Aleeknives

Aleeknives

I make knives, swords and other various projects! Come and learn with me! I am here to help, feel absolutely free to ask questions! If you are interested in doing a collaboration with my channel Just ask! I am here to have fun.

Please show your support by subscribing to my channel!

Sincerely,
Airin Lee


Don't forget to subscribe! Please

Fantasy build

Fantasy build

Keris Part 2

Keris Part 2

Making a tiny knife!

Making a tiny knife!

My favorite knife of 2021

My favorite knife of 2021

Пікірлер

  • @Keith_the_knife_freak
    @Keith_the_knife_freak5 күн бұрын

    👍👍👍

  • @johntellerman1
    @johntellerman16 күн бұрын

    After I glue the welt on I dye everything inside and out. You can't do that after you sew it all up. I dye the belt loop inside and out before gluing and stitching as well. Hard to dye inside the belt loop after it's stitched.

  • @johntellerman1
    @johntellerman17 күн бұрын

    Another hint to new blade makers...ALWAYS drill your handle pin holes BEFORE you temper the blade! Keep everything in this video in sequence. A well tempered 1095 blade for sure will make you go thru a handful of bits! Also, I use a machinist center drill after I punch the hole positions with a center punch. That gives you a very nice beginning hole for your main bit that won't let it walk on you.

  • @6Sally5
    @6Sally59 күн бұрын

    Black, thin one! Looks damn badass.

  • @KarlBAndersen
    @KarlBAndersen11 күн бұрын

    San-Mai has an unhardenable jacket. Wrought iron, stainless steel, mild steel, etc. You made a three layer "Damascus" blade. "San Mai (Japanese: 三枚, Hepburn: sanmai), in the context of metal blade construction/metalwork, refers to a knife, blade or sword that has the hard steel hagane forming the blade's edge, and the iron/stainless forming a jacket on both sides. It is also the term used to refer to the technique used to create these blades."

  • @Cetrifuga1945
    @Cetrifuga194511 күн бұрын

    Meraviglia 🤩 Artigiano 🧑‍🎨 Cempion

  • @Cetrifuga1945
    @Cetrifuga194511 күн бұрын

    Sei molto professionale tutto imparati tu ai una marmitta in più grande 👍❤️‍🔥🔥

  • @ballistic350
    @ballistic35012 күн бұрын

    Bad ass.. how heavy is it?

  • @ginesrodriguez8570
    @ginesrodriguez857017 күн бұрын

    your handles are beautiful! How do you keep the tang and pins from staining your light colored woods- like curly maple?

  • @ReadyUpGo
    @ReadyUpGo18 күн бұрын

    I wish I had a video of my recent fall down 8 wooden stairs. I had to have looked the real fool there. At 73 i realize how incredibly lucky I am to have only ripped a little valley down one forearm for 8 inches. The luck was in getting spun around and going down on my back so no fingers or limbs or the old face were forced in dangerous directions. I jumped up after lying still for my sensory inventory of parts and got out of that unfamiliar, poorly lit building straight away. Reminded me just how quickly the lightening of life can strike.

  • @dwayneburbridge3283
    @dwayneburbridge328319 күн бұрын

    Love the Fordite handle!

  • @jimpartridge9634
    @jimpartridge963420 күн бұрын

    Elm

  • @alonsoestudilloramos2405
    @alonsoestudilloramos240520 күн бұрын

    Cuanto tiempo en el cafe??

  • @cedrics1220
    @cedrics122022 күн бұрын

    Awesome!! How long do you let the tung oil dry after you applied a layer?

  • @hunt_trap_fish
    @hunt_trap_fish24 күн бұрын

    I love how this turned out too. Super duper cool.

  • @rowpaul4545
    @rowpaul454525 күн бұрын

    Nice machine!! Started a sharpening business up here in Canada, was thinking of DIY like that, especially for salon shears freehand sharpening. You should smooth out the disc edge so it sounds better when your knife guide hits the edge.

  • @REDARO11
    @REDARO1128 күн бұрын

    man why no lanyard hole ...??? whyyyy ?+??+?+?+

  • @kdnofyudbn5918
    @kdnofyudbn5918Ай бұрын

    Wow amazing craftsmanship !

  • @jfk767
    @jfk767Ай бұрын

    I've watched hundreds of knife making videos from dozens of makers and that's one of the most beautiful builds I've ever seen.

  • @GlennLaguna
    @GlennLagunaАй бұрын

    that stinks. hope your better, and that you start making videos again soon.

  • @philzy420
    @philzy420Ай бұрын

    I told my wife one day my 3rd leg would be useful as a 3rd hand lol

  • @user-oh8cr7ji9v
    @user-oh8cr7ji9vАй бұрын

    Very educational video 👍🏻👍🏻💥

  • @user-oh8cr7ji9v
    @user-oh8cr7ji9vАй бұрын

    Great video I appreciate your knowledge and skills awesome job sir.

  • @LockBits-ts6eo
    @LockBits-ts6eoАй бұрын

    All 3 are lovely.

  • @nicolasknifeamateur
    @nicolasknifeamateurАй бұрын

    Thank you very much for sharing your experience and the good work making the video. 👍👍👍

  • @norcalbowhunter3264
    @norcalbowhunter3264Ай бұрын

    The first time I made a knife I got done and say down with my Work Sharp precision adjust knife sharpener. Which is like the wicked edge but much cheaper. I spent 3 weeks grinding that edge down to a cutting edge because I was using the stones of the sharpener to get from that square edge down to a cutting edge. I almost gave up on it. But using a file or a belt sander to get close to an edge, then using my setup to bring it to sharpness is so much faster and better on me both physically and mentally lol

  • @norcalbowhunter3264
    @norcalbowhunter3264Ай бұрын

    Oh and Work Sharp actually did a video where they tried different methods of sharpening seeing if it's better to pull, push, and all that. They go in with a microscope and look at the edges and do cut tests. It's on KZread, totally worth the watch.

  • @norcalbowhunter3264
    @norcalbowhunter3264Ай бұрын

    You can get a special metal trash can for oiled rag disposal. The car shops I've worked in had them and they are designed so if something does catch fire in them it won't spread.

  • @jimpartridge9634
    @jimpartridge9634Ай бұрын

    For draw sanding I made a little block. Used 1” aluminum square tube, cut it to 4” long, and filled it with epoxy. I cut a slot in one side, and use that to insert a little 4” wide sandpaper.

  • @norcalbowhunter3264
    @norcalbowhunter3264Ай бұрын

    Hand sanding is a great time to listen to a podcast or music or something. It's very meditative for me. I listen to Bible sermons and just embrace the moment of iron sharpening iron.

  • @norcalbowhunter3264
    @norcalbowhunter3264Ай бұрын

    I would say that a 2x72 is a necessity. Like I get the advice if you're just trying it out you don't need to buy one, and when you first start making knives you don't need one. You can literally get by with just a hack saw and some files and sand paper. But the 2x72 is 100% something you should save up to buy as soon as you can if this is something you want to do more seriously. The availability of belts, the different attachments, the entire system, being able to control the motor. Those are all game changers that I wish I had MUCH soon in my adventure of learning how to make knives and make a business out of it.

  • @michaelmorrison4843
    @michaelmorrison4843Ай бұрын

    That fine grit conditioning belt left a really nice finish! Great job! 🤔👍

  • @JustinBlaustein
    @JustinBlausteinАй бұрын

    You're pure class. No cussing and swearing and jumping up and down, and no giving up. If not a lesson to us all, definitely a lesson to me. I love that you went ahead and made the knife that was in your mind, regardless of the path you took to get there, in fact, that knife is more personal for the story behind it. As always, thank you for your generosity in sharing.

  • @JustinBlaustein
    @JustinBlausteinАй бұрын

    What doesn't show through in these videos is just how good you are....The end product shows it but, I follow your videos, and you make it all look so effortless, like watching a pro athlete...Only in this case, I say, "I can do that", and I actually try to! Hahaha. I can not for the life of me grind bevels to the "grind to" line to save my butt. At some point I'm going to have to invest in a 2" x 72", but in honesty, I don't know that it will help. "Its not the arrow, its the Indian". Thank you for these videos. I would be incredibly proud if I ended up with a knife like that, and you do it all with humility. You've inspired me to "keep on pushing".

  • @JustinBlaustein
    @JustinBlausteinАй бұрын

    WOW That is a thing of beauty.

  • @JustinBlaustein
    @JustinBlausteinАй бұрын

    Hello @Aleeknives I've only been finding my way through knifemaking (with my son) for the past year or so. I sure wish I stumbled on your videos sooner. What is so great and what separates you from the others is that you don't just say "what" to do, you say "why". Maybe its a fault of mine but throughout my life, esp. the public school years, I did not do well when just told to "do". For example, I knew to harden the blade only, but I thought it was just because of ease, or speed rather than doing the whole thing. Duh, of course it would be more brittle when gone through heat treat. Obvious to most, not to a newb like me. Virtually ALL of the tips you give throughout your videos, I have adopted. I will admit I am a little concerned, it looks like you disappeared over a year ago, and your Patreon link is null. I hope you are well. Looking forward to your next post! Thank you for all of your teachings!

  • @tek9102
    @tek9102Ай бұрын

    Did you build your disc sander? Do you have a video on it?

  • @jimpartridge9634
    @jimpartridge9634Ай бұрын

    Man makes knives (loads of knives), but uses crappy steak knife for actual cutting job 😂

  • @julieanddavidmyers6641
    @julieanddavidmyers6641Ай бұрын

    Great tutorial I made a simple leather sheath for a blade I black smithed out of a Harbor Freight 17mm wrench. I used a speedy-all stitcher to sew it up.

  • @boubouboubou7875
    @boubouboubou7875Ай бұрын

    Can't wait to see the result

  • @Thealexyates
    @ThealexyatesАй бұрын

    Alright this was the best instructional video for people to get started I’ve seen. Thanks for your time in filming this one. I’ve been working through issues I’ve had with really cheap equipment like a 1x30 and your tips with the angle grinder and beveling jig set up are coming in clutch.

  • @robr4596
    @robr4596Ай бұрын

    That's exactly the length of the knife that I thought they were, longer than a dagger, shorter than a bowie. Thanks for your post!

  • @JimmyJamesHopper
    @JimmyJamesHopper2 ай бұрын

    Great Videos…What material are the pins? Will you provide a link?

  • @Belows682
    @Belows6822 ай бұрын

    would normalizing the steel be necessary for this style of grinding and the heat it generates? i only have a forge so holding a specific temp for extended times or allowing a very slow cooling is kind of tough(I do have a steel bucket of vermiculite though). id like to profile like this though; currently, I am taking it kind of slow. when the blade gets to hot for me to touch with bare skin it goes in the water real quick.

  • @GodmadeConscious
    @GodmadeConscious2 ай бұрын

    Um, omg, why are you not protecting that knife with that completely wet leather covered in super sheen and dye???

  • @shakaz6641
    @shakaz66412 ай бұрын

    How thick is your cutting edge? Cant find a guide anywhere on the net 😂 👍

  • @javanthomas4122
    @javanthomas41222 ай бұрын

    Beautiful work. I want to buy it

  • @cameltj908
    @cameltj9082 ай бұрын

    you could probably put a piece of 1x to rest your jig on so it doesn't flex. between your vice and the bottom of your jig.

  • @justinabrahim7674
    @justinabrahim76742 ай бұрын

    Just wanted to say thankyou for the videos been binge watching them all weekend learning about knife making as I’m in the process of getting involved with it. I picked up a lot of helpful tips and always info on what I’ll be getting my self into. I can’t wait to give it a go

  • @JustinBlaustein
    @JustinBlaustein2 ай бұрын

    @Aleeknives I absolutely love all of your videos. So much good info. I watch these over and over while I'm at my day job so when I go home I put them into practice. Quick question: when you talk about quenching you say, "I think the book says...". Can you tell me which book?? I can't find a single chart online that definitively says what heat treating method for which steel. I bought some 01 steel thinking "oil quenching" but then I read in one place that it needs to soak at exactly 1500 Farenheit for 1/2 hour. Another source said it can be treated just like you describe the 1095. I don't have a special knife kiln for long "soaks". Is there a work around? (ok, not a quick question, and not one question. ;) ) thanks for the help.

  • @mikenorris6769
    @mikenorris67692 ай бұрын

    😊I'd be interested to know more about your knife, did you use a mixture of colours to get that finish?

  • @mikenorris6769
    @mikenorris67692 ай бұрын

    Sorry.. meant to say knife sheath!!!