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"

"Rebanador" Custom Knife

"Rebanador" Fine Custom Handmade knife, obverse side view in t3 cryogenically treated 440C high chromium stainless steel blade, 304 austenitic stainless steel bolsters, Stone Canyon Jasper gemstone handle, hand-carved, hand-dyed leather sheath
"Rebanador" Fine Handmade Custom Knife
  • Size: Length overall: 15.88" (40.3 cm), Blade Length: 11.2" (28.5 cm), Thickness: .093" (2.4 mm)
  • Weight: Knife: 9.8 oz. (278 grams) Sheath: 7.2 oz. (204 grams)
  • Blade: 440C High Chromium Martensitic Stainless Steel, Hardened and Tempered with T3 Cryogenic Process to Rockwell HRC 56, Mirror Polished
  • Bolsters, Fittings: 304 Austenitic Stainless Steel, Mirror polished
  • Handle: Stone Canyon Jasper Gemstone (California)
  • Sheath: Hand-carved, hand-dyed Leather Shoulder
  • Knife: This is an incredible knife, a fantastic custom knife project that I was honored to make with the direct input of my client. He wanted a slicer, a thin, yet stiff knife with an extremely long blade. I named this knife "Rebanador" which is the Spanish word for slicer. The Rebanador is incredibly thin, long and keen. The design of blade is a recognized form of a slicing knife for the chef, designed to create long, thin, and accurate cuts. My client wanted the best slicing knife possible, with a blunt, rounded point, and honored me enough to allow my own creative input. This is why I truly love making custom knives!
    • The steel chosen for my client's Rebanador is 440C, my most asked-for steel for a reason. It's very tough, highly wear resistant and excels in corrosion resistance, for the lowest care needed of just about any knife steel. It's also one of the very best steels for chef's and kitchen use, since it meets all Food Contact Safety guidelines. I applied my proprietary T3 deep cryogenic process in heat treating this blade; it's a highly detailed, extremely sophisticated process that takes 33 individual steps and takes over a week. The result of this is an incredibly wear-resistant blade that has extremely high carbide development, fine grain, and high toughness. Asperity is reduced; the microstructure development is superior to any other typical handmade knife, and far above any factory or manufactured knife. This is, simply put, 440C at its very finest advanced condition. This is difficult on such a long, thin blade, since the stress of heat treating happens after the blade is hollow ground. Even the hollow grinds are special, accomplished with a 12" diameter wheel which creates a very wide, deep grind necessary to make the thinnest geometry possible at the edge. Add to that, my client requested a stiff blade, so a long, straight section of full thickness spine helped establish that property. The blade has a fully tapered tang, and just a touch of light, accurate filework at the handle scales for handmade artistic distinction.
    • I bolstered the knife with zero-care 304 high chromium, high nickel stainless steel bolsters, which are contoured, rounded and finished for a comfortable feel. The bolsters are secured with zero-clearance peened pins and dovetailed to bed the handle scales. This is a true, no-care bolster material, 304 is also known as 18-8 stainless, and the standard for all Food Safe Contact materials, as well as the toughest stainless steel nuts, bolts, and fasteners.
    • The handle scales are a striking contrast to the steel; my client requested deep orange color, and nothing quite compares to Stone Canyon Jasper. While the jasper is available in many hues, from reds to tans to whites, the orange color is actually limited and doesn't occur that often. I carefully chose and created the scales incorporating the rich burnt orange color, contrasting with the black matrix of the brecciated stone. This stone is many millions of years in the making, with replacement mineralization, metamorphosis, and altered igneous rock. Jasper is a cryptocrystalline quartz, extremely hard, solid, and an eternally lasting gemstone. Stone Canyon jasper is a special type, from Monterey County in California, and is closer to agate than jasper with white chalcedony outlining angular inclusions. I've polished it to a bright, glassy finish.
    • The knife feels very lightweight in the hand, due to the very thin blade, hollow grinding, and accurate geometry. The handle is comfortable and solid, feeling smooth and locking well into the hand. The character of the knife is like an extremely long bladed straight razor, keen and sleek.
  • Sheath: For the sheath, only hand-carving would do. I was inspired by the angular brecciated appearance of the jasper, so I created a design that accentuated the figure of the gemstone. It took many hours of painstaking drawing, refining, transferring, carving, and tooling to get just the look I wanted. Hours of relief stamping, were followed by layers of darkening, and multi-step dying for just the right dark burnt orange look of the geometric interlocking figures against a black background. I didn't want the sheath to overpower the handle by being too bright, and I'm extremely happy to say that this is one of my finest hand-carved heavy leather sheaths. The sheath is necessarily long, for the elegant blade, and thick and protective for the owner. The tooling is throughout the piece, even on the belt loop, and I've double-row stitched the loop and single-row stitched the sheath welts with strong nylon thread. The sheath is lacquered and sealed for longevity.
  • A unique new design of custom knife for a great client, a thin, keen, and graceful slicing knife.

Thanks, M. R.!

I did (receive it), thanks! Loved it. Feels great and the long blade does exactly as I wished it did. I found it sturdier than I thought it would be for such a thin blade.
Thanks!!

--M.


Please click on thumbnail knife photos
"Rebanador" Fine Custom Handmade knife, reverse side view. Sheath back is entirely hand-carved and tooled, even the belt loop. "Rebanador" Fine Custom Handmade knife, spine view and detail. Elegant, light filework on tapered tang, bolsters are dovetailed to lock and bed handle scales to tang. "Rebanador" Fine Custom Handmade knife, inside handle tang detail. Bolsters are rounded, smoothed, contoured and polished for comfortable feel and solid grip "Rebanador" Fine Custom Handmade knife, obverse side handle detail. Fit is precise and clean, high nickel-chromium stainless steel bolsters are zero care stainless steel "Rebanador" Fine Custom Handmade knife, reverse side gemstone handle detail. Handle has wide rear bolster for balance, forefinger placement is smooth and comfortable. "Rebanador" Fine Custom Handmade knife, gemstone handle detail showing white chalcedony agate with brecciated jasper fused into completely solid rock "Rebanador" Fine Custom Handmade knife, obverse side gemstone handle detail. Stone Canyon Jasper is a magnificent gem sought out for jewelry and ornament, yet is completly tough and eternal  "Rebanador" Fine Custom Handmade knife, sheathed view. Sheath is long and large, solid and deep, with intricate carving and hand-dying "Rebanador" Fine Custom Handmade knife, sheath reverse side view. Belt loop is fully tooled adn hand-dyed, stitched with double row nylon stitching "Rebanador" Fine Custom Handmade knife, reverse side sheath detail. Many hours of design work and carving into sheath "Rebanador" Fine Custom Handmade knife, sheath belt loop detail. Hand-carved pattern works well with long, narrow slicer and gemstone handle "Rebanador" Fine Custom Handmade knife, sheath front detail. Striking patten is a reflection of the gemstone brecciation of the Jasper handle "Rebanador" Fine Custom Handmade knife, sheath front detail. Sheath has a high back, yet allows enough gemstone handle for unsheathing and display "Rebanador" Fine Custom Handmade knife, sheath mouth detail; rear handle quillon allows easy unsheathing while high back protects the wearer "Rebanador" Fine Custom Handmade knife, close enlargement view of sheath tooling, dying, and highlighting "Rebanador" Fine Custom Handmade knife, blade view. Blade is long, elegant, and thin, yet is stiff for its light weight "Rebanador" Fine Custom Handmade knife, maker's mark detail against dark reflection "Rebanador" Fine Custom Handmade knife, maker's mark detail in bright reflection. Grinds are accurately matched with gentle, rounded terminations

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