Clearance sale before final closure — the last 634 handcrafted blades. 60% off while supplies last.

Forged in England — Since 1976

Hand-forged Damascus knife

By James Morley

✅ Slices a tomato without pressing down — the blade glides through on its own

 

✅ Zero fatigue after an hour — perfect balance between blade and handle

 

✅ One sharpening a year is all it takes — damascus steel holds its edge

 

✅ Your kids will fight over who gets to inherit it

⚠ Only 27 Knives Left in Stock!

🔒 Secure payment 🚚 Fast shipping 🔄 30-day money-back guarantee

A Blade That Still Cuts After 30 Years

Not a single layer of steel like store-bought knives. 67 layers folded and forged by hand — that's what gives it the kind of edge that doesn't go dull.

 

Some of James' customers have been using the same knife since 1994.

 

One pass on a whetstone once a year — that's all the upkeep it needs.

 

Look: the blade glides through the tomato without any pressure.

A Grip You Feel From the Very First Second

No moulded plastic.

 

A solid block of walnut, carved and hand-oiled three times. The grip is warm, natural, reassuring.

 

And unlike plastic that breaks down over time, wood develops a patina. In 10 years, your knife will look even better than it does today.

Zero Fatigue, Even After an Hour of Prep

A hand-forged knife is balanced to the gram. The weight distributes naturally between the blade and the handle.

 

It doesn't pull to one side, doesn't strain your wrist.

 

It settles into your palm and does the work for you.

 

That's the difference between cooking with effort and cooking with pleasure.

The man behind the blade

James Morley — 50 Years, 1 Workshop, 0 Machines

You already know his story. Here's what matters: every knife you see on this page passed through his hands. Not a machine's. Not a factory worker's. His.

 

634 blades stacked in a 32 m² workshop. When they're gone, the forge goes dark for good. No new run.

 

No restock. Ever.


The price of $139 instead of $280 — that's his choice. Not some wholesaler's who wanted to resell them at $400 behind glass.

 

James would rather his knives be used in kitchens.

 

"I'm not looking for charity. I want my knives to end up in the hands of people who love to cook."

Frances L., 67, Germany | Verified Purchase

“ I bought my first knife from James back in 1994. It's survived three moves, two kids, and thousands of meals. It still cuts better than any new knife I've bought since. ”

Catherine D., 61, United States | Verified Purchase

“ My husband gave me one of James' knives for our 25th anniversary. I thought it was an odd gift at the time. Fifteen years later, it's the only thing in our kitchen I've never replaced. ”

Andrew B., head chef, Singapore | Verified Purchase

“ I've used Japanese knives at $700, German knives at $480. None of them come close to a Morley blade. The day he closes, a whole chapter of Irish craft disappears. ”

Carlo G., 63, Italy | Verified Purchase

“ My wife asked why I was smiling while cutting carrots. I told her: because for the first time in 40 years, I have a real knife. ”

Special Offer Available Now

Availability is limited online · 60% OFF THE REGULAR PRICE while supplies last!

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