Kyle Fisher Not “every dad ever” has a drill press, hacksaw blades for metal, a dremel, and especially not a budding wheel and a forge. Most of those items aren’t common unless the dad in question is a craftsman or does a lot of home repairs/ construction
@@hicksteryt6617 I understand what you are saying. The point is basic tools does not mean tools that everyone has, it means that this is the simplest version of the tool in question, your dad may or may not have them, no one is saying that these are mandotory tools or most commonly found tools but if he has tools for crafting/repairing , this is the most basic set you can have . Thus the title "using basic tools".
The only thing that isn't basic is a furnace, and with some home Depot supplies, you can make one in an hour. Most of those things are toys for 60% of dads. If you don't, that sucks, but what are you expecting to make a knife from scratch from if you don't have at least basic tools??
You mentioned your a bladesmith as well. Im new to blade smithing im a master union sheet metal worker just now after many years getting into blade smithing. I have experience with stock removal knife making similare to this not as nice yet but im focusing my education currently towards heat treat thermal cycling. I asked the channel maker this question and wanted to ask you as well see who answers first just so i can learn i have a project im working on. When he went for the heat treat in this video from what i have learned so fare to me it apeared almost welding temperature. And was told a quench that hot can cause micro fractures throughout the blade. Especially dealing with higher carbon steel. In your opinion what is a good temp to quench and do you thermal cycle before the quench. And what should it look like. I always go until its no longer magnetic than i quench. I also use transmision fluid and or canola oil. Any suggestions or input welcome. This guy made a beautiful blade with basic tools and a nice file jig.
@@joshofalltradesgendron5464 My approach is not very scientific, I heat the blade about as hot as my homemade heat-treat forge can, then quench in oil, then put it in the oven for a few hours at 400 up and down twice. I mainly make knives from big, used circular saw blades. I usually test a few small pieces of a blade before I make a bunch of knives out of it by heat treating the way I normally do, then performing a few tests to make sure it'll get hard, but not too brittle, and hold an edge.
Thank you thats basically all i do as well also wrenches chisles and files. I heat my blade until i see the nice coloration and check with magnet once its not magnetic than i take it out and quench. Ive had a few early attempts where my blades where as Orange in this video and blasted fireballs in the quench and each of those blades failed in stress test though had excelent file skate. I later learned that quenching at welding temp or near welding temp can cause severe stress fractures after i asked this question to you. I spoke with a local 40 year bladesmith blacksmith and informed me on what i did wrong. Thank you for taking time to help educate me. I really want this hobby to take off for me.
@@lylahsworld3930It's a filing jig, you can make one of the various designs at home. You can find some videos on them online, most of them using a bastard file, some more adjustable others not. With some screws, plywood, a couple hardware pieces, a metal pipe and a bastard file you can make something.
@@lukesadler6830 ARE YOU JOKING? WITH ONLY A FILE. THAT SIMPLE. AND SIMPLE FIRE TO PAINT IT (BURNING). LOOK WHAT MEANS BASIC TOOLS MY FRIEND. th-cam.com/video/_5LXpgSzKyQ/w-d-xo.html
Still one of my favorite builds you've done. So many to choose from though. Appreciate all the content. Thanks for the bit of inspiration and the hard work that goes into your craft.
I love how ppl are so ignorant. SIMPLE knife making tools!! Either way you did an amazing job. I just found you channel and look forward to watching more
@@livier3970 Dude, a "forge" can be just an anvil, a source of intense heat, hammers, tongs and files. All of that combined is still more basic than a belt grinder.
I liked the video and the editing was good, but you should put a tool and material list in the description for people who will obviously want to recreate the knife. Thanks
Random piece of mild steel, anneal before starting to shape blade. Angle grinder. Metal file. Drill. Fire, pref a forge but campfire is also doable. Various sandpapers. Old oil for tempering, fresh oil for polishing up and treating the wood. Hammer to peen the pins on the handle, And a sharpening stone if you can't sharpen it enough with the sandpaper.
Great build,you might consider taking the base off of your bench grinder used for the last step sharping,and turning it around so you switch will still face you and the wheels will turn the other direction! Much easier to sharpen with edge facing up
@@Mrflymess I said mostly but a grinder and a dremel are power tools that you hold in your hand so my statement holds true. Anyway I'm just paying the guy a compliment on a nice job, why knock him?
I like this knife!It was made with basic tools,regardless of the critical comments.Very good video,and basic tools doesn't necessarily mean stone age tools.I'm sure I'd mess up a good many pieces of bar stock before getting it close to this nice. He's got skill.
4:12 That moment when, “Maybe I should use gloves when I do this stuff” finally registers. Beautiful work, though. Videos like these make me want to learn to create things with my hands.
How i made a knife with basic tools: Coal forge made of fire briks and a hair dryer A "anvil"(a piece of metal that I bought on an junkyard) Hammer A chisel to cut the metal Vise Recycled metal for the blade Square and round file 2L of canola oil to hardening(the tempering as made holding the blade above the fire for a few minutes) Sandpaper and sharpening stone Recycled wood or leather Pins on the handle it all cost me 100 reais/ less than 50 bucks Sorry my bad english, i'm brazilian
so it's basically just not using a grinder for the bevels or handle shaping. which does in fact make it really difficult. so props for having the patience to do all that hand filing.
Nice job, but those aren't basic tools especially a forge. For what it would cost me to buy all those tools, I be better off just buying a nice blade, a very nice blade.
Wow !! Really- WOW ! That was some wicked foreplay and then a beautiful climax with the grand finale finish . I won’t begin to Understand how there are 260 some thumbs downs on this !?!? Really ??? What is wrong with this world !?!? Well Done !!!!!
Awesome video man! I absolutely love your channel. I really respect the level of quality you are able to achieve. Those crisp grind lines are something to envy!
Amazing ! Such a marvelous knife , didatic , simple , with a beautiful light . One of the best videos I have seen on knife making . Congratulations from Brazil .
Thank you for this video. I'm just starting out and this made me a 1000 times more comfortable getting into this. I have pretty much the same forge you have mine is just square. I just need to buy a few things and I'll have all the tools you have. I haven't checked the video description box yet but do you have a tool list?? Thanks in advance if you do.
The furnace is rather expensive and not really a basic tool. Was the steel stainless or high carbon? Love the design of the knife and the video. Good job!
Really nice video. Im not trying to be a troll on this im seriously asking to learn. Your quench looked like you where at welding temp do you feel it was to hot. Please let me know. Ive been doing alot of reading and education on it so i can learn right. I was told that can cause severe stress fractures quenching that hot. Especially with higher tool steel. Thank you
Reiner mit ei, bidde! Not so! Only 9:18 (length of video) cuz of his wicked-fast filework. (Massive fast-twitch muscle fibres!) Still, I would offer him maybe $150-175...
I have questions: when you FLIP the blade during the Bevel "HOW" did you assure it would be EVEN? 2nd Why polish out the hammer marks & then re apply them with dipping? it looked Great before =/ 3rd HOW did you account for Bevel angle when putting an EDGE on it? =/
What steel did you use because i would like to forge a knife but i got 308 stainless steel and a normal drill and grinder doesn't do the job and what does the heat do when forging a nice knife
@@gearjunkie3412 ought to work. I always either used brass brazing rods because they were concentric. I drilled the holes a little oversized and dimpled the handle a bit around around the hole so I could peen the pins. I've also used nails. I used 2 ton epoxy for the glue for a while but after leaving a knife out in the direct sun for too long I found that the handles loosened. Since then I've used J.B. Weld. That stuff will hold a deisel motor block together. I know because my dad did just that when I was a kid. It was still holding together when he sold the old tractor.
Well, I don't know about the numbers placed on Steel. Back 40 years ago will you lose anything from horseshoes to an old buggy axle. Now I'll tell you an old buggy axle and I do mean old, you can Hammer some good tools out of them thangs. Also, railroad spikes if they're heated up and fold it over like we did the horseshoes several times they can be beat into some good metal. Then again we had no other place to get metal
The only “basic” tool in my house was a black marker. And I’m not sure if it can write or not.
Kaan Kaya Lol
Basic tools my ducking ass
I don’t even have a marker
@@escofortnitegamer309 I dont even have a penis
Bana Bino lmao
You're gonna need:
- Paper.
- Marker.
- Lime tool.
- a Blacksmith's workshop.
Namaste.
That is true but look at it as a investment. If you buy quality tools they will last longer than you will if you take care of them believe me.
Or just heat it up with a blowtorch, or do the even cheaper (but less reliable) option and use a campfire.
From my own experience, what he's doing is as basic as it gets for knife making. It's hardly a shop. I say, GREAT JOB AV make!!! Keep it up.
You could technically do it yourself using some coal
“Basic tools” here is like the blacksmith version of when a Minecraft youtuber say they did a little mining off camera
Haha yeah but to be fair those are basic tools for a rural home, you probably live in a big city?
those are tools that literally every dad ever has. plus, what were you expecting? him to make it out of a cereal box?
Kyle Fisher Not “every dad ever” has a drill press, hacksaw blades for metal, a dremel, and especially not a budding wheel and a forge. Most of those items aren’t common unless the dad in question is a craftsman or does a lot of home repairs/ construction
@@hicksteryt6617 I understand what you are saying.
The point is basic tools does not mean tools that everyone has, it means that this is the simplest version of the tool in question, your dad may or may not have them, no one is saying that these are mandotory tools or most commonly found tools
but if he has tools for crafting/repairing , this is the most basic set you can have . Thus the title "using basic tools".
The only thing that isn't basic is a furnace, and with some home Depot supplies, you can make one in an hour. Most of those things are toys for 60% of dads. If you don't, that sucks, but what are you expecting to make a knife from scratch from if you don't have at least basic tools??
As a knife maker, I'll say you did an excellent job using what I consider to be very basic tools. Great work.
You mentioned your a bladesmith as well. Im new to blade smithing im a master union sheet metal worker just now after many years getting into blade smithing. I have experience with stock removal knife making similare to this not as nice yet but im focusing my education currently towards heat treat thermal cycling. I asked the channel maker this question and wanted to ask you as well see who answers first just so i can learn i have a project im working on. When he went for the heat treat in this video from what i have learned so fare to me it apeared almost welding temperature. And was told a quench that hot can cause micro fractures throughout the blade. Especially dealing with higher carbon steel. In your opinion what is a good temp to quench and do you thermal cycle before the quench. And what should it look like. I always go until its no longer magnetic than i quench. I also use transmision fluid and or canola oil. Any suggestions or input welcome. This guy made a beautiful blade with basic tools and a nice file jig.
@@joshofalltradesgendron5464 My approach is not very scientific, I heat the blade about as hot as my homemade heat-treat forge can, then quench in oil, then put it in the oven for a few hours at 400 up and down twice. I mainly make knives from big, used circular saw blades. I usually test a few small pieces of a blade before I make a bunch of knives out of it by heat treating the way I normally do, then performing a few tests to make sure it'll get hard, but not too brittle, and hold an edge.
Thank you thats basically all i do as well also wrenches chisles and files. I heat my blade until i see the nice coloration and check with magnet once its not magnetic than i take it out and quench. Ive had a few early attempts where my blades where as Orange in this video and blasted fireballs in the quench and each of those blades failed in stress test though had excelent file skate. I later learned that quenching at welding temp or near welding temp can cause severe stress fractures after i asked this question to you. I spoke with a local 40 year bladesmith blacksmith and informed me on what i did wrong. Thank you for taking time to help educate me. I really want this hobby to take off for me.
@@seskipper806What is that file pole thing he uses to make the bevel, and how does it work
@@lylahsworld3930It's a filing jig, you can make one of the various designs at home. You can find some videos on them online, most of them using a bastard file, some more adjustable others not. With some screws, plywood, a couple hardware pieces, a metal pipe and a bastard file you can make something.
Anyone else finding out how to make a knife while stuck at home with corona lmao
Zach Grossman yeah bro use the spoons then toilet paper for handle it’ll be worth tons
Flat files
Yes I am lol
I'm using old saw blades I had lying around
yep
Dude basic tools are a Hammer and a screw not a forge, still nice video
filippo latte, how the frick else would u make it
Forge is a basic tool. But I don’t think angle grinders and dremels are
Now I want to see someone make a knife using only a hammer and a screw :(
Can't harden a blade without a forge Dingus, you could use a coal forge though.
@@lukesadler6830 ARE YOU JOKING? WITH ONLY A FILE. THAT SIMPLE. AND SIMPLE FIRE TO PAINT IT (BURNING). LOOK WHAT MEANS BASIC TOOLS MY FRIEND. th-cam.com/video/_5LXpgSzKyQ/w-d-xo.html
Still one of my favorite builds you've done.
So many to choose from though. Appreciate all the content.
Thanks for the bit of inspiration and the hard work that goes into your craft.
I don't have the basic tools mentioned here to make a knife, but I think I just made a baby. Life is gooood.
Now to sharpen it..
Oh dear god no
That Dremel work is beautiful! This is such an amazing knife.
How to invade a country with basic tools:
*uses laser minigun*
Only Basic minigun
I'm sure everyone is paying attention to your comments...you have 13 subscribers, and he has 21K...:-)
@@edanthony4131 well you have 1 so 13 is still better if you think that way
Ed Anthony and you have 1
Aynen kardeşim. Adamın evinde herşey var bide basic diyo.. 😄
Holy cow that's a gorgeous design... You were so faithful to the original sketch it's almost like a photo. Great work
You did a beautiful job. On your next project leave the dremel spots dark. It add so much to the look. ^_^ Keep the videos coming.
I love how ppl are so ignorant. SIMPLE knife making tools!! Either way you did an amazing job. I just found you channel and look forward to watching more
I agree 100% there are a lot haters on here lol. He made a better knife than I can and used much more basic tools. 👊
Totally agree.
I imagine what non-basic tools looks like to this dude. Bring in the alien proton ray machinery.
Do you see how cheap and basic that rotary tool was? It looked like Ozito which is only 60 dollars and pretty crappy next to ryobi
This is basic tool 🙄 you are just in a city
@@livier3970 Yeah, XIV century blacksmiths sure loved their belt grinders and other various "basic" power tools.
@@Kirai_ yeah i prefer original blacksmithing, a forge is not basic, a grinder yes
@@livier3970 Dude, a "forge" can be just an anvil, a source of intense heat, hammers, tongs and files. All of that combined is still more basic than a belt grinder.
I was literally just watching videos on how to do this! Perfect timing!
I liked the video and the editing was good, but you should put a tool and material list in the description for people who will obviously want to recreate the knife. Thanks
Random piece of mild steel, anneal before starting to shape blade.
Angle grinder.
Metal file.
Drill.
Fire, pref a forge but campfire is also doable.
Various sandpapers.
Old oil for tempering, fresh oil for polishing up and treating the wood.
Hammer to peen the pins on the handle,
And a sharpening stone if you can't sharpen it enough with the sandpaper.
Great build,you might consider taking the base off of your bench grinder used for the last step sharping,and turning it around so you switch will still face you and the wheels will turn the other direction! Much easier to sharpen with edge facing up
Got damn I didn’t know having a drill press was basic tooling my garage sucks
Maybe try an ordinary hand drill?
The Apple Bros that won’t work 😂
@@therealbatman4000 why not?
@BrendanMorlik Got damn you have a garage? My little balcony sucks
For some people basic tooling is everything except a lathe lmao
Beautiful piece, I understand that this was not a tutorial but equipment and supplies list would really help. Very nice work.
Yeah, want to know what the blue stuff was at the beginning, or what the handle is made of
I love watching your videos. So much visual detail, which is helpful since I'm blind
Considering you used mostly hand tools, outstanding job. Very nice work!
hahaha! hand tools like a drill press & angle grinder. Yeah, sure
@@Mrflymess I said mostly but a grinder and a dremel are power tools that you hold in your hand so my statement holds true. Anyway I'm just paying the guy a compliment on a nice job, why knock him?
Really lovley knife. It's nice to see a beautiful product made with simple tools with talented hands.
I like this knife!It was made with basic tools,regardless of the critical comments.Very good video,and basic tools doesn't necessarily mean stone age tools.I'm sure I'd mess up a good many pieces of bar stock before getting it close to this nice. He's got skill.
This video incouraged me to start a business and make my own knives
4:12 That moment when, “Maybe I should use gloves when I do this stuff” finally registers.
Beautiful work, though. Videos like these make me want to learn to create things with my hands.
one of the best videos on knife making I ever saw. Thx buddy
I love this video. I probably watchet it like 20 times and i still come back to it.
one of the most beautifull knives out there , good job
Uuuuuuu. Ma man .I JUST FOUND A VIDEO THAT MAKING KNIFE “WITH”BASIC TOOL . God job man
That is truly one of the better knives I've seen on TH-cam. Good job.
Search for Slavik Tely, then. He is the number one
Homemade perfection. Beautiful brother, thank you.
Geez, you gotta be PROUD of this awesome KNIFE, you done a great video and thanks for sharing it 👍🏻
How i made a knife with basic tools:
Coal forge made of fire briks and a hair dryer
A "anvil"(a piece of metal that I bought on an junkyard)
Hammer
A chisel to cut the metal
Vise
Recycled metal for the blade
Square and round file
2L of canola oil to hardening(the tempering as made holding the blade above the fire for a few minutes)
Sandpaper and sharpening stone
Recycled wood or leather
Pins on the handle
it all cost me 100 reais/ less than 50 bucks
Sorry my bad english, i'm brazilian
so it's basically just not using a grinder for the bevels or handle shaping. which does in fact make it really difficult. so props for having the patience to do all that hand filing.
Nice job, but those aren't basic tools especially a forge. For what it would cost me to buy all those tools, I be better off just buying a nice blade, a very nice blade.
You can make a “forge” with a couple bucks.
Gas bottle/hose and a few breezeblocks (Cinderblocks for Americans)
Could probably get all these tools at harbor Freight for around 100-150 total
@@OldNavajoTricks Not concrete cinderblocks, right? Only if u want a granade though, then u can use concrete in a forge.
The tool investment would actually be a better and more long term investment that could possibly pay out over and over again for you.
Great knife..much respect from Croatia
Hvala zemljače✌️
Wow. I would be pretty proud to own this knife. It’s nice.
WELL DONE.👍
Wow !!
Really- WOW !
That was some wicked foreplay and then a beautiful climax with the grand finale finish .
I won’t begin to Understand how there are 260 some thumbs downs on this !?!?
Really ???
What is wrong with this world !?!?
Well Done !!!!!
It's just what " they " do Man , just what they do .
Hermoso trabajo amigo, saludos de “AZTECA KNIVES” desde Ecatepec, México 🇲🇽
Awesome video man! I absolutely love your channel. I really respect the level of quality you are able to achieve. Those crisp grind lines are something to envy!
Estupendo! Excelente trabajo.
That’s a solid looking knife. Well designed!
Could ya tell me, ok that first heat treat then cooling it with the liquid, was that called annealing? Then the oven bake, is that the hardening?
Stunning knife!!!! Absolutely love the video. Thanks for sharing
OMG ! Good skills and beautiful work !!!
Totally awesome knife dude. Learned alot with your short video thanx.
Nice damascus technic...n off course he did a san mai method too.great job...i'm blacksmith too
That's a really nice blade I like it a lot
Nice. It was a pleasure watching that video. Thanks.
Amazing ! Such a marvelous knife , didatic , simple , with a beautiful light . One of the best videos I have seen on knife making . Congratulations from Brazil .
Greetings from Argentina. With what do you polish the micarta at the end?
"Basic tools" uses a goddamn flamethrower
Elon musk can help u out
Good day. What steel did you use on that knife. It's really beautiful ....
Awesome knife. It came out really nice. Great job.
Finally a knife maker uses metric system
Love it
Well he done a good job but screw the metric system!
Oh by the way I like to buy my whiskey in quarts and Pints and gallons. I don't like damn 500ml 750ml and thousand mL bottle
Up to you
Me with my hammer excited to make a knife, I was lied about basic tools
Beautiful looking knife. What’s is the coating liquid in the plastic bottle you dipped the blade in called
Thank you for this video. I'm just starting out and this made me a 1000 times more comfortable getting into this. I have pretty much the same forge you have mine is just square. I just need to buy a few things and I'll have all the tools you have. I haven't checked the video description box yet but do you have a tool list?? Thanks in advance if you do.
i have a question actually would it be better to use wood or a piece of horn for a handle for a knife
The furnace is rather expensive and not really a basic tool. Was the steel stainless or high carbon? Love the design of the knife and the video. Good job!
H.R. Pufnstuf it’s a high carbon steel
Looks like it was marked as O1, which is a carbon tool steel and pretty easy to work with.
Really nice video. Im not trying to be a troll on this im seriously asking to learn. Your quench looked like you where at welding temp do you feel it was to hot. Please let me know. Ive been doing alot of reading and education on it so i can learn right. I was told that can cause severe stress fractures quenching that hot. Especially with higher tool steel. Thank you
Thats a sick blade. I love the profile. Personally id like about an inch longer blade. But that thing turned out awesome..looks professional
Sweet! Thats it. The basic tools are basic for a small shop or used by a handyman. I have these basic tools...enjoyed the vid thx for sharing
Wonderful knife. Great job.
Would a vice work aswell instead of the clamps for the handle process?
No matter what other can say about this kind of crafting ...
You know what : I would pay around US$45 for this kind of knife ... Nice video ! .
He probably worked on it for 10 hours. So you would only give him a third of the money its worth without taxes?
Hahaha
Reiner mit ei, bidde! Not so! Only 9:18 (length of video) cuz of his wicked-fast filework. (Massive fast-twitch muscle fibres!) Still, I would offer him maybe $150-175...
Nice design knife.Keep up the good work. 👍👍👍
Fantastic job. I love what you did...
Do you put the edge before or after the heat treatment?
Everyone's going on about basic tools, whatever, this is bad ass! How long did it take?
Good looking knife nice build ,the tools you used I have used many times they work well 👍.
That's a sweet lookin knife dude
Gorgeous knife, absolutely gorgeous
Awesome knife man, I like how the Dremel work turned out
What was it that you duped the blade in.. not the oil for the quench but after that?
I have questions: when you FLIP the blade during the Bevel "HOW" did you assure it would be EVEN? 2nd Why polish out the hammer marks & then re apply them with dipping? it looked Great before =/ 3rd HOW did you account for Bevel angle when putting an EDGE on it? =/
Lord Baccus 1. When he flipped it, the angle of the file stays the same. 2. I do not know. 3. That comes with experience and repetition.
Can I use and acetylene torch to heat treat the knife? And what material should I use to dip it in?
That's a handsome knife...
Question:
1 what kind of liquid you dump the hot knife?
2 and what is the second liquide, and why you use them for?
thank you.
Thank you for such a great video, could you please let me know what the material you used for the handle is called? Thanks
Mircata green canvas and aluminium pins.
AVmake Please point out that inhaling micarta dust is not a good thing! If people try this, they should have eye and lung protection.
非常喜欢这个设计👍
Great job💪🏼
That’s a sweet blade. I like what you did with the dremal tool. I’m gonna try and make one like this.
Great Video! (and I've watched 100's of them) Thanks for sharing!
What steel did you use because i would like to forge a knife but i got 308 stainless steel and a normal drill and grinder doesn't do the job and what does the heat do when forging a nice knife
OUTSTANDING WORK MY FRIEND!
Good video. I liked the design. I would have suggested checkering the thumb spine area. This knife was very nice without a handle.
Amazing work and I'm going to make the file jig!! I subscribed to your Chanel, blessings 🙏
DAAAAAAMN! That is one awesome looking knife you’ve made for yourself.
what do i use for those pins inside the tang?
Brass brazing rod from the hardware store.
The pins from brass hinges
@@gearjunkie3412 ought to work. I always either used brass brazing rods because they were concentric. I drilled the holes a little oversized and dimpled the handle a bit around around the hole so I could peen the pins. I've also used nails. I used 2 ton epoxy for the glue for a while but after leaving a knife out in the direct sun for too long I found that the handles loosened. Since then I've used J.B. Weld. That stuff will hold a deisel motor block together. I know because my dad did just that when I was a kid. It was still holding together when he sold the old tractor.
Its beautiful. I like it. And l'll try to make it at home.
3:13 how much does creating the edge usually take especially by hand?
Long time, probably half a day to a day (IMO) :)
Wild bosnian aproximately half an hour, ignore Michiel Buyens
Nice knife! What kind of steel did you use?
Cool! 💪
This is perfect! 👍
could i use wooden dowel rods for pins along with the epoxy?
What is the best steel to use for beginners and where do you get the designs
Those are my designs,if you are beginner you want high carbon steels like O1,1095,1084,80crV2 they are pretty simple to harden and temper.
Well, I don't know about the numbers placed on Steel. Back 40 years ago will you lose anything from horseshoes to an old buggy axle. Now I'll tell you an old buggy axle and I do mean old, you can Hammer some good tools out of them thangs. Also, railroad spikes if they're heated up and fold it over like we did the horseshoes several times they can be beat into some good metal. Then again we had no other place to get metal
4:23 if you are making multiple knives, can you let them sit a while before putting them in the oven or should they be done asap
That was badass
Handle is my favorite part!!!! Nice work!!!