This 5-piece Damascus kitchen knife set pairs three gyuto chef knives and two petty knives into one complete configuration. The largest blade runs 12 inches. The smallest runs 7 inches overall. Every blade is hand-forged from layered Damascus steel and fitted with black Micarta handles on full tang construction.
The Blades
All five blades are forged from layered 1095 high-carbon steel and 15N20 nickel alloy. The two steels are stacked, heated, and hammer-welded into a single solid billet. Repeated folding strengthens the grain structure and multiplies the layer count throughout the steel. Acid etching after forging reveals the Damascus surface pattern, with, with flowing contrast lines that run the full length of each blade. Every knife carries a slightly different pattern from the hand-forging process.
Heat treatment brings each blade to 58–60 HRC. That hardness holds a sharp working edge through daily prep without chipping under regular cutting load.
What Each Knife Does
The 12-inch gyuto is the primary prep blade. It slices large proteins, breaks down vegetables, and handles the bulk of general kitchen work during active cooking sessions. The curved belly suits both rocking cuts and long pull strokes.
The medium gyuto handles everyday slicing and chopping at a more manageable length. It suits cooks who prefer a shorter blade for daily prep without sacrificing the gyuto profile's versatility.
The small gyuto handles precision slicing and vegetable prep, where a longer blade creates unnecessary movement. It is the most controlled of the three gyuto profiles in this set.
The large petty knife bridges the gap between the smallest gyuto and the compact petty. It trims fat, portions smaller cuts, and handles mid-size detail work cleanly.
The 7-inch petty knife is the smallest blade in the set. It handles peeling, scoring, trimming around bones, and close-hand detail work that needs a short, precise blade.
Handle Material
Each knife is fitted with a black Micarta handle. Micarta is built from layers of linen or canvas fabric saturated with resin and compressed under heat. The result is a fully sealed, non-porous handle that resists moisture, does not warp or crack, and maintains its grip surface even with wet hands.
Black Micarta has a slightly textured surface that improves grip security during heavy prep without being abrasive. It does not absorb food oils or bacteria and wipes clean after each use.
Bolsters and Full Tang Construction
Reinforced steel bolsters sit at the blade-to-handle junction on each knife. The bolster adds forward balance weight, reinforces the most stressed point of the knife, and acts as a natural finger guard during chopping strokes.
Every knife is full tang. The blade steel runs the complete length from tip to handle end, pinned through the black Micarta for permanent structural integrity. Full tang eliminates blade flex at the junction and distributes weight evenly across the full knife length.
Specs at a Glance
- Pieces: 5 knives
- Largest knife: 12 inches (gyuto)
- Smallest knife: 7 inches (petty)
- Handle material: Black Micarta
- Bolster: Steel
- Blade steel: Layered Damascus (1095 + 15N20)
- Construction: Full tang
- Hardness: 58–60 HRC
- Engraving: Available on request
Makes a Strong Gift For Professional chefs, home cooks, knife collectors, groomsmen, Father's Day, birthdays, anniversaries, and culinary graduates.
FAQs
How is this set different from others in this collection?
This is the only set focused entirely on gyuto and petty profiles with black Micarta handles. All other sets include mixed blade types like cleavers, santoku, or slicers with wood or bone handles.
What is the difference between a gyuto and a petty knife?
A gyuto is a full chef's knife for general prep across proteins and vegetables. A petty knife is shorter and narrower, built for trimming and close-hand detail work.
What makes Micarta better than wood handles?
Micarta is fully non-porous and never absorbs moisture or bacteria. Wood handles require regular drying and oiling to stay stable.
Can these knives be sharpened at home?
Yes — use a whetstone at 15–20 degrees per side. Avoid pull-through sharpeners as they damage the Damascus layers.
How should this set be stored?
Use a knife roll, magnetic strip, or wooden block. Never store loose in a drawer as blade contact dulls the edge.