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custom kitchen knives

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Offering Best Traditional custom Kitchen Knives in Different Pattern Design with international shipping Pick ideal match for your kitchen and cooking style – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: custom kitchen knives


1
Knife
  • handmade kitchen knives are instruments or
    weapons with a cutting edge or blade that are
    often attached to a handle or hilt (plural
    knives from Old Norse knifr "knife, dirk").
    Knives were one of the very earliest tools that
    humans employed, and the Oldowan artefacts
    demonstrate that this was at least 2.5 million
    years ago. Knife blades were first fashioned from
    materials like wood, bone, and stone (such as
    flint and obsidian), but as metallurgy and
    manufacturing skills evolved through time, they
    were also produced from materials like copper,
    bronze, iron, steel, ceramic, and titanium. The
    majority of modern knives have either fixed or
    folding blades nevertheless, the designs and
    types of blades vary depending on the
    manufacturer and country of origin.

2
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3
  • handmade kitchen knives can be employed in a
    number of situations. There are knives for
    throwing or juggling, knives for religious
    ceremony or display, and kitchen knives (like the
    chef's knife, the paring knife, the bread knife,
    and the cleaver) as well as table knives (like
    butter knives and steak knives) and weapons (like
    daggers or switchblades) that are used for
    preparing food (the kurgan)

4
Parts
  • The components of a modern handmade kitchen
    knives are the blade the handle the edge,
    which is the part of the blade's cutting surface
    that runs from the tip to the heel the grind
    and the shape of the blade's cross section. The
    spine is the thickest part of a single-edged
    knife and is on the side that faces the edge. On
    a two-edged knife, the fuller the blade becomes
    further toward the centre, and a groove was made
    to lighten the blade.
  • The guard serves as a stop between the handle and
    the blade to prevent the hand from moving forward
    onto the blade and to protect the hand from the
    frequent external forces. The flat portion of the
    blade in the position known as the ricasso

5
Blade's Edge
  • The blade's edge handmade kitchen knives be
    either straight, serrated, or both. On certain
    single-edged blades, a false edge or reverse edge
    that occupies a piece of the spine can be
    discovered. To enhance function, these edges are
    frequently serrated.
  • The handle, which is used to securely grasp and
    wield the blade, may have a tang, or a portion of
    the blade that extends into the handle. Knives
    can have full tangs (sometimes known as "stick
    tangs," which extend all the way into the handle)
    or partial tangs (extending the full length of
    the handle, often visible on top and bottom). The
    Sorocaban Knife, an antique blade made in Brazil,
    is made using the enterçado manufacturing method,
    which entails riveting a previously used blade to
    the handle.

6
Blade
  • Knife blades may be made from a variety of
    materials, and each one has advantages and
    disadvantages. Carbon steel, an iron and carbon
    alloy, exhibits sharpness. Although it is prone
    to rust and stains, it nevertheless has a superb
    edge and is relatively simple to sharpen.
    Stainless steel primarily consists of iron,
    chromium, nickel, and maybe molybdenum, with a
    very small percentage of carbon. Although it is
    incredibly corrosion resistant, it cannot be
    edged nearly as sharply as carbon steel can. High
    carbon stainless steel is a kind of stainless
    steel with a higher carbon contentintended to
    blend the greatest features of carbon steel with
    stainless steel. High carbon stainless steel
    blades maintain their sharpness and are resistant
    to rust and staining.

7
Sandwiching
  • By sandwiching a few metals together, laminated
    blades combine the advantages of each. A layer of
    stronger, softer stainless steel may be
    sandwiched between a harder, more brittle steel
    to reduce the sensitivity to corrosion. The edge,
    which is most vulnerable to rust in this case, is
    still frail. Damascus steel is a type of welding
    that has a pattern similar to laminate
    construction. Layers of different steel types are
    welded together, and the stock is then
    manipulated to create patterns in the steel.

8
Flexibility, Titanium
  • In terms of strength to weight ratio, wear
    resistance, and flexibility, titanium performs
    better than steel. The titanium alloy's carbides
    make it possible to heat treat them to a
    sufficient hardness despite their lower hardness
    and reduced ability to withstand sharp edges.
    Blades made of ceramic are as fragile as glass
    and will break if set down on a hard surface.
    Years may pass with little maintenance required
    on them maintaining a sharp edge. They are
    resistant to conventional corrosion and can only
    be polished on silicon carbide sandpaper and
    specific grinding wheels. Blades made of plastic
    are frequently serrated and are not very sharp.
    They are often discarded.

9
Steel blades
  • Steel blades can be shaped using two common
    techniques forging or stock removal. A single
    piece of steel is heated and bent with a hammer
    or press while still hot to produce forged
    blades. Stock removal blades are created by
    grinding and removing metal. The steel must be
    heat treated after shaping for both processes. To
    improve the steel's hardness, this includes
    heating it over its critical temperature before
    quenching the blade. After hardening, the blade
    is tempered to release tension and strengthen it.
    Both the stock removal method and forging are
    used to mass make kitchen cutlery.  Even while
    integral bolsters aren't always present in
    forging, the presence of one may usually be
    utilized to distinguish stock removal product
    lines from forging.

10
A fixed-blade structure
  • A fixed blade knife, sometimes called a sheath
    knife, cannot fold or slide due to the tang,
    which extends the blade into the grip, and the
    lack of moving parts. It is frequently more
    powerful than a knife with a sliding blade.

11
characteristics of a folding blade
  • A pivot connects a folding knife's handle and
    blade, allowing the blade to fold into the
    handle. In order to prevent injury to the knife
    user from the blade accidentally closing on the
    user's hand, locking mechanisms are frequently
    included in folding knives. Depending on criteria
    like perceived strength (lock safety), legality,
    and usability, people have varying preferences
    for various locking mechanisms. Common locking
    mechanisms.

12
Social links
  • Facebook link
  • https//www.facebook.com/icknivesofficial
  • Instagram link
  • https//www.instagram.com/icknives_official/
  • Pinterest link
  • https//www.pinterest.com/icknives_official/
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