TLDW #21 - Making a Tanto Habaki with simple tools

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  • Опубликовано: 17 фев 2018
  • **WARNING: This is the longer process version intended for serious students of knifemaking. Watch the overview edit here: • TimeWarp #10 - Forging...
    Making a classical tanto style habaki forged from reclaimed copper, silver soldering in the charcoal forge.
    Material is scrap copper from an electrical bus bar, shape is forged and bent, soldering done with hard silver solder in the charcoal forge with fuigo, finish work done with files and rasps.
    Machigane info: islandblacksmith.ca/2014/10/cl...
    See the finished tanto and process here: islandblacksmith.ca/2019/08/fu...

Комментарии • 104

  • @user-ff5qx3kh2v
    @user-ff5qx3kh2v 2 года назад +2

    Most of the craftsmen show videos of them doing things using a variety of modern expensive machines, grinders, gas burners and special tools. And this author of the video did 90% of the work with a hammer and 10% with a chisel and a file! The result is excellent! This is a real blacksmith! Super-master! Thanks !

  • @jimfrank4800
    @jimfrank4800 4 года назад +19

    Oh my gosh! Your work is just amazing. I've made several habaki over the years, so I really enjoyed the detail of this video. Also, your cinematography is so simple and elegant, it really adds to the video. Thank you so much for your beautiful video.

  • @temnysh
    @temnysh Год назад +1

    Such a simple detail. It seems that it is simple. And so much work. Respect.

    • @islandblacksmith
      @islandblacksmith  Год назад +1

      thank you! detail is so important in the japanese craft tradition!

  • @marcusgerhold8657
    @marcusgerhold8657 6 лет назад +9

    One of the most beautifully made Habaki ive ever seen, Masterful.

  • @jimibutters5933
    @jimibutters5933 4 года назад +3

    I am wanting to get into forging as a hobby. My goal is to make a nice Tanto style knife for myself. After watching your masterful work I am starting to think I may be in way over my head.

  • @ducontra666999
    @ducontra666999 4 года назад +5

    Thank you, its so hard find a tutorial with simple tools

    • @3npitsu992
      @3npitsu992 3 года назад +2

      Yeah, all tutorials used mills and cnc

  • @Soulsmithing
    @Soulsmithing 6 лет назад +1

    Very nicely done!

  • @TheDocChannel
    @TheDocChannel 5 лет назад +1

    Beautiful work.

  • @tikataka11
    @tikataka11 6 лет назад +1

    Just Perfect , really enjoy your work !! Have great weekend and regards from Europa .........XXXX !

  • @drpablovazquez
    @drpablovazquez 3 года назад +1

    Very beautiful work, congratulations.

  • @rodneylangstroth4577
    @rodneylangstroth4577 Год назад

    Excellent work Sir

  • @RougemontForge
    @RougemontForge 6 лет назад +2

    An excellent tutorial! I need to make myself one of those punches for doming the inside of the habaki.

    • @islandblacksmith
      @islandblacksmith  6 лет назад +2

      pretty handy tool, also doubles as a rough form to forge on later...should have radius in both directions but front to back is the important one to prep for the bend...

  • @mattm9759
    @mattm9759 4 года назад

    Wow amazing! to watch all the parts that make up a japanese sword forged and hand made just incredible

    • @islandblacksmith
      @islandblacksmith  4 года назад +2

      it is amazing what can be done with a hammer and a file!

  • @a-sheepof-christ9027
    @a-sheepof-christ9027 4 года назад

    I tried punching holes into pieces of copper, metal, brass. Filing it down. Stock removal Habaki, fuchi and kashira was my idea. Now after failing miserably and many attempts - I look at this guy and realise. Some have it - and some dont. Makes you appreciate his craft. Id buy his stuff, seeing he smiths them himself - and his skill is such that he makes it looks simple too.

    • @islandblacksmith
      @islandblacksmith  4 года назад +2

      stock removal habaki would be challenging, but certainly possible...i think wrapping the jacket and soldering in a machigane is probably easier in the long run so you might as well learn the traditional way...but either way it is not an easy task, like a custom fit piece of jewelery, some specialized craftsmen in japan focus on habaki alone as a lifetime pursuit...keep it up!

  • @KF1
    @KF1 2 года назад

    Awesome work

  • @davidwelton3607
    @davidwelton3607 5 месяцев назад

    Awesome work. I'm going to attempt my first habaki tomorrow. We'll see how it goes...

    • @islandblacksmith
      @islandblacksmith  5 месяцев назад

      great! more detail here:
      islandblacksmith.ca/process/making-habaki/
      machigane info:
      islandblacksmith.ca/2014/10/classical-tanto-construction-habaki-%E3%81%AE-machigane/

  • @lucaazeri1700
    @lucaazeri1700 3 года назад

    Top of the line job

  • @dmitriykuznetsov1978
    @dmitriykuznetsov1978 4 года назад

    Мне нравится как этот человек создаёт свои шедевры, и самое главное что без лишнего трепа! Просто, молча делая своё дело.

    • @user-lz5kl3dg5e
      @user-lz5kl3dg5e 3 года назад

      Субтитры не помешали бы .

  • @federicogomez4983
    @federicogomez4983 4 года назад +1

    Que producto utilizan para unir las partes del habaki?, gracias

  • @ians1464
    @ians1464 5 лет назад

    Yeah you did good job that was nice work there

  • @artificial_element
    @artificial_element 3 года назад

    how do you know how long the thick part of the habaki has to be?

  • @joresvanwensen922
    @joresvanwensen922 5 месяцев назад

    Gonna make mine this way from now on. My way was terribly hard compared to this. Thank you for showing this 😊

    • @islandblacksmith
      @islandblacksmith  5 месяцев назад

      great! more detail here:
      islandblacksmith.ca/process/making-habaki/
      machigane info:
      islandblacksmith.ca/2014/10/classical-tanto-construction-habaki-%E3%81%AE-machigane/

  • @emreguzelgorur9332
    @emreguzelgorur9332 6 лет назад +1

    This is art :)

  • @luizferreirafreitas6395
    @luizferreirafreitas6395 4 года назад

    eu gostei muito desse habaki e me ajudou bastante

  • @harpicep888
    @harpicep888 5 лет назад +1

    QUESTION
    How thick katana habaki is?

  • @stanleyjaxen8759
    @stanleyjaxen8759 4 года назад +3

    this is my favourite one so far
    the geometry is divine, thank you so much
    wouls be cool to see a soldering instruction for this, i gather you packed the solder behind the join bound with wire and heated to cherry red and capillary flow soldered the join but no silver seems to show through when you file it down

    • @N.M.E.
      @N.M.E. Год назад

      When the fit is good enough, and the gaps are small, one can get the silver to be practically invisible without etching and a microscope

  • @exboyben5290
    @exboyben5290 2 года назад

    Perfect

  • @thefamily_ak1863
    @thefamily_ak1863 4 года назад

    So good

  • @ericcartrette6118
    @ericcartrette6118 6 лет назад

    Very nice work as always. I've got a piece of copper that I'm hoping is thick enough to make a habaki or two. I suspect I'll refer to this video plenty of times when I get started.

    • @islandblacksmith
      @islandblacksmith  6 лет назад

      excellent! you may find some additional useful information here: islandblacksmith.ca/process/

    • @ericcartrette6118
      @ericcartrette6118 6 лет назад

      Thanks! I'll be checking it out.

  • @user-md4hz8dz7z
    @user-md4hz8dz7z Год назад +1

    your work of the master should be paid as the work of a dentist🏵

    • @islandblacksmith
      @islandblacksmith  Год назад +1

      haha, it is a lot like making jewelry most of the time!

  • @TheMrplongeur
    @TheMrplongeur 6 лет назад +2

    Now let's make some Mokume Gane :D Great way to forge a Habaki by the way !

    • @islandblacksmith
      @islandblacksmith  6 лет назад +3

      i have seen just a couple of late edo tsuba made from mokumegane, no habaki or other fittings yet...but they may be out there somewhere...shakudo would be cool!

    • @TheMrplongeur
      @TheMrplongeur 6 лет назад

      Not specially to make fittings, you can make some jewerly or buttons with mokume gane :D Shakudo would certainly be cool for fittings

  • @user-jb4fc9uy4n
    @user-jb4fc9uy4n 4 года назад +3

    おみごと
    素晴らしい物を見せてもらいました。

  • @GG-gm4mx
    @GG-gm4mx Год назад

    Cool profesional

  • @user-fj8hl5pz5e
    @user-fj8hl5pz5e 5 лет назад

    Your a lifesaver

    • @islandblacksmith
      @islandblacksmith  5 лет назад

      there's more detail and info on the website, down at the bottom of the process page...

  • @islandblacksmith
    @islandblacksmith  6 лет назад +2

    Making a classical tanto style habaki forged from reclaimed copper. **WARNING: This is the longer process version intended for serious students of knifemaking. Watch the overview edit here: ruclips.net/video/LS8T71Soqyk/видео.html
    Material is scrap copper from an electrical bus bar, shape is forged and bent, soldering done with hard silver solder in the charcoal forge with fuigo, finish work done with files and rasps. More about the process here: islandblacksmith.ca/process/
    Machigane info: islandblacksmith.ca/2014/10/classical-tanto-construction-habaki-%E3%81%AE-machigane/
    See the finished tanto here: islandblacksmith.ca/2019/08/furusato-tanto/

  • @blacktemplar2207
    @blacktemplar2207 3 года назад +1

    habaki is definitely the most fun part in swordmaking :D

    • @islandblacksmith
      @islandblacksmith  3 года назад +1

      ...like precision-fit jewellery for the blade...

  • @johnhoward3271
    @johnhoward3271 2 года назад

    I've heard of " O.C.D. ! ( now I've seen it on RUclips ) ! You're darn good at what You do , but , I'm afraid I'm going to have to hide all the knives
    in the house AGAIN ( before I get susideal , watching You )

    • @islandblacksmith
      @islandblacksmith  2 года назад

      it is amazing to learn how long real things take to make in the real world, isn't it! ...that's why i always try to link the short edit in the description, this version is for students of the forge...

  • @windigowhispers
    @windigowhispers 5 лет назад

    are you forging a taper into the sides of the habaki?

    • @islandblacksmith
      @islandblacksmith  5 лет назад +2

      yes, a small amount...the back end shouldn't be like a huge wedge though...saya holding pressure is only on the ha and the mune, not the sides...

  • @ivanclerc2488
    @ivanclerc2488 Год назад

    Great work 👏!!! how to join copper! what glue did you use?

    • @islandblacksmith
      @islandblacksmith  Год назад +1

      pure silver, sterling silver, or silver solder...borax for flux...

  • @paulwiggins183
    @paulwiggins183 6 лет назад +1

    So, are you closing the slot on the edge side of the habaki, just with the cold hammering... or leaving it open? I've rerun the video many times to get a good view but can not make it out. Some of your pieces look closed and some appear open.

    • @islandblacksmith
      @islandblacksmith  6 лет назад

      the edge side is usually a hairline opening from the end of the machigane forward, basically closed but not joined in any way...if the edge has ubuha there may be a slightly wider gap... islandblacksmith.ca/2014/10/classical-tanto-construction-habaki-%E3%81%AE-machigane/

    • @paulwiggins183
      @paulwiggins183 6 лет назад

      Got it. It is a challenge to tailor words to describe three dimensions. We are all trying to learn in the absence of masters standing beside us.
      Or something.

  • @stanli811
    @stanli811 4 года назад

    восхитительно

  • @kevinmorales9451
    @kevinmorales9451 4 года назад

    Master

  • @yizhuolin3906
    @yizhuolin3906 3 месяца назад

    wait... at 21:57 did you just plug a short pencil in a bamboo so you don't have to waste it when it's short? that's brilliant!

  • @PatheticPeasant
    @PatheticPeasant 2 года назад

    If you have a thick enough piece of copper, could a guy still some holes, so some file work to get it started on the knife and then heat it and hammer it onto the blade? This way it's fitted without folding and soldering. Or would this method be to complicated?

    • @islandblacksmith
      @islandblacksmith  2 года назад

      best to always start with the 1000 year old tried and tested method first...

  • @PKBladesmith
    @PKBladesmith 6 лет назад +2

    Hi, Dave! Could you tell us what camera do you use to film your videos? I love your work, very inspirational. Cheers from Poland.

    • @islandblacksmith
      @islandblacksmith  6 лет назад +2

      much appreciated! nothing special, just my digital still camera for all my photos and video...it is an older model olympus omd-em5 with an adapter for glass lenses made in the 1980's...

    • @PKBladesmith
      @PKBladesmith 6 лет назад +1

      thanks for answer! once again - i love your videos, cheers

  • @akatoxin2246
    @akatoxin2246 6 лет назад

    うーん、何て無駄のない作業工程。仕上がりの美しさといい加工精度といい感嘆するばかり。

  • @rafaelmattos4275
    @rafaelmattos4275 Год назад

    Sempre que eu olho para um habaki eu me lembro de um cadeado! Pelo formato ser pra mim parecido e ser feito de metais parecido ...Então a pergunta é será que daria para fazer um habaki apartir de um cadeado? Se alguém já pensou nessa hipótese também dê alguma sugestão ou se expresse.

    • @islandblacksmith
      @islandblacksmith  Год назад

      i would like to see a padlock made in the shape/form of habaki! ^__^

  • @randycamp4280
    @randycamp4280 2 года назад

    Did I miss something about soldering? I saw you make the flux to join the 2 pieces and put it into the forge. Please explain what you did. This video was amazing by the way.

    • @islandblacksmith
      @islandblacksmith  2 года назад

      you did! 14:45 is a small strip of fine silver bent into a horseshoe, it is coated in flux and set onto the machigane before going into the forge...you can see it at 15:01 ...plenty more details here: islandblacksmith.ca/process/making-habaki/

  • @johnbautista4517
    @johnbautista4517 4 года назад

    What is that thing you put inside the habaki before heating🤔

    • @islandblacksmith
      @islandblacksmith  4 года назад +1

      plenty of info in the description...hard silver solder and borax flux...

    • @johnbautista4517
      @johnbautista4517 4 года назад

      @@islandblacksmith thank you sir now i know im just a beginner and i want to learn many things about forging😁

  • @woodstockxx
    @woodstockxx 3 года назад

    Beautiful work..Done this before have you ? .. I’d love to try it but sadly can’t see myself being anywhere near as handy with a hammer..lol

  • @lelongclaude8181
    @lelongclaude8181 3 года назад

    Fantastique

  • @Marlin7830
    @Marlin7830 2 года назад

    Will any silver solder work when soldering in the wedge piece?

    • @islandblacksmith
      @islandblacksmith  2 года назад +1

      yes, real silver solder in any temp, or even sterling or fine silver...all strong enough, some easier to use than others...

    • @Marlin7830
      @Marlin7830 2 года назад

      @@islandblacksmith thanks and that's awesome work 😎

  • @user-fk6ul2yc1d
    @user-fk6ul2yc1d 5 лет назад +1

    Klass 🇷🇺👍👍👍

  • @user-kl2zj7gz7k
    @user-kl2zj7gz7k 4 года назад

    красавчик!

  • @nude-hd.xyz-besduldingsi3616
    @nude-hd.xyz-besduldingsi3616 6 лет назад

    最高にクールな短刀ですな。しかも海外の人だし、日本人の僕よりも行動力あって羨ましい。

  • @18IMAMGODINA
    @18IMAMGODINA 2 года назад

    When you "quench" the copper does it warp at all? Im aware that it makes it softer but does it warp it like it warps irons , it would be very dificult to soften copper so that you can work on it if it warps every time , Great work on the tanto and im aware im a bit late xD

    • @islandblacksmith
      @islandblacksmith  2 года назад +1

      not that i am aware of but it wouldn't really matter much as it is in an annealed state...

    • @18IMAMGODINA
      @18IMAMGODINA 2 года назад

      @@islandblacksmith Ah , yes it is softer and easier to work on right , thank you for response .
      Your videos are first and foremost very informative especially for someone who is trying to learn the process and is also just as much inspiring , keep up the great work!

    • @islandblacksmith
      @islandblacksmith  2 года назад +1

      ..and plenty more detail on the website...keep it up!

  • @williamavery9185
    @williamavery9185 4 года назад +1

    I am sure i have all these simple tools in my shed, the forge may be a bit harder. What with the niebours and her washing .

    • @islandblacksmith
      @islandblacksmith  4 года назад

      definitely no forging on wash day! ...but the forge itself can be very small and simple: ruclips.net/video/c5ht0P6hrZE/видео.html

  • @DEEPDIVERever
    @DEEPDIVERever 6 лет назад

    Magic!)

  • @jeovaneleiteparedes1557
    @jeovaneleiteparedes1557 4 года назад

    Utilidade pública

  • @Rsama60
    @Rsama60 3 года назад

    Very beautiful. But simple tools? He used two of the most sophisticated tools there are. His hands.

  • @andre-dx4yw
    @andre-dx4yw 3 года назад

    simple tools plus forge lol

    • @islandblacksmith
      @islandblacksmith  3 года назад

      simple tools and a simple forge: ruclips.net/video/c5ht0P6hrZE/видео.html