Crows Nest store now open from Friday to Tuesday, 10am till 6pm.

Iron Clad

Higonokami VG10 Steel Folding Knife - Medium

Sale price $76.99 Regular price $89.95

Availability

  • St Peters (Online/Showroom)
    2 Bishop St Unit 2 St Peters NSW 2044
  • Crows Nest (Storefront)
    107 West St, Crows Nest NSW 2065
    Pickup only
Detailed Specifications
Line Higonokami VG10
Profile Petty / Utility, Paring
Bevel Type Double Bevel
Weight 42 g | 1.5 oz
Edge Length 70 mm | 2 3/4″
Heel Height 13 mm | 33/64″
Width @ Heel 2.2 mm | 3/32″
Width @ Mid 2.2 mm | 3/32″
Width @ 1cm from Tip 2.2 mm | 3/32″
Steel VG10 | Stainless
Blade Construction Sanmai - Stainless Clad
Hardness (HRC) 59 - 61
Surface Finish Migaki
Handle Special Handle
Region Miki
Best for
  • Gift buyers
  • Household
  • Free shipping for knives over AU$200 Australia wide.
  • World-wide shipping via DHL Express, 3 to 5 days.


The Higonokami is a type of traditional friction folder, usually carried by workers of all kinds to perform delicate tasks that require sharpness and precision over strength, for its intended purpose, it forms an excellent pair with other traditional farming or logging tools like Nata. By now, they are still widely adopted for works like sharpening a pencil and are popular as small gifts that are characterful and functional.

The most classic Higonokami is produced by Nagao Kanekoma Factory(永尾かね駒), with their name proudly engrave on the handle: 登録商標(Registered Trademark) 肥後守(Higonokami, name of the knife) 定駒(Defined/designed by Kanekoma). They insist the use of traditional technique Warikomi - a method of manually split soft iron to clad a hard steel in the middle - to produce these knives. This is the same method commonly used for Katana forging to produce a blade that have good overall strength and good edge retention that is also easy to sharpen.

The scales and the knife blade are pinned together by a rivet, which the blade pivots around, then friction created by the rivet between the scale and blade holds the blade from deploying when it is carried. This ancient form of knife was widely utilized way before the invention of ball bearings, and it is a very easy to own item due to the lack of a locking mechanism, which made it unregulated in many places.

This VG10 version of the Higonokami uitilized full-stainless Sanmai billets for the blade and stainless steel sheet for the scale, completely eliminate the problem you'd found on traditional carbon steel-brass Higonokami. Although comes at a noticeably higher price, this is a very practical option for those who like this form, the low maintenance nature also make it worry-free as a gift as you friend won't find their beloved knife rusting 3 months later.

Pros Cons
  • Easy to look after
  • Ideal for the household
  • Ideal entry point to Japanese knives
  • High budget
Care Instruction
  1. Don't cut hard things! Japanese knives are brittle so bone hacking is a NO NO!
  2. Wash with neutral detergent after use, and wipe dry;
  3. Please don't wash knife with dishwasher, it will damage the wood handle;
  4. Be careful not to leave the knife close to a heat source for a long time;
  5. It is a lot more dangerous to cut with a blunt knife than a sharp knife!
  6. It is best to sharpen a Japanese knife regularly on a waterstone.

Nagao Kanekoma Factory

Nagao Kanekoma — The Last House of Higonokami

The Higonokami is one of Japan's most enduring everyday carry knives — a traditional friction folder once tucked into the pocket of nearly every Japanese schoolchild and tradesperson. Today, only one workshop retains the right to stamp its blades with the original 肥後守 trademark: Nagao Kanekoma Factory in Miki City, Hyogo.

The story begins in the 1880s, when founder Komataro Nagao began forging blades by hand in the Hirata district of Miki. In 1894, hardware wholesaler Tasaburo Shigematsu refined an earlier folding design by adding a small lever — the chikiri — that lets the user thumb the blade open and folds flush against the scale when closed. He named it after Higo, the old province of Kumamoto where his best customers lived, and the name stuck. By 1911, a young Crown Prince (later Emperor Taisho) had bought one at the Kobe Export Exhibition, and the Higonokami's reputation was sealed.

A boom in cheap imitations led the Miki Knife Manufacturers Association to register the Higonokami trademark in 1910, restricting its use to association members. The post-war rise of utility knives, electric pencil sharpeners, and anti-knife campaigns thinned the trade dramatically, and over the decades every other licensed maker closed or moved on. Nagao Kanekoma is the last one standing.

Their knives are still built the traditional way, using warikomi — soft iron split by hand and forge-welded around a hard steel core, the same lamination logic behind a katana. The result is a blade with good edge retention that remains easy to sharpen on a stone. The brass scales carry the proud engraving: 登録商標 肥後守 定駒 — Registered Trademark, Higonokami, by Kanekoma. Simple, characterful, and unmistakably Japanese.

Read more

Nagao Kanekoma — The Last House of Higonokami

Few knives carry the weight of a whole country's memory quite like the Higonokami. For more than a century it lived in the pockets of Japanese schoolchildren, farmers, carpenters, and clerks — a small brass-handled friction folder pulled out to sharpen a pencil, whittle a stick, slice an apple, or trim a length of twine. It was the knife of ordinary life. And today, only one workshop in the world is still allowed to stamp a blade with the original 肥後守 trademark: Nagao Kanekoma Factory, tucked into the old blade-smithing town of Miki City in Hyogo.

The story starts in the 1880s, when founder Komataro Nagao began forging knives by hand in the Hirata district alongside his colleague Mr. Murakami. In those days every blade was beaten out at the anvil, hard steel forge-welded into a soft iron body, the sheaths struck from brass or black-dyed iron and carved with portraits, horses, flowers, birds, and landscapes. A single craftsman might finish five to eight a day, and no two were quite the same.

In 1894, a hardware wholesaler named Tasaburo Shigematsu brought back a folding knife from Kagoshima and asked the Miki smiths to refine it. The result was a stroke of quiet genius: a small lever — the chikiri, or "tail" — pinned to the spine of the blade so it could be thumbed open and folded flat against the scale. Shigematsu named it after Higo, the old province of Kumamoto where most of his customers lived, and the name stuck fast. Sales exploded. By 1911 a young Crown Prince — later Emperor Taisho — spotted one at the First Kobe Export Articles Competitive Exhibition, bought it on the spot, and the Higonokami's fame was sealed.

A golden age followed. The Higonokami Knife Union, founded in 1899, swelled to forty member workshops and over two hundred craftsmen. But success drew imitators, and cheap counterfeits flooded the market. In 1910 the Miki Knife Manufacturers Association registered the Higonokami trademark, restricting its use to legitimate members. Then came the long decline — utility knives, electric pencil sharpeners, and the anti-knife social campaigns of the 1950s hollowed out the trade one workshop at a time. One by one the licensed makers shut their forges or moved on to other work. When the dust settled, Nagao Kanekoma was the last one standing.

They have kept faith with the old methods. Every blade is still made by warikomi — soft iron manually split and forge-welded around a hard steel core, the same lamination logic that gives a katana its strength and edge. The result is a blade with excellent edge retention that still yields easily to a sharpening stone. There is no lock, no ball bearing, no spring — just a single rivet, the friction of brass on steel, and a small lever to coax the edge into the light.

The handle still bears the old engraving: 登録商標 肥後守 定駒 — Registered Trademark, Higonokami, by Kanekoma. Four generations on, it remains one of the most quietly perfect everyday objects Japan has ever produced.

“Endures the test of time across 5 generations, delivering the tradition in its truest form.”

Est. 1894 | 明治27年
Known for Inheriting and handing down the classic Higonokami folder form to this date
Website higonokami.jp Instagram @higonokami.kanekoma Facebook 肥後守 Read more about Nagao Kanekoma Factory
Nagao Kanekoma Factory — Miki
Profile: Petty
Profile

Petty

Utility, Paring

The Petty knife, a smaller Japanese utility knife, serves as an ideal tool for precision tasks such as peeling, trimming, and slicing fruits and vegetables. With a blade length ranging from 120mm to 180mm (4.7 to 7 inches), it stands out for its ability to handle detailed work like deveining shrimp or cutting garnishes. Its slightly longer and slimmer profile compared to the Western paring knife enhances its functionality for intricate tasks, making it a valuable addition to any kitchen toolkit.
Composition

VG10 Element Composition

Compare with
    VG10
    15.0% 11.3% 7.5% 3.8% 0
    C Carbon 1.0%
    Primary hardening element. Raises hardness and wear resistance — but too much increases brittleness and corrosion susceptibility. As a reference: German 1.4112 (~0.5%) sits at the low end; VG-10 (~1.0%) is a common mid-range; SG2 (1.25–1.45%) and ZDP-189 (~3.0%) represent high and extreme ends respectively.
    C
    1.0%
    Cr Chromium 15.0%
    Raises corrosion resistance; 13%+ qualifies steel as stainless. Also improves hardenability and wear resistance. In kitchen use, higher chromium levels contribute to a slight drag or sticking sensation when cutting — a trade-off for the rust resistance it provides.
    Cr
    15.0%
    V Vanadium 0.25%
    Forms extremely hard carbides for superior edge retention. Also refines grain structure, improving toughness.
    V
    0.25%
    Mo Molybdenum 1.0%
    Improves hardenability and toughness. Boosts corrosion resistance and helps the steel hold hardness under heat.
    Mo
    1.0%
    Co Cobalt 1.55%
    Allows higher hardening temperatures, increasing hardness and wear resistance. Slightly reduces toughness at high levels.
    Co
    1.55%
    C — Carbon Cr — Chromium V — Vanadium Mo — Molybdenum Co — Cobalt
    Hardness 59–61 HRC
    555759616365+
    Steel
    VG10
    Category
    Stainless
    Manufacturer
    Takefu Special Steel, Japan 🇯🇵
    Hardness
    59–61 HRC
    Steel

    VG10

    • Manufacturer
      • Takefu Special Steel, Japan
    • Nature Stainless
    • Hardness59–61 HRC
    Takefu VG10, is a high-end stainless steel celebrated for its exceptional edge retention and sharpness. It is a popular choice among Japanese kitchen knife makers and widely used in various types of knives, including kitchen knives, folders, and fixed blades.

    VG10 achieves a hardness of around 60-61 HRC, with some makers pushing it to 62 HRC, ensuring good edge holding and stain resistance. The steel's composition includes 15% chromium (Cr) for corrosion resistance, 1% molybdenum (Mo), and 1.5% cobalt (Co) for matrix strengthening, leading to high hardness and durability. The addition of vanadium (V) refines its microstructure and, along with Cr and Mo, produces hard carbides that enhance wear resistance. VG10 is easy to sharpen, has good machinability, and supports secondary hardening with high-temperature tempering, making it suitable for blades that may undergo surface coating treatments up to about 450℃. Its well-rounded attributes make VG10 steel highly versatile, performing excellently in a range of applications from kitchen and general-purpose knives to machine blades.
    Construction: Sanmai - Stainless Clad
    Construction

    Sanmai - Stainless Clad

    Sanmai(Three-Piece) is a common construction for double bevel knives where two pieces of softer cladding steel are forgewelded to each side of a harder core steel. The harder but more brittle core steel will form the hard cutting edge after heat treating, and the softer cladding will support the core to increase the overall strength of the blade.

    The soft cladding enables the thinning process to be a lot easier than a honyaki or monosteel construction. And in the case where the cladding steel are stainless in nature, it can offer protection for the carbon or semi-stainless cores against rusting and discoluoring.

    Finish: Migaki
    Finish

    Migaki

    "Migaki" means "polished" or "shined" in Japanese, The term "Migaki finish" in the context of Japanese kitchen knives indeed does not exclusively refer to a mirror polish but encompasses a broader range of polished finishes that can vary from semi-gloss to a more refined, subtle sheen, rather than a highly reflective surface. The primary goal of a Migaki finish is to enhance the knife's functionality and aesthetic appeal, focusing on a smooth finish that improves resistance to corrosion and minimizes drag during cutting, rather than achieving a purely mirror-like appearance.

    1 / 4

    You May Also Like