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#1 | |
Member
Join Date: May 2012
Location: Currently, Taiwan. Previously China for 6 years. Speak and read 中文 well.
Posts: 34
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#2 |
Member
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 7,015
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Drfiftwould, it has been brought to my attention that I have not answered your question satisfactorily, and you yourself have pursued a further clarification of my inadequate answer. Please accept my apologies. Let me try again.
Any fabricated item is made of a number of pieces, and often of a number of different materials, materials that can differ in nature, character, colour, texture, and so on. In the case of a knife, or any other type of edged weapon, these pieces should be brought together so that the places where they meet, that is, their joining edges and/or surfaces, come together as closely as possible. All joints should ideally be a part of a circle or a part of a straight line. The only reason that one should be able to detect the joint is because of the different nature of the materials, not because the actual joint itself can be seen. This is what is meant by fit. All materials used in the fabrication of a knife or other edged weapon do not usually come in the form required for construction of that knife or weapon, the material needs to be shaped and reduced in size so that it fulfills the purpose for which it is intended, once shaped it needs to be smoothed and often polished. These processes of shaping, smoothing, polishing require that the surface of the material be subjected to cutting, grinding, moulding, and abrasive processes. In the completed knife or other edged weapon traces of the processes used to produce the finished product should not be visible. What I have outlined is a description of perfection, and this is very seldom achieved, however, the closer to perfection an item comes, the better is the fit and finish. I was a member of the Australian Knifemakers Guild for a number of years, and I displayed my work at a number of knife shows. The fit and finish that I could achieve in a complete knife was not even remotely close to the fit and finish that was achieved by many other makers. The principal reason for this was that I used only very primitive hand tools, my ethic was that I attempted to make in the ways that were available to artisans prior to the coming of the Modern Age. At a knife show the buyers of custom and handmade knives carry jewellers loupes and magnifying glasses, and they examine the work of the makers very closely before they part with the purchase price. It is never only a matter of the overall appearance of a knife, nor of design, it is a matter of seeking total perfection in the construction of the knife, the type of perfection that is found in finely crafted jewellery. Clearly we cannot apply these same standards to the construction of ethnic weaponry, but the closer we get to these standards, the better is the fit and finish of the item under consideration. |
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#3 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 1,712
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Savage.. but true & correct!
![]() Also the butterscotch horn hilt was clearly cracked while still on the animal, but was still used for the hilt. So despite good colour clearly a defective & imperfect material, so presumably not top quality. spiral |
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#4 | |
Member
Join Date: May 2012
Location: Currently, Taiwan. Previously China for 6 years. Speak and read 中文 well.
Posts: 34
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#5 |
Member
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 7,015
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Yes, a lot of people do not understand that often the only way to get the information or knowledge that one requires is to ask precise, specific questions.
This way the information can be tailored to the level that the person asking the question is ready to accept and understand. Give too much info, it gets lost, give too little and it gets lost. Ask the right question and hopefully the info given is just sufficient. I don't have any pics of western style knives that I made, I still have a couple of these, but cannot immediately put my hand on them, I do have a very large quantity of damascus blades that I made, but again, no pics, however, here is a link to a page in my site, if you scroll down a bit there are 2 or 3 keris blades that I made a few years ago:- http://www.kerisattosanaji.com/PBXIIempus.html |
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#6 |
Member
Join Date: Nov 2013
Posts: 456
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An anecdote about Uzbek pichok knives
A little while back I bought a pichok, not nearly as nice as the ones you got but nice enough. It seemed sturdily built and sharp as a razor, and I intended to use it as a kitchen knife. A few weeks later I was at a bar, and I overheard a man saying he was from Uzbekistan. I started chatting with him and mentioned that I bought a pichok and that I thought it was great. He looked at me like I was crazy and asked why I would bother importing one. He said they were junk and that he'd never use one unless he had no alternative. I asked why he wouldn't use one, he replied "because I know the kind of metal they use to make them." I probably should have asked him to elaborate, but it was enough to give me second thoughts about using that knife. |
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#7 |
Member
Join Date: May 2012
Location: Currently, Taiwan. Previously China for 6 years. Speak and read 中文 well.
Posts: 34
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Blue Lander and AG, thanks for the replies. Thanks to everyone for helping, the input I got from this discussion has given me a LOT of good places to start learning! Quality of handle materials, quality and type of steels, fit and finish, and on a side note, I've been looking into damascus. Two questions for the general public:
1) I'd still like to hear more thoughts on what you would take into consideration when judging the quality of steel in a modern-made, traditional knife. What standards should we hold something like that to, and would the seemingly obvious idea that they would be different from place to place (say, tribal Africa vs. tribal Taiwan (good access to modern materials, the modern world in general)) be correct? For that matter, what about an old one? 2) In keeping with the "101" theme, and hoping this will be useful for other beginners in the future (as well as myself), are there any other areas of general knowledge you can recommend I look into to build the broad knowledge base I need, given that I will - very regrettably - never have the time available to become a professional knife smith myself and learn by that route? |
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#8 | |
Member
Join Date: May 2012
Location: Currently, Taiwan. Previously China for 6 years. Speak and read 中文 well.
Posts: 34
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I'd love to see some of the handwork you did, if you don't mind posting it. If you've posted already, which I'd guess you probably must have, then the link would be great! The fact that you chose to use traditional techniques and tools in the modern age, and that you also attended shows where people were judging based on modern standards, gives you a really great perspective and I'd love to know more about it. Last edited by driftwould; 7th September 2014 at 02:16 AM. |
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