Antique Farmer's Kitchen Knife With Kingwood Handle Restoration

Forgotten Shine Restoration July 4, 2025
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Forgotten Shine Restoration

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Hello and welcome to Forgotten Shine Restoration! We all love new things, but what else do we like? We love the feeling when we clean things up and they look shiny again, when something that was broken works again. And that's what this channel is all about - bringing old things back to life. Restoring old tools or items is really rewarding, but also something soothing and good for the environment and for yourself. You renew yourself through these items. But since not everyone has a garage or workshop where you can restore or repair old things, I decided to record what I do. And of course, to share it with you. "The hunt is better than the catch". I try to find and learn new ways or methods to restore things, and you can join my journey if you want. Feel free to subscribe to my channel. If you have any questions, suggestions or ideas, please leave a comment or email me at: [email protected] Thank you so much for your support!

Video Description

Restoring an old kitchen knife with simple tools? That’s exactly what I did in this project! No expensive specialty equipment — just sandpaper, vinegar, a file, and a little patience. I brought a rusty, dull blade back to life and gave it a brand-new, elegant kingwood handle. If you’re into knife restoration, kitchen knife sharpening, old knife refurbishing, and DIY projects with wood and metal, you’re in the right place! 🔥 What to expect: ✔️ Removing the handle — The old wooden handle had to go. ✔️ Rust removal with vinegar — Soaked the blade in vinegar for 24 hours to dissolve the rust. ✔️ Sanding & polishing — Smoothed the blade up to 1200 grit and restored a high shine. ✔️ Polishing the blade — Buffed to a mirror finish on the polishing wheel, bringing back the forgotten shine. ✔️ Kingwood handle — Traced the shape of the old handle and crafted a new one from fine kingwood. ✔️ Custom brass pins — Turned three custom pins on the lathe. ✔️ Milled groove — So the blade fits perfectly into the handle. ✔️ Assembly & finish — Glued everything together with 2-part epoxy, cleaned off excess glue, finely sanded, and sealed with shellac. ✔️ Blade sharpening — Sharpened up to 800 grit and finished with a ceramic strop. ✔️ Tomato test — Put the final edge to the test on a ripe tomato. This kitchen knife restoration was a lot of fun — and the result turned out to be a real eye-catcher! 😃 If you love old tools, knives, and fine woods, you’ll definitely enjoy this one. 🔔 Subscribe to my channel so you won’t miss any future restorations! 📌 Want to support my work? Become a channel member: ➡️ Join here: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCwBnXlOxxt2MC5tZhyr2JQw/join Or support me via PayPal: ➡️ Donate via PayPal: https://www.paypal.com/donate?hosted_button_id=C3NBENWZT56DG Or use my affiliate links: 🛠️ Materials I used: 🔹 Metabo straight grinder — https://amzn.to/3QoisBT 🔹 Metabo cordless drill BS 18 LTX-3 BL — https://amzn.to/43833JV 🔹 Metabo bit set — https://amzn.to/3pzwV4n 🔹 Sandpaper file — https://amzn.to/3A3YqbF 🔹 Knife sharpener — https://amzn.to/4eo9XCc 🔹 Polishing wheel — https://amzn.to/4lpCWrI 🔹 Plastic hammer — https://amzn.to/4no01wM 📷 My gear: 🎥 Sony AX-53 camera 💡 Ring light 🎤 Rode microphone 🎙️ Zoom H5 recorder 🎥 DJI gimbal camera 📷 DJI Osmo Action 5 💡 Affiliate note: These links don’t cost you anything extra — but I earn a small commission when you use them. Thanks for your support! 🎬 Enjoy the video — and let me know in the comments what you think of this restoration! 💬