how would I make a knife sheath??

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evilbacon

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I was wondering how I could possibly make my own knife sheath using regular things I could find around the house. I have a 6" blade kabar that I had just bought for only 13 dollars, it is a really nicely balanced knife with a drop point blade, later im going to take a file to the back of it and make a serrated edge and a line cutter. The sheath that it came with is a wanna be leather and is just poorly designed to hold such a nice knife. I have heard of people making sheaths out of ordinary materials you can find in your house or a fabric store, but I never knew if there were directions on how to make these. So if anyone could give me directions to make one with a locking system, i would be very greatful.

Thanks

Evil:D
 
Would not it be easier to buy a knife with a serration spine and line cutter than
to muck up a "perfectly" good knife? The cutting edge itself should cut line well
enough.
 
well although the knife is beautiful, it is made in pakistan so it is really not top quality steel. Although i was thinking about taking the file to it, i never had the heart to do so. I am most likely take a diamond stone to it and make a new blade on it and then take a fine stone to it to make that razor edge that will cut through anything like warm butter.
 
Evil,
Don't ruin a good kabar. Besides, it's not suitable for diving unless it's one of the more highly corrosion-resistant stainless steels (many kabars are hi-carbon or slightly-stainless). If it is stainless then that means it's not differentially heat treated. That means the spine is the same hardness as the cutting edge. Therefore the spine is most likely a Rockwell C-scale hardness of between 57-60 depending on the alloy. A good Nicholson file probably has a hardness of 61-62. You'll wear your file dull and make a mess of the knife. You can get a very inexpensive dive knife that work great for it's intended purpose.

ps - Regarding your comment yesterday that knives are primarily weapons and only incidentally used as tools... Actually the vast majority of knives (past and present) have been designed specifically as tools - NOT weapons. Trust me.

-Ben M. (part-time custom knifemaker)
 
The simplest "locking" sheath I've made was a piece of 2" webbing. I folded it over to make a sleeve my belt would fit through, and sewed the end down with a stitching awl. I then folded it over again to make a pocket the right length for the blade, and stitched up the sides. That made a simple sheath, but the knife easily slid out. I stopped that from happening by putting a "figure 8" snorkle keeper around the base of the sheath, and over the handle of the knife. If I take the knife out, it might slice the keeper, but they're a buck to replace and I figure a lot less important than my knife being there when I need it.
 
airsix:
ps - Regarding your comment yesterday that knives are primarily weapons and only incidentally used as tools... Actually the vast majority of knives (past and present) have been designed specifically as tools - NOT weapons. Trust me.

-Ben M. (part-time custom knifemaker)


Yeah, I know, I was generalizing when I shouldn't have been. Yeah I also realized that a file is pretty worthless when it meets steel. I have 2 other dive knives, but they just don't feel right when i hold them. I like the weight of the Kabar and the way it is balanced. I have that "razor" edge on it and it just feels perfect in the palm of my hand. A little rust on it wont hurt either, I can just wire brush it off, plus it is a throw away knife anyways (only got it because it was 13 dollars at a hardware store) But it is a really beautiful knife. Also, since your a custom knife maker, do you know a good way to make a sheath for diving use?

thanks

evil:D
 

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