Results 1 to 10 of 24
Thread: Tamahagane Razors?
-
09-28-2007, 07:51 PM #1
Tamahagane Razors?
I was just wondering. Several people are now making some pretty exotic custom razors, including forging the blades themselves. For example Maestro Livi, Robert Williams, Tim Zowada, Joe Chandler etc.
Maestro Livi buys steel in from Sushui Takeda (sp?) sometimes, to make his Takeda razors. But I was wondering if any of the custom makers have ever bought in some Tamahagane steel from Japan, and made a western style straight razor out of it?
If not, has anyone heard talk of this being possible/feasible?
I assume it'd be pretty expensive, very likely more so than Takeda steel or Wootz type damascus. I believe swords made from Tamahagane are among the best in the world, would the properties of the steel make a razor that's similarly great?
Cheers,
Iwan
-
09-28-2007, 08:02 PM #2
- Join Date
- May 2005
- Location
- East Liverpool, Ohio
- Posts
- 971
Thanked: 324Here is one link that discusses tamahagane steel. http://www.ksky.ne.jp/~sumie99/steel.html .
This steel is 50 times more expensive than modern made steels because of the enormous amount of manual work involved in smelting it from the black sands of Japan.
Tamahagane steel can be very good or poor in quality. There are a few makers in the US trying to keep the tradition of tamahagane steel alive and experimenting with traditional smelting processes. I think Mike Blue might be one of them, but I can't recall for sure.
-
09-28-2007, 08:41 PM #3
I thought that I remember Joel saying that he had a Japanese style razor made out of Tamahagane steel. From what I remember, he said it was one of his top razors, but not the best. I don't really know much about steel properties; however, I was told that the modern high quality steels like the ATS are "better" than traditional Tamahagane . Of course there would be a definate "cool factor" of owning a razor made out of the same material as the famous Samuri Swords.
-
09-28-2007, 08:49 PM #4
There was a member here who was talking about manufacturing his own Tamahagane steel, though his name escapes me right now. I'll see if I can locate the thread.
-
09-28-2007, 08:51 PM #5
PapaBull is right. Mike Blue is the gent's name.
See here:
http://straightrazorpalace.com/showt...ght=tamahagane
-
09-28-2007, 08:53 PM #6
Is it possible to just buy "a piece of tamahagane steel" anywhere? I suppose as long as you could get a piece the right sort of dimensions, then any of the custom razor makers should (in theory) be able to forge a western style razor out of it, no?
-
09-28-2007, 09:10 PM #7
- Join Date
- Oct 2006
- Posts
- 1,898
Thanked: 995First, tamahagane that's been made in Japan is supposed to stay in Japan. I have about a one ounce piece of the really good jewel steel (that's the translation from Japanese anyway) that I keep as a reference library. It was given me by the murage of the Shimane smelter. I do not believe that anyone has legally obtained enough of the correct material to make anything of blade size unless they are working old Japanese swords into stuff like that. Anyone can obtain smallish samples of the material, but a good portion of the stuff available to even serious tourists is low grade. Believe me, not even the smallest portion of the really good stuff would be ignored by a swordsmith whose reputation depends on the quality of the material in his blades.
Mr. Kihara is obligated to sell the material he makes to Japanese swordsmiths first, and perhaps really old toolmakers of high enough rank. I believe that would include some of the well known razorsmiths as well. But, I know nothing of the types of steel that are used by the razor makers. I'll start asking around though. It would not surprise me to find that some of them have access to this material.
Second, I have been making this kind of steel at my shop for the last four years. It takes me about three days to build the furnace and a full day to run it. Firebrick is expensive, clay isn't, charcoal is, helpers are. After that the bloom steel has to be forged and welded into a bar before it can be turned into a blade. That material has to be sorted to identify the good stuff. It's very expensive in terms of time, materials and labor.
Third, I'm happy to say that I'm getting more satisfied with the material I've learned to make. Where some may be eager to run their material out to sell it because it's rare and looks like a bloom, I've been much more cautious on two fronts. I'd like to be sure that metallurgically this is a satisfactory approach to the real deal and I have endeavored to give the Japanese no reason to regard me as other than someone who respects the craft.
As to the steel itself, well, it's not that special compared to some of the serious metallurgical production going on these days. It really is nothing more than iron and carbon with the carbon content running about 1.4-1.6%. By the time a Japanese swordsmith gets done making a blade the usual carbon content is down around 0.6-0.7% which would be an average steel here. It will hold a good edge, and with the typical hardening treatment will make very good looking hardening lines (hamon). But that's why it's made the way it is, to be very low in hardenability to best produce those hardening features.
All other aspects of the razor still need to be accounted for, edge shape, honing etc. I'd want to know what the Japanese razor makers were doing to the carbon content too. Do they reduce it like the swordsmiths? That has to be taken into acccount. If I was going to build a razor company today, I'd look to the crucible particle metallurgy steels for a production blade.
If you want exotic, I can do that. I'd be very interested in seeing how it shaves too. It'll be expensive. Very much along the lines of: if you have to ask the price, you can't afford it. I'd like these babies to start out being great razors first and foremost, very collectible second and remain uncommon. Am I being fussy, sure. I don't want my stuff being flipped around every where unless I can stand behind it.
Just some thoughts.
-
09-28-2007, 09:24 PM #8
- Join Date
- Mar 2007
- Location
- Saskatchewan, Canada
- Posts
- 878
Thanked: 5i don't think you can get a better answer than that
-
09-28-2007, 10:12 PM #9
- Join Date
- Oct 2006
- Posts
- 1,898
Thanked: 995No, not really. The Japanese restrict the "real stuff" for sale only to the correctly registered and licenced folks who can have it in Japan. Bits and bobs, both good (few, very few) and bad (all the rest), that drop off the supply chain aren't enough to get close to blade size.
If it could be had, yes, I'd love to forge something from it. Getting through customs with my own body weight of permits and paperwork in addition to a small portion of good steel, would be very interesting. Not coming home, but leaving Japan mind you.
There are a few others out there who know how to make this stuff. "Some dudes" in Australia, some in Florida, one in Georgia and a couple others who make claims of doing so, but I've never seen their materials. But it comes down to the fact that it's not easy to make.
I won't even quibble about "making it correctly" or that I didn't use real iron sand from Japan or that I don't have Japanese DNA or all the other ridiculous criticisms made to keep me from being confident about whether the steel is good enough.
I will say this. When I'm happy with what I'm making, I'll start letting some out of the shop. I've got some other irons in the fire right now, but it won't be far off.
-
09-29-2007, 08:08 AM #10
Wow, thanks for the detailed replies Mike, that's pretty much answered all of the questions I had - including some that hadn't previously occurred to me!
I think I'll drop this idea now for myself. With no predicatble income I'm not in a position to pay vast amounts for an experimental razor at this time. For me the quality of the shave is #1, and I'd be a bit gutted to comission a blade of extreme rarity/cost only to risk finding out it doesn't shave as well as a mass produced modern steel.
It's a really interesting subject though. Having watched the Nat Geo documentary on Katana forging I think it's pretty cool that you're having a go at making your own Tamahagane steel. I'd love to have the time and facilities to be able to try things like that myself, if I lived in the USA I'd offer to come and lend a hand.