Jay Fisher - Fine Custom Knives

New to the website? Start Here
Custom Knife display stand for Izanami, Izanagi knives and sheaths. Stand is granite, tulipwood, 304 stainless steel, Noreena Jasper and Nickel Magnesite/Chrysoprase gemstone, and Paduk hardwood
"Izanami and Izanagi"

Older/Early Works

Omega

"Omega" in carbon damascus steel blade, hand-engraved low carbon steel guard and pommel, petrified wood gemstone handle, bloodwood, tropical walnut hardwood articulating stand with brass pique work
"Omega" Art Knife

The Omega is based on my Aunkst knife pattern, a hidden tang knife with a western trailing point blade style. This is an older/early work, and I went all out when I made it with one of my elaborate articulating stands. The name Omega came from the general shape of the stand. The blade is a carbon steel random pattern damascus, hand-forged and made of high carbon and low carbon steels ground, heat treated, and finished with alternating grinding and etching steps. This brings out the bold pattern by etching the higher carbon component away, and leaving the lower carbon component at its original surface level. Then, in a final step, the blade is blued to bring out dark contrast. The blade is fully fileworked, and deeply hollow ground with a nice grind termination radius. The knife is guarded and has a pommel of low carbon steel, hand-engraved with a scroll and leaf pattern. The handle is striking in Agatized and Jasper Petrified Wood gemstone from the Petrified Forest in Arizona. I rarely use this type of petrified wood, as it is difficult to find in large and solid enough pieces for a knife handle. Though the Petrified Forest has millions of tons of fossilized trees replaced with agate, jasper, carnelian, and quartz, most of this material is riddled with fractures and will break to crumbs when worked by the lapidary. That is why though you may see many trunks, limbs, and large pieces, you'll seldom see any that are solid in a fist-size. The larger pieces can be worked with fractures in place and still hold together, but when you try to cut and shape and grind down the smaller pieces needed for knife handles, they fall apart. There are, however some carefully acquired and harvest pieces suitable for a knife handle, and this knife demonstrates the beauty of that material. All the colors are natural, and the stones are hard and take a smooth, glassy polish. I used stainless steel spacers and red vulcanized fiber spacers to accent the reds in the gemstone.

The display stand for the Omega is as intriguing as the knife. I made it from Bloodwood and Tropical Walnut hardwoods, with brass fittings, axles, and pins as well as intricate brass pique work. The stand is articulating, and the knife swivels around in the central ring, while the omega lobes swivel around the outside of that. This allows the knife to be displayed in a wide variety of positions. The base is tropical walnut, and the stand has a machine-engraved black lacquered brass nameplate.

A beautiful ensemble and bold display of a popular early knife style, and an older work that is nice to visit.

Please click on thumbnail knife photos
"Omega" art knife reverse side view. Stand is fully articulating in exotic hardwoods and brass "Omega" in stand. Dynamic articulating stand can display the knife in a variety of positions, directions, and angles "Omega" obverse side knife detail. Carbon steel damascus blade is distictive and deeply patterned, complimenting the bold petrified wood gemstone handle

Return to 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