Jay Fisher - Fine Custom Knives

New to the website? Start Here
"Kochab" obverse side view in T3 deep cryogenically processed 440C high chromium martensitic stainless steel blade, 304 stainless steel bolsters, Petrified Sycamore Wood gemstone handle, sheath of lizard skin inlaid in hand-carved leather shoulder, nylon
"Kochab"

Nihal

"Nihal" obverse side view in 440C high chromium stainless steel blade, hand-engraved 304 stainless steel bolsters, Amazonite gemstone handle, hand-carved, hand-dyed leather sheath
"Nihal" Fine Handmade Knife
  • Size: Knife: Length overall: 6.25" (15.9 cm), Blade Length:3.0" (7.6 cm), Thickness: .127" (3.2 mm)
  • Weight: Knife: 3.0 oz. (85 grams) Sheath: 2.9 oz. (82 grams)
  • Blade: 440C high chromium stainless steel, hardened and tempered to 58HRC, mirror polished
  • Bolsters, Fittings: 304 Austenitic Stainless Steel, mirror polished, hand-engraved
  • Handle: Amazonite Gemstone
  • Sheath: Hand-carved, hand-dyed leather shoulder
  • Knife: Nihal is the name of a star in the constellation Lepus (the Rabbit). This is a great small knife, and I don't make many small knives, so this one is a real gem. The blade is clean and smooth, made in highly corrosion resistant 440C high chromium martensitic stainless steel, for almost no care and extreme corrosion resistance with good toughness and high wear resistance. The blade is clean and polished to a high mirror finish, and with no filework, choil or abrupt geometry, is easy to keep clean. The blade has a razor sharp single bevel edge with a substantial finger depression behind the blade for a safe grip. The tang is fully tapered for balance, and the blade is bolstered with zero-care high nickel, high chromium 304 stainless steel alloy. This is a very tough, durable, and highly corrosion resistant stainless steel. I've hand-engraved a light intertwined leaf pattern in the bolsters, a hint of Celtic style. The bolsters are dovetailed to bed a pair of striking green Amazonite gemstone handle scales to the tang. Amazonite is a potassium aluminum silicate, a microcline feldspar that resembles turquoise or chrysocolla at first glance, but is harder and more electric in intensity. You can see from the photos that this is a bright material, with bits of white tipped crystals throughout. There is nothing that quite looks like the intense color, and though the knife is small, the extreme appearance will not be ignored. The knife feels accurate and particularly light in the hand, with the balance point at the junction of the front bolster and handle scale. This is a three finger handle shape; the first three fingers of the hand wrap while the small finger is draped behind the rear bolster quillon, and it molds into the palm. As you look at the photos on this page, please note that they are all enlargements. Even the full photo above is over 2 times the size of the actual knife, showing every detail.
  • Sheath: As always, my sheaths must be commensurate with the knife, so I created a high-backed sheath out of heavy leather shoulder, and hand-carved and hand-dyed the design that matches the bolster engraving. I wanted it darker and less striking than the handle, so I chose a deep emerald green against a background of black for the color dye arrangement. The sheath is carved and tooled front, back, and on the belt loop, and hand-stitched with black polyester for durability and strength. The sheath is deep and protective, sealed from moisture and the elements.
  • A beautiful and elegant small knife, with an vibrant gemstone handle and pleasing sheath.

Thanks, L.B.!


Please click on thumbnail photos
"Nihal" reverse side view. Sheath back has full carving, tooling, and hand-dyed shoulder "Nihal" spine view. Clean and smooth spine, dovetailed bolsters lock gemstone handle material to tang "Nihal" inside handle tang view. All surfaces are smooth, rounded, polished, and finished for comfort "Nihal" knife profile view. Knife shown in three power magnification! "Nihal" knife profile view. 3X magnfication shows every detail of this beautiful gemstone knife "Nihal" reverse side gemstone, engraving detail. This is a 5 power enlargement showing every detail. "Nihal" obverse side handle enlargement is five times the size of the knife, showing great detail and magnificent gemstone color "Nihal" blade grind and maker's mark detail. Single bevel edge is razor sharp. "Nihal" sheathed view. Sheath is deep and protective, with clean and simple design with durability "Nihal" sheath back view. This is a two-power enlargement of this small sheath "Nihal" point detail. The blade is a drop point, for easy sheathing and good strength at the tip "Nihal" sheath mouth view. Knife is well-protected in deep sheath, wtih just enough handle for easy unsheathing

Featured Knife Pages


XHTML 1.0 Validated, Compliant, Link Checked, and CSS Level 2.1 Validated through W3C, the World Wide Web Consortium
Main Purchase Tactical Specific Types Technical More
Home Page Where's My Knife, Jay? Current Tactical Knives for Sale The Awe of the Blade Knife Patterns My Photography
Website Overview Current Knives for Sale Tactical, Combat Knife Portal Museum Pieces Knife Pattern Alphabetic List Photographic Services
My Mission My Knife Prices All Tactical, Combat Knives Investment, Collector's Knives Copyright and Knives Photographic Images
The Finest Knives and You How To Order Counterterrorism Knives Daggers Knife Anatomy  
Featured Knives: Page One Purchase Finished Knives  Professional, Military Commemoratives Swords Custom Knives  
Featured Knives: Page Two Order Custom Knives USAF Pararescue Knives Folding Knives Modern Knifemaking Technology My Writing
Featured Knives: Page Three Knife Sales Policy USAF Pararescue "PJ- Light" Chef's Knives Factory vs. Handmade Knives First Novel
Featured Knives: Older/Early Bank Transfers  27th Air Force Special Operations  Food Safety, Kitchen, Chef's Knives Six Distinctions of Fine Knives Second Novel
Email Jay Fisher Custom Knife Design Fee Khukris: Combat, Survival, Art Hunting Knives Knife Styles Knife Book
Contact, Locate Jay Fisher Delivery Times Serrations Working Knives Jay's Internet Stats  
FAQs My Shipping Method Grip Styles, Hand Sizing Khukris The 3000th Term Videos
Current, Recent Works, Events Business of Knifemaking Concealed Carry and Knives Skeletonized Knives Best Knife Information and Learning About Knives  
Client's News and Info   Military Knife Care Serrations Cities of the Knife Links
Who Is Jay Fisher?   The Best Combat Locking Sheath Knife Sheaths Knife Maker's Marks  
Testimonials, Letters and Emails     Knife Stands and Cases How to Care for Custom Knives Site Table of Contents
Top 22 Reasons to Buy   Tactical Knife Sheath Accessories Handles, Bolsters, Guards Knife Making Instruction  
My Knifemaking History   Loops, Plates, Straps Knife Handles: Gemstone Larger Monitors and Knife Photos  
What I Do And Don't Do    Belt Loop Extenders-UBLX, EXBLX Gemstone Alphabetic List New Materials  
CD ROM Archive   Independent Lamp Accessory-LIMA Knife Handles: Woods Knife Shop/Studio, Page 1  
Publications, Publicity   Universal Main Lamp Holder-HULA Knife Handles: Horn, Bone, Ivory Knife Shop/Studio, Page 2  
My Curriculum Vitae   Sternum Harness Knife Handles: Manmade Materials    
Funny Letters and Emails, Pg. 1 Blades and Steels Sharpeners, Lanyards Knife Embellishment     
Funny Letters and Emails, Pg. 2 Blades Bags, Cases, Duffles, Gear    
Funny Letters and Emails, Pg. 3 Knife Blade Testing Modular Sheath Systems  
Funny Letters and Emails, Pg. 4 440C: A Love/Hate Affair PSD Principle Security Detail Sheaths      
Funny Letters and Emails, Pg. 5 ATS-34: Chrome/Moly Tough
Funny Letters and Emails, Pg. 6 D2: Wear Resistance King        
The Curious Case of the "Sandia" O1: Oil Hardened Blued Beauty        
The Sword, the Veil, the Legend Elasticity, Stiffness, Stress,
and Strain in Knife Blades
   
Professional Knife Consultant Heat Treating and
Cryogenic Processing of
Knife Blade Steels