On The Cover
Vivid colors leap off the front cover of Knives 2014, and the knives are equally brilliant in hand. Wayne Whittakers locking-liner folder at far left features a 3.5-inch Robert Eggerling armadillos-mosaic-damascus blade and bolsters, a mammoth-tooth handle exuding blue and red hues, file-worked liners, and zirconia (manmade ruby) inlays in the back spacer and thumb stud. To its right is the Artiste, a fascinating little fixed bladeonly 6 inches overallby Don Cowles showcasing a CPM-154 blade, a Pau de Pernambuco (Brazilian violin-bow wood) handle, a 416 stainless steel guard engraved and gold inlaid by Jim Small, 14k-gold pins and a ruby accent on the ferrule. Half folded at top-right lies a Warren Osborne Ripcord model called Rhinos, parading a Burmese Jadeite handle, a CTS-XHP blade and 416 fittings. Masterful engraving by Tim Adlam, along with inlays of gold, silver and copper, depicts a black rhino on a 24k-gold background on the front bolster, and a Maasai warrior shield on the rear bolster. The reverse side of the knife shows a white rhino and a Swazi warriors shield. Peter Careys Rubicon XL boasts a Chad Nichols iguana-stainless-damascus blade, Gibeon-meteorite bolsters, an ivory-inlaid thumb stud and blue-anodized liners. The pre-ban ivory handle is scrimshawed by Gary Williams in a Viking motif, the Viking himself with all the character an artist could conjure upon one knife. All are incredible creations by skilled knifemakers and artists.
Introduction
A handshake. It tells so much about a person before a word is even spoken. No one should judge a book by its coveralthough the Knives 2014 book has a fine one at thatbut being perceptive, or interested in someone who extends a hand is perfectly natural and good. A knifemakers hand, now thats a golden glove with stories to tell, isnt it? Generalizations are rarely advised, but one would rightly expect a bladesmiths hands to be rough and dirty, a sign of hard work, with lines where metal met tissue, scarred from cuts, soot embedded under the fingernails. Maybe a few nails are broken from wrestling steel, working a grinder or taking a hammer to an anvil.
Weather also wreaks havoc on a persons hands. Days, weeks and months spent in the shop or smithy prematurely age the skin, killing cells and dulling the nerves. Yet the dedicated craftsman labors on into the wee hours of the night when slumber takes hold of less sturdy stock. The hands build something, a useful tool that must withstand rigors of its own, tough cutting media, sinewy fibers, stubborn plastics and knotty pine. Like the knifemaker, the tool has an eventual job to do. Just as in nature, the materials circle of life continues.
Its a good metaphor. The bladesmith breathes life into steel, synthetics and natural materials. There is a predestination to build what is useful and necessary. The men and women who choose such a path in life, or are born into it, generally take their craft seriously. There it is, another preconception, but one that is complimentary and backed by fact. It has been this authors experience that knifemakers take great pride in their work. They are a diligent bunch of perfectionists, hand rubbing steel until it shimmers and oiling wood until every grain has a chance to surface.
So what about the fruits of their labor? Turn the pages and look inside. Master craftsmen and women have fashioned some of the finest knives the world over this past year, and hired photographers to capture their work on film or digital pixels, where it has been converted to print and properly attributed.
The question often arises, How does one make a living building knives? Another popular query the Knives author often receives is: Dont you eventually run out of things to say about knives? The answers in order are, Its not easy, and, No, never. That which is never easy is often well worth the wait and worth telling. Take a look at the Trends and State Of The Art sections toward the middle of the book to see the cream of the knifemaking crop that rose to the top of thousands of images submitted for consideration. Like always, the knives themselves helped determine the trends of the era, and decide what common features knifemakers across the globe are including in their designs and patterns.
The State Of The Art section is just that, current coverage of the hottest knife embellishments including Inlays & Etchings, Stone Infusion, Whirling-Dervish Damascus, Non-Prosaic Mosaics, Full-length Filework and Copious Carving. Scrimshaw and engraving get their just due, and Puzzle Pieces, or knives with several handle pieces put together like jigsaw puzzles, are given prime real estate as well. Handcrafted sheaths round out the artistic offerings and lead into the Factory Trends section.
A bank of features in the front of the book include articles and color photos covering switchblades, mauls, art knives, Blades of the Grand Bazaar, climbing knives and high-carbon steel. Knifemaker Tim Zowada explains How to Strop a Straight Razor, knife writer Dexter Ewing tells why Factories Drink from the Custom Maker Well, and American Bladesmith Society master smith Wally Hayes hopes you Enjoy an Engraving Tutorial.
In all, its been a busy year in the knife shop, as evidenced by the hands of the maker. They are tough like leather, and convey the character and makeup of the man or woman behind them. That alone is reason to appreciate an extended hand that welcomes you into its world, if only for a time.
Joe Kertzman
2014 WOODEN SWORD AWARD
Some people arent content to rest on their laurels. They wont rely on past successes for continued fame or recognition. Take knifemakers Michael Vagnino, Jon Christensen, David Lisch and Tom Ferry, for instance. For the past few BLADE Shows, theyve shared a booth (usually knifemakers take individual tables at the show, but they pooled their resources and rented booth space), joining forces under the name ACE or Artisans of Cutlery.
I talked to Michael at the show, and he said the group originally formed to show appreciation for the avid knife collector and to further advance the art of making knives. There was an invitation-only show for collectors and knifemakers for a couple years, and in 2013, the ACE group fashioned a bowie and folder for a Custom Knife Collectors Association cancer benefit raffle.
Their initial goal of advancing the art of making knives has come to fruition in the form of innovation. Ferry and Vagnino put their heads together to come up with the Ever Flush spring, a slip-joint split-spring feature in which, unlike traditional pocketknives, the spacer or back spring does not rise above the handle spine when opening and closing the blade. It remains flush with the knife spine, thus the name Ever Flush. The idea evolved from the desire to engrave back bars of slip-joint folders, but that was impossible in the past because slip-joint back springs are heat-treated.
Vagnino has busied himself most recently with Convertible Lock-Back Push Daggers. Yes, thats correct, hes fashioning handmade knives that convert from a lock-back fixed-blade position to a locked push dagger and back again. The models shown here sport 3.875-inch blades, one in CPM-154 stainless steel and the other in Wootz steel, the former combined with an antique tortoise shell handle and the latter in black-lip mother-of-pearl. The maker engraved the 416 stainless steel bolsters, and since the push daggers convert to fixed blades, Paul Long sheaths were necessary as fashionable carry options.