Danish Oil & Antler

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JonathanD

Ophiological Genius
Sep 3, 2004
13,028
1,830
Stourton,UK
Been a long time since I soaked a knife handle in Danish oil. I used to do it all the time on my non stabilised scaled knives. Anyway, since I had my antler handle bushy knife with its three layer liner to bulk it out to my usual spec, I realised that the fibre liners were the weak point so decided to dip it in warm Danish for two days so it would have a good chance of 100% penetration.

This is the knife before treatment.

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After I pulled it out, I left it to dry and harden for a few days. I was surprised that most of the antler, apart from some dense parts near the ricasso, had absorbed the oil right the way through and given it a translucent effect. It really brought out the beauty in the antler and at the same time virtually stabalised it. The pictures really don't do it justice, it is stunning...

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I shall be on the door again this year,hope to see you ( and your knives!? ) there.
Cheers.
Chris.

Cool. Hopefully I'll make it this year.

Incidentally, if anyone is thinking of giving their wood/bone/antler handle or just liners some stabilisation, heres how I do it for top results.

Stick you knife in a tall thing and tip in some Danish so that it covers the entire handle when suspended by some foam:

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Wrap a heating pad (low wattage reptile pads you get for £4.99 does the job). The leave for three days.

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Wipe off any excess and leave to dry for 24 hours. Then enjoy.

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This oil soaks ino the densest material at this warm temperature 100% and makes it that much stronger and impervious to moisture penetration and so protects the steel underneath too. A great bonus if you have an 01 knife.
 
Seriously nice Jonathon, adds that extra touch of class.
just out of question, does your Deval Bushcrafter have a secondary bevel or is it due to Stu's Slight hollow grinds?

It used to be a high scandi grind with a polished edge. Now it has a secondary bevel. I've always had scandi grinds, but I now like the stronger edge of the secondary and less time and hassle when it needs sharpening. I use this knife a lot and it never needs more than a few strokes down the fine ceramic of a sharpmaker to bring the edge back. Stus high grind has virtually eliminated the problems you get with thick blades. This one is 3.5mm.

I suppose eventually I'll have to get out the bench stones to take back the main bevel, but that is several years away yet.
 
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