Cholla Folder with Meteorite and Mammoth

Product Description for Cholla Folder with Meteorite and Mammoth

Maker: Mike Tyre (J.S.) (click to see more by this maker)
Item num: 104204
*** This is handmade and one-of-a-kind ***
Blade length: 3.20 in.
Cutting edge length: 2.80 in.
Total length: 8.50 in.
Blade height (at heel): 0.80 in.
Blade thickness (near bolster): 0.14 in.
Blade thickness (at midpoint): 0.14 in.
Blade thickness (near tip): 0.10 in.
Item weight: 4.60 oz.
Shipment weight: 5.4 oz.
Blade: Mosaic damascus forged from carbon steels
Bolster: Muonionalustra meteorite
Handle: Presentation grade green mammoth ivory
Style: Folding liner lock
Description: This exceptional folder was forged and crafted by Journeyman Smith Mike Tyre. Mike was born in Logansport, Indiana. He joined the US Army in 1968 and served three tours in Vietnam, coming home a disabled vet. He attended the University of Wisconsin as an art major and moved to Arizona in 1980. Having been a knife collector for many years, when he D'Holder at the Arizona Knife Collectors Association Show, he found a teacher that could show him the way to put together a quality knife. In 2003, Tyre caught the folder bug. After spending a week with Texas legend Johnny Stout, Mike also sought instruction from Bill Ruple. Mike is a full time knifemaker. He has been featured in numerous issues of Knives Annual and Blade Magazine, as well as The Art of Custom Knifemaking by David Darom and The Art of the Knife by Joe Kerzman.
This Cholla Folder featues a blade made from Mike's mosaic damascus snowflake pattern. By forging from carbon steels, Tyre ensures a keen, long lasting edge. It is easily opened using the custom thumbstud with a faceted peridot setting.
Handle scales are presentation grade mammoth ivory bark. They incorporate rare green, brown and caramel tones that developed across thousands of years as minerals moved from surrounding soil into the ancient ivory. The backbar and liners are fileworked and nitre blued to match.
Bolsters are formed from Muonionalusta meteorite. This meteorite was originally found in 1906 near Kiruna, Sweden. Muonionalusta meteorites are very rarely found on the meteorite market and even less frequently found on knives as the strewn field is within the Arctic Circle, making searching for it very difficult. The crystalline patterns revealed on the bolsters are known as "Widmanstatten patterns". These patterns can only form in the vacuum of space. The large metallic crystals require millions of years of cooling to form from a molten planetary core fragment. It has been estimated that it took about 1000 years for these molten pieces of planetary core to cool by just 1 degree Celsius!
Exceptional work throughout!


Availability: Not currently available