Nice!So I am using this new knife in spite of any flaws with the assumption that originals back in the fur trade may have had imperfections too. So maybe I’m more period correct than not.
It holds an edge good. Starting to patina nice too.
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I recently got a Higo Nokami Japanese pocketknife when it ended up as a suggestion from Amazon for under $20. Sharp as a razor and makes a good path knife.
Not exactly historically correct for a muzzleloading patch knife, but historical in its own right and interestingly constructed.
Mine is like the black one shown in this video. The brass one I think costs a bit more.
Yep. The acids in the maters I'm thinking. I got a Hudson's Bay Roach Belly from Knives of The North a while back. Brought it along on a camping trip to play with, mamma sliced a tomato with it, cut them as thin as the Hinkle's in the kitchen.I cut some tomatoes with it checking the edge; patina showed up almost immediately.
Looks like I've had it for years, not a week....
Is it 1095 steel? It takes a bit to get there, but holds an edge good.I was able to get an edge on this one that you could shave with.
I don't see anything wrong with it. If you like it, use it. I would and not blink an eye. Nice looking tool.So I am using this new knife in spite of any flaws with the assumption that originals back in the fur trade may have had imperfections too. So maybe I’m more period correct than not.
It holds an edge good. Starting to patina nice too.
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They definitely had some well made and very nice knives in the 1700's. However, trade knives were not among those. They were the "cheap" knives of the era and were first used to trade with the native Indians. However, they were still serviceable knives and a lot of folks ended up with them, not just the natives. The knives in Japan, especially in the Sakai region (around the city of Sakai) were far superior as they made a type of steel that is more commonly known of now as Damascus steel. They made it by hammering it thin; folding it over; forge hammer-welding the pieces together; and repeating the process multiple times. Every time they folded it, it doubled the layers of steel in the knife. It's the same method they used to make Katana swords. Those were not the type of knives coming out of Europe in the 1700's.I don't know much about them but Id think they treated there knifes well back then.
I been looking at some Japanese knifes now..
That's a problem because that's a problem. Id say they have some nice mountain man knifes too.
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