Celtic Cross Fighter with Mosaic Damascus and Ironwood

Product Description for Celtic Cross Fighter with Mosaic Damascus and Ironwood

Maker: Luke Dellmyer (click to see more by this maker)
Item num: 111453
** This is handmade and one-of-a-kind **
Blade length: 8.50 in.
Cutting edge length: 8.00 in.
Total length: 13.60 in.
Blade height (at heel): 1.80 in.
Blade thickness (near bolster): 0.20 in.
Blade thickness (at midpoint): 0.18 in.
Blade thickness (near tip): 0.04 in.
Item weight: 14.60 oz.
Blade: Celtic cross mosaic damascus forged from 1084 and 15N20 carbon steels
Bolster: Damascus S-guard
Handle: Ironwood set on a twist damascus frame
Description: Luke Dellmyer (b. 1980) is a bladesmith residing in Hellertown, Pennsylvania. He lives on a horse farm with 26 horses in their stables. He first started working with metal at 15 years old while working as a farrier apprentice. During this time, he would also create ornamental ironwork as a hobby. Today, he still works as a full time farrier while working as a bladesmith part time. He made his first knife in 2018 and was lucky to have Mastersmiths Josh Fisher and David Lisch as mentors along the way. Luke received his Journeyman Smith award at Blade Show in 2023. He also won the James Lucia award for best knife submitted by a new Journeyman smith. It is clear that Luke is a maker to keep an eye on as he moves up in the ranks of elite knifemakers.
The 8-1/2 inch blade was hand forged from Luke's own mosaic damascus, combining 1084 and 15N20 carbon steels to ensure excellent edge holding and chip resistance. The complex pattern is extremely engaging and will have you staring at the blade for hours. The blade is flat ground and razor sharp. Luke's touchmark is on the left side.
The frame construction handle combines Arizona desert ironwood (Olneya tesota) with a twist pattern damascus frame. Showing Luke's skill at the forge, the stars at the center of the twist line up perfectly along the frame. Ironwood is a rare wood that is only found in the valleys of the Sonoran Desert below 2,500 foot elevation. It is among the most desirable of exotic woods used for knives. A damascus guard and fluted spacer finish the handle.
Excellent work throughout!


Availability: Not currently available