Lily White Washita Oilstone Fine American Natural Stones ANATs - Polishing, Sharpening, Razor, Uses

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  • čas přidán 12. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 47

  • @ndoghouse6853
    @ndoghouse6853 Před 5 měsíci

    FYI: its Novaculite not Noviculite. Cool stone. I just met the owner of the property last weekend where most of it comes from if not all. I brought back a few hundred pounds for flintknapping. I did buy several oil stones of different varieties so thanks much for the info. Cant wait to try them. I have been using Japanese waterstones but gonna try something new.

    • @nisamvise1724
      @nisamvise1724 Před 13 dny

      is there a way i can get a piece of washita stone off you?

  • @herbertgearing1702
    @herbertgearing1702 Před 3 měsíci

    I really enjoy sharpening on my washitas. I tend to use very light pressure and I have a wide variety of washitas from very fast to several that are very dense and pass light almost as well as a translucent. They produce a nice knife edge especially with antique carbon steel and if I need to take it to a more refined edge I move to one of my translucents. I own a couple of black arks but for me the deciding factor is my ability to see the steel removed on the translucent and the fact that I can't see the difference in the edge between black and translucent.

  • @danhip2442
    @danhip2442 Před rokem +1

    Thanks for the very interesting information, I watched it twice✌

  • @samla2404
    @samla2404 Před 7 měsíci

    I wish I can give more than one like for this video - outstanding amount of information and thorough analysis 🧐. Very well done 👍🏻 and thanks for all the good work

  • @steveasula
    @steveasula Před 9 měsíci

    Very interesting. Seems perfect for general carpentry chisels and plane blades. Using water means rust! So using oil is always a bonus.

    • @naturalwhetstones
      @naturalwhetstones  Před 9 měsíci

      Truthfully something shouldn't rust so fast but yep, that is what they were always marketed for.

  • @renew4267
    @renew4267 Před 4 měsíci

    With the arkansas stones you can use a mixture of dishsoap & water if you don't want to use oil.

  • @dappershaves
    @dappershaves Před rokem

    on point and wonderfully informative as usual 🖖

  • @SeaDragonGod
    @SeaDragonGod Před rokem

    Interesting as always!

  • @danhip2442
    @danhip2442 Před rokem +1

    All the same, washita stones replaced other stones in the UK precisely because of their productivity, if you are a carpenter and you can sharpen one chisel in 5 minutes, and not in 15, this greatly increases your productivity

    • @naturalwhetstones
      @naturalwhetstones  Před rokem

      Oh for sure. I'm not surprised they were so popular then - but similarly surprised they are less relevant now than other natural whetstones

    • @Master...deBater
      @Master...deBater Před 5 měsíci

      @@naturalwhetstones They're less relevant because they're no longer produced. They're no longer produced because the high-quality stone was mined out...not because they were replaced by synths. Soft Arks are inferior to Washitas and modern synths...but they're still mined and sold. Apparently, Norton and possibly Dan's occasionally have what they claim are new Washita stones available for sale. But as far as I've seen these are nothing like classical Washitas. I don't own any new ones but from what I've read about them and the pictures I've seen they are not the same stones. What I've read from knowledgeable people think they're just soft arks labeled "Washita". These newly mined stones sell for relatively cheap...but the vintage used Washita are quite expensive in good condition.

  • @herbertgearing1702
    @herbertgearing1702 Před 3 měsíci

    Food grade mineral oil works great and doesn't smell or go rancid.

    • @herbertgearing1702
      @herbertgearing1702 Před 3 měsíci

      I also wipe my stone every few minutes and lay down a bit more oil.

  • @user-yg9sp6mm7g
    @user-yg9sp6mm7g Před rokem

    Wonderful video, very in depth explanation 🙌 just curious where could you find and buy these jnat or sell them?

    • @naturalwhetstones
      @naturalwhetstones  Před rokem

      I keep this list around, here ya go: naturalwhetstones.com/natural-whetstones/reputable-japanese-natural-stone-jnat-nagura-sellers/

  • @edwardrutledge2765
    @edwardrutledge2765 Před rokem

    Another amazing tutorial; nothing else as thorough is available here.
    Please indulge me with JNAT (waterstone) recommendation for a new Hado Nakiri, aogami #1 not #2) edge maintenance. It’s amazing out if the box sharp, and I’d like keeping it that way.

    • @naturalwhetstones
      @naturalwhetstones  Před rokem +1

      It is hard to say as people like different edges. Do you have any idea if you like a toothier edge (so not as refined) or razor like refined edge?

    • @edwardrutledge2765
      @edwardrutledge2765 Před rokem

      @@naturalwhetstones …let’s go with razor, refined and sharp. That’s possible with blue #1, right?

    • @naturalwhetstones
      @naturalwhetstones  Před rokem +1

      @@edwardrutledge2765 Yes absolutely, it is a great metal for it. There are really many stones that could produce that in a knife. Clearly looking for an Awasedo. If you have a lot of experience sharpening hand you cold look for a 4.5 ranged one. If you have less experience, something like a 3/5 will work better for you as they are more forgiving. The mine name is far less important that the stone is fairly pure, from a reputable seller, and doesn't have any concerning lines. Suita tends to be popular as it falls into that fast cutting softer category a lot of the time. If you want to talk further you can use the contact me on my website.

    • @edwardrutledge2765
      @edwardrutledge2765 Před rokem

      @@naturalwhetstones …thanks so much, I’ll peruse the inventory of JNS (Denmark) to see if he’s got what you’re recommending.

    • @naturalwhetstones
      @naturalwhetstones  Před rokem +1

      @@edwardrutledge2765 I always recommend shopping around. JNS is very expensive compared to many other places. Helping look at individual things is far better done over email.

  • @erhan313
    @erhan313 Před rokem

    Thank you for your videos. I'm new to the hobby of sharpening and can you recommend me video tutorials to learn how to sharpen?

    • @naturalwhetstones
      @naturalwhetstones  Před rokem

      Sure, I have one here!
      czcams.com/video/pEbmkV9bVQw/video.html

    • @naturalwhetstones
      @naturalwhetstones  Před rokem

      I prefer now working towards myself as it makes burr removal easier. In the video I show working away from yourself. Going away from yourself on the stone is much more beginner friendly. Once you master that apply the same concerns but with edge leading strokes.

    • @erhan313
      @erhan313 Před rokem

      @@naturalwhetstones Thanks a lot. I have 400, 1200 grit stones. and I ordered king s-3 6000 . for use in the kitchen at home do you need other stones?

    • @naturalwhetstones
      @naturalwhetstones  Před rokem

      Depends on the user. I like my blades above 6k but many don't care. If you are doing razor or certainly carving work yes. Obviously I would say you have a critical lack of natural stones too :P

    • @erhan313
      @erhan313 Před rokem

      @@naturalwhetstones I have no idea about natural stones. I will learn slowly on your page.

  • @JohnDoe-zb7dz
    @JohnDoe-zb7dz Před rokem

    Thanks for sharing this very interesting video. I would love to
    experiment a Washita stone. Not sure how close it comes
    to a Mountainview course, Marcella extra course, (Arkansas),
    or the Queer Creek (Ohio). I have all these in a 4x1 format for
    my KME along with soft, hard, and translucent Arkies.
    It may be redundant to what I already have.

    • @naturalwhetstones
      @naturalwhetstones  Před rokem +1

      Reading over what those are (mountain view and marcella) my guess is that they are soft arkansas stone. Washita and Soft Arkansas can feel very similar, but the Washita will (almost) always be higher quality with more consistency to its composition, placing of holes, etc.
      In use though, probably somewhat redundant. A lot of the benefit of the Washita comes from the pressure you can place upon it. I am have not used your sharpening system but I would doubt it allows you to really torque the pressure.

    • @JohnDoe-zb7dz
      @JohnDoe-zb7dz Před rokem

      @@naturalwhetstones Informative response. Thanks. Yes,
      you are observant and correct. The needed pressure you
      suggested cannot be achieved on the KME with those
      stones. Though more stable on my TSP/KO3, still not
      desirable compared to diamond stones or SIC stones.
      I do have quite a few full size Arkies (8x2x1), from soft
      to blue/black, just not a Llly Washita. Not sure how bad I
      need it, but it looks very interesting. Thanks!

    • @naturalwhetstones
      @naturalwhetstones  Před rokem

      @@JohnDoe-zb7dz They are cool! I think a lot of people feel that the soft arks and washitas are very similar. However, people who are really big novaculite fans will still be able to feel the benefits of a washita over the soft ark.

    • @JohnDoe-zb7dz
      @JohnDoe-zb7dz Před rokem

      @@naturalwhetstones Your not helping my wallet. Now it's on my list. Lol...

    • @naturalwhetstones
      @naturalwhetstones  Před rokem +1

      My bad ;P

  • @pipepuffah6548
    @pipepuffah6548 Před 11 měsíci

    Carpenters stone and was always marketed as such

  • @Doodle-.Snoozel
    @Doodle-.Snoozel Před rokem

    Can you do a video about how to prepare the stone please?

    • @naturalwhetstones
      @naturalwhetstones  Před rokem

      For this stone in particular or stones in general?

    • @Doodle-.Snoozel
      @Doodle-.Snoozel Před rokem

      @@naturalwhetstones just in general

    • @naturalwhetstones
      @naturalwhetstones  Před rokem

      Sure! I am probably going to do a "about and using Awasedo video" next which I think will cover that

  • @PhuongTran-jw4go
    @PhuongTran-jw4go Před rokem

    Interesting as always!