shobudonnie
Well-Known Member
Aside from stunning fit and finish, what are some knives that you have used where you don’t just go, this is a great knife, but THIS WAS AN EXPERIENCE!
Thanks for breaking that ice. The first food my Kashima encountered was a moment:Shibata bunka was the first knife that made me weak in the knees. I didn't know a knife could cut like that. On the opposite side of the spectrum, when I held my Shi.Han for the first time I thought, this knife is really heavy, I'm not sure I'm going to like this thing. Then I cut something with it and instantly bonded with it.
I keep hearing wonderful things about his work. I can't wait to order one for myself.Eddworks
This is why I have to try things for myself. If I had a midweight that was wedgey, it is out the door, even if it cut everything else well. I have a hard time keeping wedging knives. Even WH's, whales, board yachts, whatever term you use, I toss wedgers. I got the most gorgeous santoku. Honyaki, mirror polished, walkschliff, on the line between midweight and WH, yada yada, couldn't make it through a sweet potato. Why would I have a santoku that gets stuck in vegetables (onion too)? God it was gorgeous but cut for $hit (according to my criteria). I traded it with a guy who loved it.Lastly, Wakui V2 nakiri. This one actually caught me off guard. All the reviews were favorable, so I bit, as I had not tried a "real" nakiri (only Kiwi). The specs suggested something midweight to work horsey, but while it will start to wedge in anything about an inch tall, it passes through anything shorter almost imperceptibly, its extreme BTE thinness is assisted by its mass. A genuine jaw dropper.
I was blown away when I got my Eddworks. Thick at the handle, awesome taper to a thin tip, mid-heavy weight and neutral balanced. One of my thinnest knives at the edge, in the same range as my Myojin sharpened stuff and Birgersson, but with more weight behind it. Glides through everything like it's not even there. The only downside is that everything wants to stick to it, but my Myojin stuff has the same issue, plus a lot of stiction.I keep hearing wonderful things about his work. I can't wait to order one for myself.
For me, the TF Denka is an experience. It handles like no other knife I've ever had. Fast, agile, and the notch in the choil is the chef's kiss.
I can't wait to get a chance to order my custom EddWorks. The guy is amazing to deal with and is probably a future Master Bladesmith. I just have to wait till my turn comes. I've opted for a indented choil for grip and an S-Grid to reduce sticking.I was blown away when I got my Eddworks. Thick at the handle, awesome taper to a thin tip, mid-heavy weight and neutral balanced. One of my thinnest knives at the edge, in the same range as my Myojin sharpened stuff and Birgersson, but with more weight behind it. Glides through everything like it's not even there. The only downside is that everything wants to stick to it, but my Myojin stuff has the same issue, plus a lot of stiction.
I was also impressed with my Shig santoku even though a lot of people poo poo on them, which set the bar low for me. The zero edge was insane, but the microchipping is real and it did wedge in dense stuff.
Kamon for sure!
Bidinger
Everyone loves Migoto white 1 for the grind which is excellent. But for me the steel is the unrecognised star on that knife. Just stays sharp for ages. IMO I find it better than Tanaka blue 1 in terms of retention.
I have both. It was in fact the specific knife I had in mind when comparing. There is no objective way for me to measure "better" or " better retention". But I feel it lasts longer.What if it's a Y. Tanaka b1 sold by migoto?
Thats what it's all about!clicks better with me,
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