So I have been experimenting for a while looking for the perfect woodcarving knife. I am looking mostly at function here and am looking at larger knives for roughing out. For beginners I reckon the Frosts 106 narrow bladed sloyd at £10 is very hard to beat but as folk get more into carving I like two knives, a bigger one for roughing and a smaller one for finer work. The finer one I like Del Stubbs sloyd, it just works very well.
For me the perfect woodcarving knife is not too deep so you can cut concaves (most scandis fail on this one for me) and have not too much belly, just a nice flowing curve from handle to tip.
I have been working with Del to design a larger sloyd and he is working on some at the moment, basically a scaled up version of his current knife but 3 1/2" long. Then last week Nicola (AKA Dr Spoon) spotted a knife on here with a blade which was very close to what I was after, a little research found out that not only was it bang on but it was cheap too so I ordered 4, they arrived yesterday and I stuck a quick rough handle on one to play with. First impressions are very good. So here are some of the knives.
From bottom to top, Dels sloyd, our scaled drawing for the new big sloyd, the new knife and a bare blade and top a Hankala tommi, almost identical profile but made of silver steel and 5 times the price.
So the blade I am enjoying is made by Polar in Finland, its is a cheap (about £6) but good carbon blade. The one drawback is the grind is not perfect for carving having a very slight convex secondary but it still worked exceedingly well without me touching it and won't take a lot of work to get it even better. It has a sharp square back edge which would please the firestarters but I prefer a rounded back for thumb pushing.
I am sure Del's blade will be nicer, but in the meantime this is a superb user at the price. For my money it would be a better bushcraft knife than the frosts clipper (and I love clippers) I will be using this hard and will let you know how it holds up.
For me the perfect woodcarving knife is not too deep so you can cut concaves (most scandis fail on this one for me) and have not too much belly, just a nice flowing curve from handle to tip.
I have been working with Del to design a larger sloyd and he is working on some at the moment, basically a scaled up version of his current knife but 3 1/2" long. Then last week Nicola (AKA Dr Spoon) spotted a knife on here with a blade which was very close to what I was after, a little research found out that not only was it bang on but it was cheap too so I ordered 4, they arrived yesterday and I stuck a quick rough handle on one to play with. First impressions are very good. So here are some of the knives.
From bottom to top, Dels sloyd, our scaled drawing for the new big sloyd, the new knife and a bare blade and top a Hankala tommi, almost identical profile but made of silver steel and 5 times the price.
So the blade I am enjoying is made by Polar in Finland, its is a cheap (about £6) but good carbon blade. The one drawback is the grind is not perfect for carving having a very slight convex secondary but it still worked exceedingly well without me touching it and won't take a lot of work to get it even better. It has a sharp square back edge which would please the firestarters but I prefer a rounded back for thumb pushing.
I am sure Del's blade will be nicer, but in the meantime this is a superb user at the price. For my money it would be a better bushcraft knife than the frosts clipper (and I love clippers) I will be using this hard and will let you know how it holds up.