Table of Contents
What is Katana Hamon?
The Hamon is recognized as the sharpened section of the blade and is a result of differential hardening. In a traditional Japanese katana the blades spine is coated thickly with a special clay and thinning out greatly before the edge.
How is hamon created?
In swordsmithing, hamon (刃文, hamon) (from Japanese, literally “blade pattern”) is a visible effect created on the blade by the hardening process. This difference in hardness results from clay being applied on the blade (tsuchioki) prior to the cooling process (quenching).
What is a Choji hamon?
The choji (clove) has a pattern that looks like many cloves lined up together. The gunome pattern has a certain pattern lined up in an orderly maner. The hitatsura pattern has the tempering through the hiraji, shinogiji, and the ridge area. The hamon is also divided into nie-deki and nioi-deki.
What is Katana Hamon and what is it for?
Katana Hamon – What is Hamon. Hamon is the part of the Samurai sword referred to as blade pattern. This is the effect produce by the hardening process. The blade produce during this hardening process is referred to as Yaki-ire.
What is Katana Hamon and yaki-ire?
Katana Hamon – What is Hamon Hamon is the part of the Samurai sword referred to as blade pattern. This is the effect produce by the hardening process. The blade produce during this hardening process is referred to as Yaki-ire. This has a different HRC base on the Rockwell scale on its Ha (cutting edge) and Mune(back of the blade).
What does a real Hamon blade look like?
The appearance of a real hamon is like an chemical etched hamon: it’s white and cloudy. But a real hamon seems to “glow” under light and the blade needs to be at a certain angle to view it.
What is a hanhamon samurai sword?
Hamon is the part of the Samurai sword referred to as blade pattern. This is the effect produce by the hardening process.