The oak on my knife has shrunk around the metal in the dry Canadian winter, so nothings flush anymore.
What should I do to swell it a bit? Tis treated with boiled linseed oil (should've used tung oil) and epoxied to the metal.
While I'm on the subject, should I treat the sheath with oil or wax?
>>939359
Knife looks terrible. What is wrong with the blade?
>>939373
Just a little short and wide ( like your mother)
>>939375
Looks really shittily made. Like a bad bevel and what not. Looks like YouTube tier diy aluminum lost foam casting
That looks like a toy knife
>>939359
trim the metal down to be flush with the wood again. And treat the sheath with neetsfoot oil.
>>939402
Lets see what you've made then huh mr. cool guy?
I'm dead impressed desu, not bad for babbys first knife. It cuts and it sits on my hip so what more could I ask for?
Right so neetsfoot oil for the sheath no prob.
I'd kinda rather swell the wood if it's possible, don't have any metal working tools until I'm home again next winter.
If swelling wood is stupid tho I'll abandon the idea
>>939643
The knife bevel and shape and hook have so many functional problems is what's bad. It's cool you made it and that you use it but you should keep working. Get a belt sander
Use alcohol to stir the oils, humidity the wood if possible and then reseal with something watertight
Or
Add extra layers of vanish till it's flush
>>939643
Use oil, BLO should do fine. Don't use any waterbased stuff, that will wreck the woodfibers.
Personally I'd just dunk it in oil, if possible create a vacuum to saturate the pores. Take it out after a couple of days and it'll be good for a long time.
>>939359
Swelling the wood is a temporary solution. You could soak it mineral oil/inseed oil or something, but it'll be leaching our over your hands for eternity.
Instead, do furniture restorers do and use parafin wax or refinishing wax to fill in the gaps, nobody will see it unless they go looking for it.
Thanks guys I'll start trying these tomorrow