This handmade Ulu chopper knife is built on a high-polished stainless steel blade measuring 5.5 inches across the crescent cutting edge. The blade carries a full mirror polish and a finger hole cutout in the upper body for a secure grip during heavy chopping tasks. The JW Steel Crafts Viking logo is engraved on the blade flat. The wenge wood handle measures 4 inches and sits over the blade spine with a mosaic cross pin and a silver pin locking the scales. A brown leather sheath with gold stitch edge is included. Total weight is approximately 188 grams.
This is the only Ulu chopper knife at JW Steel Crafts with a highly polished stainless steel blade, wenge wood handle, mosaic pin, and fitted leather sheath in this configuration.
The History Behind This Blade
The Ulu knife originated with Arctic Indigenous peoples of Alaska, Canada, and Greenland over 5,000 years ago as the primary all-purpose blade for skinning, food preparation, and camp tasks where a rocking chopper outperformed a straight knife on every cut. The wide crescent blade and top-mounted handle allowed the user to apply full palm pressure directly over the cut line — giving far more control on hide work and meat processing than a conventional edge-forward grip. Wenge wood became a preferred handle material on premium handmade tools for its exceptional density, tight grain, and natural resistance to moisture in field conditions. The JW Steel Crafts Ulu chopper carries that same Arctic cutting tradition in a high-polished stainless build.
Blade Performance
The blade is ground from stainless steel and polished to a full mirror finish across the entire crescent face. The wide Ulu profile positions the cutting edge in a full arc below the handle — the palm sits directly above the cut line, applying even downward pressure across the full edge on every rocking stroke. This geometry makes the Ulu significantly more efficient than a straight blade on chopping, mincing, skinning, and hide work tasks. The finger hole in the upper blade body locks the index finger for added control during heavy cuts. The mirror polish reduces drag during slicing and resists surface staining through daily kitchen and camp use.
Handle Construction
The handle is shaped from wenge wood — one of the densest hardwoods used in knife making, with a tight straight grain and natural dark espresso tone that resists moisture, swelling, and cracking through repeated field and kitchen use. The handle profile fits over the full blade spine and sits in the palm for direct overhead cutting pressure. A mosaic cross pin and a silver pin lock the handle firmly to the blade tang. The brown leather sheath with gold stitch edge provides safe storage and belt carry between uses.
Best Used For
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Skinning, hide work, and meat processing tasks
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Food prep, mincing, and kitchen chopping
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Camp kitchen and outdoor field tasks
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Collectors of Ulu and Arctic-style handmade knives
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Gifting for hunters, cooks, and outdoor knife collectors
Specifications
|
Feature |
Details |
|
Type |
Ulu chopper knife |
|
Blade Material |
Stainless steel |
|
Blade Finish |
High mirror polish |
|
Blade Width |
5.5 inches |
|
Blade Profile |
Crescent Ulu/rocker |
|
Finger Hole |
Yes |
|
Blade Engraving |
JW Steel Crafts Viking logo |
|
Handle Material |
Wenge wood |
|
Handle Length |
4 inches |
|
Pin Detail |
Mosaic cross pin + silver pin |
|
Weight |
188 grams approx. |
|
Sheath |
Brown leather, gold stitch edge |
Frequently Asked Questions
What makes this Ulu knife different from other knives at JW Steel Crafts?
Only Ulu chopper in the store with a highly polished stainless steel crescent blade, wenge wood handle, mosaic pin, and fitted leather sheath together.
What is an Ulu knife used for?
Skinning, meat processing, food prep, mincing, and camp kitchen tasks — the rocking crescent blade applies direct palm pressure over the full cut line.
What is the finger hole in the blade for?
It locks the index finger during heavy chopping strokes, giving added control and preventing the hand from slipping forward onto the edge.
What is wenge wood?
One of the densest hardwoods used in knife handles; tight, straight grain, dark espresso tone, naturally moisture-resistant through field and kitchen use.
Is this knife suitable as a gift?
Yes. Mirror-polished stainless blade, wenge wood handle, mosaic pin, and leather sheath make this a strong gift for hunters, cooks, and knife collectors.
How do I care for this knife?
Wipe the blade dry after use. Apply light oil to the blade occasionally. Condition the leather sheath with leather oil and store in a dry place.