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How to Make Better Bolsters

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by John Lewis Jensen

First Steps Toward a Beauty of a Bolster

Because my work is so complicated, my first step is to draw and refine everything on paper, working out all of the issues in terms of design and proportions. Once this is done, I make about six Xerox copies of the drawing that will be cut and pasted to material as needed.

In the case of these bolsters, I had Timascus on hand already. It came precision-milled from the supplier in a 1/8-inch thickness. However, as you can see in the accompanying photo, there are some rough tooling marks that should be eliminated. The smoother the contact surfaces are to other contact surfaces, the tighter the overall fit of the knife parts. It is important and critical, to me anyway, that components be “air tight,” and that there are absolutely no visual gaps between materials.

I hand sand the flats. Even though I am technically using the 4-inch-by-36-inch belt sander, I am not turning it on, as that would be a bit too aggressive in this case. The piece is small and would be hard to hold against a moving belt. It could easily get away from me, which could damage the piece and/or my hands! I simply hand sand it with even pressure on a 320-grit sanding belt.

 

I’m not trying, in particular, to remove thickness, only to eliminate the slightly irregular tool marks. This takes a bit of elbow grease, especially with the material being titanium. I just want to smooth out the surface. I have carefully cut out the bolster section from my overall drawing and double-stick taped this shape down to the topside of the raw material that I want to be my front bolster.

As you can see in the accompanying photo, I have smoothed the surface. You can see the grit marks of the sanding belt, but the bolster material is certainly smooth and flat to the touch and sight. The process is repeated for both bolsters.

How to Make a High-Tech Folder

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by Allen Elishewitz

There are many methods to build a knife and there is no wrong way to do it. You can use anything from simple hand tools to industrial machines. The method I have chosen for readers to follow allows for a high-tech folder to be fashioned with either simple or large industrial-type machines, the latter of which are like the ones I own.

The fancy locking-liner folder that has resulted from this step-by-step instructional is completely handmade. The reason I choose to build all my knives in such a manner is because it gives me, the knifemaker, more flexibility in my production method. It also allows the knife to take on more of an individual and unique appearance.

 

Keep in mind that, due to space limitations, there are quite a few small steps that I have excluded. I will do my best to mention them but I will concentrate on the most important aspects of making a high-tech locking-liner folder.

For this project, the knife has titanium bolsters, a carbon fiber handle and a damascus blade. The locking-liner folder integrates a classical handle/bolster combination that, to build it, entails an intermediate level of difficulty. What makes the folder more complicated to build than other plain-handle knives is the introduction of the bolsters. The bolsters add just one more aspect to handle construction, and the alignment of the bolsters and handle material must be constantly maintained during the knife assembly.

11-11-11: Here’s To U.S. Service Personnel Everywhere

Blademag.com, BLADE® magazine and everyone at F+W Media and Krause Publications would like to take this opportunity to thank all American service personnel and veterans for their service to their country.

It goes without saying that without the sacrifices they have made and continue to make, we would not have the privilege of living in the greatest country the world has ever seen. However, we can never say it enough.

Thank you active duty personnel and veterans everywhere!

Boston City Council Hears Concerns On Proposed Knife Ordinance

Thanks to great response from BLADE readers, blademag.com visitors, members of the American Knife & Tool Institute (AKTI), members of KnifeRights.org, and all knife enthusiasts who contacted knife retailers in Boston, the City Council is hearing the concerns about a proposed ordinance to license stores that sell knives.

While the actual ordinance wording targets hardware stores, it exempts only department stores and hardware stores, leaving a lot of outdoor and other retailers liable for licensing. Such a measure would discourage knife sales in Boston, and limit the individual’s right to purchase responsible and much-needed edged tools. This first step has been effective, but Knife Rights and the AKTI need blademag.com visitors to keep spreading the word.

If you are a Boston citizen, contact your council person and express your opposition to this proposal. Visit www.cityofboston.gov/citycouncil/councillors, or call 617-635-4500 and ask for your council person. Or, email Mayor Tom Mennio at [email protected], or call his office at 617-635-4500.

Knife Test: Winkler Knives II Get A Tough Workout!

Master bladesmith Daniel Winkler’s knives and axes created for elite Special Operations teams. http://www.winklerknives.com/

Kickstarter Campaign for Documentary of Knifemaker Eddie White

 
Shadowland is a documentary about a knifemaker who spent most of his career working in the shadows of other knifemakers and knife companies. He finally set out on his own and has made a success of it in these hard times of recession, nonetheless.
 
That fella’s name is Eddie White.  We’ve been friends since we were in the Boy Scouts together and when he came home from the Navy he was looking for something to do.  I had a custom knife shop and offered Eddie a job.  On his first day I showed him how to grind a blade and as his dad says “and from there he went.”  He was good at it and it wasn’t long before he was grinding 70 knives a day.  Mind you that these blades were already profiled and just needed the blades ground, but still quite a feat.
EdgeGrind1.JPG
He spent years repeating that process and knife assembly for various knife shops before striking out on his own.  I thought it would be a good idea to document how he progressed in the custom knifemaking business and give an inside look at the challenges a craftsman like Eddie faces in keeping the business going.  There is also plenty of footage of Eddie carrying a knife from start to finish.  While not a tutorial it does give you an idea of how to make a knife and not work yourself to death.  Because if anyone knows efficiency and economy of movement it’s Eddie White!
 
 

Please take a moment to check out the project on Kickstarter.

Shadowland Documentary Project at Kickstarter.com

Anti-Knife Law Would Oppress Boston Convenience Stores

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A proposed Boston ordinance requiring the licensing of “convenience stores” that sell certain knives was presented to the Boston City Council earlier this week, the Knife Rights e-mail newsletter reported.

The council had tabled action on the proposed ordinance Sept. 8.

“This proposal to license so-called convenience stores in order to be able to sell knives [with blades] 2 inches long and longer doesn’t accomplish anything but cost businesses additional hassle and money, which might well succeed in [the] ultimate goal of making it impossible for law-abiding citizens to buy a knife at their local convenience store. That is discriminatory against both citizens and these businesses,” the newsletter stated.

According to the newsletter, the businesses may decide it is too much trouble and expense to bother with knives anymore, which is obviously what the proposed ordinance’s supporters want. “But this will not make a dent in crime or violence,” the newsletter stated.

You can review the ordinance at www.kniferights.org/BostonOrdinance.pdf.

As the newsletter noted, only honest citizens and businesses would be impacted. No one wanting a knife will have much difficulty buying one someplace else because most other stores except the proposed ordinance’s ill-defined “convenience” stores are purportedly exempted from the licensing—at least for now. “No regulation of knife sales will stop violence,” the newsletter observed.

 
According to the newsletter, Boston code already restricts sales by city-licensed retail stores of knives with blades over 2 inches long to minors.

If you are a Boston citizen, contact your councilperson and express your opposition to this proposal. Visit www.cityofboston.gov/citycouncil/councillors or call 617-635-4500 and ask for your councilperson. Or, e-mail Mayor Tom Mennio at [email protected], or call his office at 617-635-4500. 

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