Some work was already done on it by another Sr member Mack The KnifeKatana wrote:Think up a design and will have it done.
http://www.indiansforguns.com/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=653
I love the design.
Some work was already done on it by another Sr member Mack The KnifeKatana wrote:Think up a design and will have it done.
timmy wrote:Katana:
I was working from the publications of Dr. J D Verhoeven, who, along with other papers, published "The Key Role of Impurities in Ancient Damascus Steel Blades".
Regarding my mention of Hyderabad, this one paragraph from the above-mentioned paper will partially explain my reference:
This paragraph is found about 5/6ths of the way down the web page.One of the big mysteries of wootz Damascus steel has been why the art of making these blades was lost. The vanadium levels provide the basis for a theory. Based on our studies, it is clear that to produce the damascene patterns of a museum-quality wootz Damascus blade the smith would have to fulfill at least three requirements. First, the wootz ingot would have to have come from an ore deposit that provided significant levels of certain trace elements, notably, Cr, Mo, Nb, Mn, or V. This idea is consistent with the theory of some authors30 who believe the blades with good patterns were only produced from wootz ingots made in southern India, apparently around Hyderabad. Second, the data of Table IV confirm previous knowledge that wootz Damascus blades with good patterns are characterized by a high phosphorus level. This means that the ingots of these blades would be severely hot short, which explains why Breant's9 19th century smiths in Paris could not forge wootz ingots. Therefore, as previously shown,15 successful forging would require the development of heat-treating techniques that decarburized the surface in order to produce a ductile surface rim adequate to contain the hot-short interior regions. Third, a smith who developed a heat-treatment technique that allowed the hot-short ingots to be forged might still not have learned how to produce the surface patterns, because they do not appear until the surface decarb region is ground off the blades; this grinding process is not a simple matter.
This interesting article: Reproduction of Damascus steel ( Wootz ) has an interesting discussion on an academic research project which attempts to make a "damascus blade". I found this work quite interesting, along with the pictures associated with the article.
Katana wrote:I returned after visiting Jodhpur and Udaipur a couple of days ago. The idea of going to Jodhpur started in my mind when I was told that there was a blade maker with considerable finesse in his work. So off I went with my sakligar in tow.
On reaching Jodhpur (actually in a village close by) and on seeing the man's work both of us concluded that it was basically acid etched sakela work. On pressing the man too much he finally relented and spoke the truth.
The reason for this is that he does not have any patrons who would pay him enough for actual mechanical sakela work, while he has managed to garner a contract from a handicrafts exporter in Delhi to make acid etched sakela pieces that he supplies to. Apparently the exporter then sells it to a firm in Spain where the same pieces are branded with the Spanish company's logo and 'Made in Spain' stamped on them.
Meanwhile, I noticed that he was working on some knives, just as some people had discussed! Folders in sakela.........
He is willing to sell if orders are for lots of 25 numbers. Final pricing is not known as yet but I did buy 2 from him at Rs3800/- each for the folding knives. I also discussed the idea of personalising them with a logo or something alike. The man says he can cut a die and stamp it on the blade or hilt. he cannot do any inlay work. If this is required the knives can be sent to Udaipur where the same can be done easily, at least in silver if cost is to be kept down.
Apart from this I have not been able to locate anyone in Jodhpur who could even vaguely be called a skilled artisan in this field.
kalashnikovcult wrote:katana ji the knives in the first picture (hitler, bayonet ) stand at $150 in the USA...you made an amazing discovery
here is a link to one of them http://orangecounty.craigslist.org/clt/2627875521.html
Katana wrote:A demonstration of the art of Kuftgari
I asked a known artisan if he could let me photograph his art step by step so as to enable all of us to understand the entire process.
The first process is to heat or anneal the piece to be decorated to acheive a shiny blue colour, to contrast it with the lines that will be etched to fill in the gold or silver thread. Thereafter the peice is 'cross hatched', ei. lines are affected in a criss cross pattern to 'hold' the lines to be etched.
After this lines depicting the design or characters (alphabets) that may be required to be etched are drawn by hand. Mind you, there is zero reliance on a computer or even a paper on which designs have been finalised! Some designs require repetitive motifs and these are all done by hand.
Thereafter, the gold or silver threads are affixed into the etched lines. Quantity varies according to the design, if the lines are to be broad, too many curvatures are required or the lines too deep. Either way its a matter of hand-eye co-ordination. This is the laborious part. Following the completion of this process the piece is heated once again to fuse the gold or silvers wires to the steel.
Once the piece is cooled,it is filled in with the required thread and rubbed with a flat file if it is silver or an agate stone if the wires are in gold because rubbing steel over gold will remove a considerable quantity of it. Silver work will be finished with agate rubbing to remove any traces or left over lines from the cross hatching.
This process may sound and look simple but if seen in it's totality, it is absolutely time consuming and a strain on the maker.