (like mine avaliable on Knafsale for 23 dollars for 1.7oz) it's 100x better then wax alox compound.
I'm inspired! Thank you. #GRATITUDE
🙏 that’s what it’s all about!
ruclips.net/video/J8QdcoZzXIw/видео.htmlsi=Rqs1_W3YdFMgMjyW
I just found your channel, this video is AWESOME!!!
Thank you! I really appreciate it!
Whats the link to your fiverr need a web page
Shoot me a message on Instagram @SharperByMichael - Fiverr fee's are way too high now unfortunately so I will be most likely forever on "vacation" www.fiverr.com/michaelfromecom - Happy to help you out though!
Good video man. Do you collect payment upfront or after the job?
Thanks! I collect payment after - sometimes customers will pay on their way to pick up and I'll have them in a pick-up bin outside.
@@SharperByMichael thanks. have you had any problems with people not paying? i imagine you can automate invoice reminders and stuff if you use a CRM like jobber
@@BnibroC69 never had a problem with it - it was a major “concern” of mine and now I will sometimes tell customers to pay me once they have gotten home and had a chance to use the blade. I used crms like Housecall Pro and I’ve found it to be way less stressful strictly dealing in cash, check and payment apps. I have only had a handful of customers that absolutely needed to pay via credit card. I keep the crm on hand incase I need to process cards but I’m about to phase it out completely.
@@SharperByMichael wow good to know. thanks bro
For drop off, how do you have the clients drop off the knives when you’re not home?
I have a tote bin that my customers can place their knives in :) sorry for the late reply!
@@SharperByMichael do you have a contact number or something I can chat with you?
@@vinnym5095 DM me on Instagram @michaelthesharpener 📲
@@SharperByMichael just messaged ya
Where do I find your sharpening business? Do you have google reviews?
I address these questions in the video - to answer your questions though:
Google
Yes
Hi their . My name is Gary I just retired . Have done tool and cutter grinding for years. Looking to do something part time.
Hi Gary! 👋 dive into it! It’s a whole “world” in itself as I’m sure you could imagine given your tool and cutter grinding experience. A lot of people have blades that need fresh edges! Best of luck in your endeavors.
How did you find out you were number 1 for your search in google?
I googled!
ruclips.net/video/J8QdcoZzXIw/видео.htmlsi=Rqs1_W3YdFMgMjyW
@@SharperByMichael is your website ‘seriously fast sharpening’? I wanna contact you
@@vinnym5095 yes sir feel free!
I really appreciate this video thank you very much
I’m glad it was helpful! Thank you for taking time to comment 🙏 new videos soon!
IMPORTANT: Do not remove "rust" from knives, this is a protective kind of rust called "patina", if you remove it, the red rust will come and ruin the knives.
You should remove the rust from a knife, especially if it's used for culinary purposes..right?
I heard this somewhere but it was something like there's more ways to force a Patina than there is to skin a cat lol
@@SharperByMichael there are many types of iron rust, yellow, red, grey, back and others, having different chemical compositions like FeO, Fe2O3 (hematite), Fe3O4 (magnetite) and others, perhaps you should do some serious research about this topic and then you will come to a sensitive and informed conclusion, seriously.
I do also sharpen knives in Australia as a part time job and would never use any toxic substance like rust oleum, it should never be in contact with food preparation items.
I appreciate that you make videos, but before make one please inform yourself about dangers and considerations. I am not an expert but I like to read and inform myself before I do stupids things, yes I have made many mistakes in my life, I am an older guy.
The reason a patina is forced (in many ways) onto a knife is to add a grey-black rust to the knife that prevents the nasty red rust. Knives with a patina cause no harm to food, in excess may cause food to taste bad.
@rybird7564 i didn't realize you were replying to my OLD video LOL.
Watch my new vid, much better.
Let's resume our conversation there!
ruclips.net/video/J8QdcoZzXIw/видео.html
@@SharperByMichael then remove or modify the video as it may give the wrong information to people without much experience.
@@redangrybird7564 I think the people that actually care about the quality information or that are looking to help, will actually read the first sentence of the video description or look at the comments - then realize there's a new video - I’ll keep this one up for history’s sake 👍
Nice that a demonstrably amateurish sharpener has the confidence to instruct others. My one piece of advice would be to subdivide the video into more segments.
Hahaha hahaha bro I just died reading this, did you see the size of his wet stone????! Lmaooooo and the cheap ass compound he put on that strop without working it into the leather lmaaaoooooo he straight up started a business for teaching people something he has no idea about lmao
@@so1212owwhere’s your business? I’d like to know.
ruclips.net/video/J8QdcoZzXIw/видео.htmlsi=Rqs1_W3YdFMgMjyW
I also started my business in 22, and also with Work Sharp, but the war slowed me down a lot. and our prices for sharpening are five times less. but nevertheless, if not for my equipment, I would probably die of hunger now.
Same! Here’s to a successful 2023 🎉
I run a sharpening shop that's sharpens and fixes just about everything. It's nice that you have people interested in this trade, and it is fruitful. But you're very far off how efficient you should be to actually make good money relative to your time. The ken onion is just not a commercial machine, unfortunately. And you're gonna start losing money if you use that for lawn mower blades. A tip to you and your viewers, 1x30 sharpening machines unlock crazy profits.
T C , I appreciate your advice! Thank you!
Can you go a bit more in-depth about the 1x30?
How much do you charge to build the website
You are doing so well with this (to me) minimal about of $ and equipment investment is surprising. I was thinking I would need a much bigger investment. I have a worksharp already and maybe I just need to get better at it. Home or a mobile knife business is another option I am looking at. Flea markets with the exposuer from that I think will make me even more successful. I am going to watch this several times to make sure I got all the information. Very good.
Thank you, Jim! You can definitely get some amazing results (quickly too) with the Worksharp. I do home (transitioned from mobile) and I’m going to be expanding into b2b. I appreciate you taking the time to comment - feel free to join our Discord community (link in description) we’d love to have you in!
My experience, and that of many other sharpeners, is Farmers Markets are much better than flea markets. Higher volume and you can get more money for your work. People at flea markets are always looking for cheap and often do not understand value enough to pay for it.
This is beyond the most professional video I have ever seen! 🤗 Wow your awesome Michael! 🔥🔪✂️Love it !
Thank you! 🙏📣📣📣
Does someone starting this kind of business need to get a license?
It depends on where you are as laws are different per location.
Really bad idea to soak wood handled knives in the sink like that. I also would never use steel wool on a customers knife unless they asked me to and they wanted a rough satin finish.
AJ, I appreciate you taking the time to comment.
You are correct!
Since posting this, I've learned several things:
Don't soak, only wash.
I've now started applying Boiled Linseed Oil to all wooden handles after washing.
& Steel Wool. I've stopped using it and switched to using soft sponges.
Just curious, what do you personally use (cleaner) to clean blades?
I'll be uploading new videos soon with updates/changes.
is COVID a swear word now?!
RUclips hates it! 😳