Improvised sharpening

philaw

Settler
Nov 27, 2004
571
47
43
Hull, East Yorkshire, UK.
I thought it might be interesting to make up a thread of everyday items that we have around us that can be used for sharpening. I bet some people here know of some good improvised things, as well as some traditional ones. After we read a few new ideas we'll all start to notice some of our own.

Here's number 1: Pendants! I got a viking whetstone pendant from ragweed forge that both looked cool, and being very smooth jasper, are useful for polishing a blade in addition to your usual kit. Unfortunately I dropped mine on a concrete floor and it broke in half. Now it's smaller and more comfortable to carry.

I got myself a jade buddha pendant yesterday, and got it blessed at the local temple at my wife's suggestion. A bit odd for an atheist, but temple's are some of the only non-commercial places left, and I like them. Anyhow, it ocurred to me that jade being both hard and composed of very fine crystals (it was used by 'stone age' chinese to make knives), it might be good for knife sharpening. If I find a nice rectangular pendant I could wear it it everyday and always have something handy. Anyone ever tried it or got any thoughts? What other cheap semi-precious stones, commonly used in pendants, etc, would be good?
 

philaw

Settler
Nov 27, 2004
571
47
43
Hull, East Yorkshire, UK.
Good stuff Andy. Do you mean that you rub sand/ sandstone on to a green stick to embed grains in it, and use then use the stick to sharpen your knife? It sounds like it would scratch the blade. Glass is about as everyday as it gets, as is the unglazed-bottom-of-a-mug, and they're exactly what I was thinking of.

Let's keep it coming.
 
A

Andrzej

Guest
Will the glass place mats get damaged by the blade, I don't want to just try it on my girlfriends glass coasters, or else there will be trouble.
 

Moine

Forager
Natural :
- very smooth and hard river stone (either flat or rounded for convex edges)

Transformed/non-natural :
- steel wire (it's a steel after all)
- the spine of another knife as a steel
- wet/dry sandpaper (that's what I use all the time)
- Any roundish rod made of something hard and soft (ok, now you've got your imagination going wild, I'm talking sharpening here : glass, ceramic, steel, etc.) :)

For an extreme hone : sheet of paper on the mouse pad. That's scary. You use it as a strop. Try it. Scalpel is an euphemism.

You don't need the thing to be harder than your steel if you don't cut into it and use a strop-like motion (spine first). So anything soft will do, actually. The palm of my hand or my pants are good strops.

Cheers,

David
 

redcollective

Settler
Dec 31, 2004
632
17
West Yorkshire
One of my wifes emery boards - quite a useful edge on my pocketknife with that. It is a bit flexible though - I think it would put a rounded edge on anything bigger.
 

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