Like most people, I don’t have a means to process my own steel blade. I don’t have the means to blacksmith or heat-treat a knife at home, though I will someday. In any case, I wanted to make a knife as a one-of-a-kind heirloom piece that I can gift or pass down at some point. I decided to craft a one-of-a-kind knife handle for a purchased blade blank using Alumilite resin. Alumilite casting has been pretty well documented for knife handle material and I thought I’d give it a shot. For this particular project, I used Alumilite RC-3 which dries to a solid color, and is the cheapest dollar-per-oz formula I could find.

Tools and Materials Used:

I do a lot of DIY stuff so I had some tools and material laying around. Some tools can be used in place of tools I used so I’ll try to list them out accordingly

Tools Used:

Materials Used:

Jantz Silvermoose with my Alumilite rough-cuts on the Alumilite how-to white paper

Jantz Knife Blank Choice:

I wanted a stainless steel hunting knife that would work as bushcraft knife and only be limited by the length of the blade. I ordered one of the more expensive Jantz Silver Moose pattern in CPMS 30V. This particular blade has high-carbon qualities that I wanted, like high hardness, and is still considered a full stainless blade material. The overall length is 7-5/8-inches with a blade length of 3-inches, width of 1-inch, and 1/8-inch thickness. As a hunting knife, this would be capable of processing both large and small game and should have great handling characteristics for skinning game. CPMS 30V is also supposed to be pretty good when it comes to edge retention and it seems like it so far, but I haven’t processed large game with it. I have made some feather sticks and batoned wood with it to test the bushcraft characteristics of the blade and everything passes well. The back of the knife even has a nice 90-degree edge on it which strikes a ferro rod well.

Knife Handle Material Choice:

I wanted something decorated and exotic. Even after watching hours of videos on youtube, I still went with the wrong Alumilite formula, which ended up turning into a beautiful mistake. For the wood pieces, I inherited a wedding centerpiece that had manzanita branches as the main material. After reading up a bit, it’s a hardwood that’s used in any other projects like bowls and fish tank decoration, but isn’t used as much for knife handle material as it tends to warp. Being an experiment, I cut sections of this on my Rockwell Bladerunner and it looked cool enough to use.

The Alumilite I used was Alumilite RC-3 Tan, which cures to a mostly-solid tan color. I bought the 32-oz kit which includes two 16-oz parts (A & B) for a total of 32-oz. I’ve been able to make 3 molds so far, and have enough for one more test.

I mixed in some blue pearl and white pearl pigment into it, thinking I’d get a nice pearl translucent look, but it cured seafoam green. At first, I was going to toss it, but after my fiance had said it could make a beautiful knife, I gave it a shot. I’m loving the result.

My resin casting mold using a hacked up 1-in cutting board

Making a Mold:

For my mold, I used an NSF certified Polyethylene 12x18x1-inch cutting board. The most important dimension here is the 1-inch thickness for assembling with 2-inch screws. Again, using my Rockwell Bladerunner, I cut this into sections that were appropriate. The dimensions are based off of a standard knife scale and creates castings that are 5-inch x 2-inch x however much material you pour. The walls on my mold are about 2-inches tall to accommodate oversized cuts. You can do this with a hacksaw with lots of patience.

Alumilite Resin Casting without a Pressure Pot:

Alumilite hardening in my cutting board mold

I can only speak to RC-3, but this thing has a 7-minute cure time. That is, it goes from mixed to hard in 7-minutes. Alumilite RC-3 has a pot life of only 3-minutes, so I timed my pour well under that number and gave myself 2-minutes. I gave it 1-minute for stirring the parts together and 1-minute to settle in while I poured in hopes that air bubbles would escape while in its most liquid form. The casting guys generally recommend a 2.5 gallon paint pressure pot with a compressor and gauges, but for my purpose, I didn’t find one necessary. I’m sure this would have created a better product, but I was able to fix any mistakes carefully.

This was truly a kitchen counter open-air cure. I sealed the gaps in my mold with some plumbers putty and painters tape, and put some paper towels down to catch any resin that would seep out. I fit the pieces of scrap wood in the mold and stuck it in the oven at 170-degrees for about 10-minutes. This does two things: 1) helps dry out any excess moisture that may have been introduced and 2) heats up all the bits, helping the Alumilite resin get into all the gaps in liquid form.

You will want to pour each part of the Alumilite in to two separate paper mixing cups at the exact same weight using an electronic kitchen scale. I eye-balled the amount of 1100-grains for each part for my mold, so your mileage may vary. Don’t take this for an exact science. Once the two parts are poured into separate cups, I let both cups sit for about 10-minutes to help degas a bit. I then added my resin pigments to one of the parts (the clear one) and stirred it up. I let it rest again to degas a bit.

Freshly cut Alumilite Resin casted knife scales on my Rockwell Bladerunner table saw

Start a timer before you combine parts A & B to give the pour some time to fill in and move air to the top as much as possible. Take the mold with scrap wood out of the oven. Combine and stir the Alumilite parts for a full minute, making sure you mix thoroughly and don’t see unmixed parts. Make sure to scrape the cup on the sides and bottom to get a good mixture. At about a minute (1.5 if you really need time), start pouring in from one corner of the mold medium-slowly to allow for the resin to move through the mold. It helps to squish the cup a but to give yourself a divot to pour from. As the mixture rises in the mold and you think you have a piece thick enough, don’t be bashful about pouring over holes in your scrap wood.

As you can see in the picture, with all of these steps, I still get air bubbles. However, these are negligible since they’re on the surface and I’m cutting that piece away anyhow.

Before I forget, make sure your wood scrap is DRY DRY DRY. Moisture and casting don’t mix well and causes lots of bubbles.

Cutting and applying the Scales:

Jantz Silvermoose with my Alumilite rough-cuts on the Alumilite how-to white paper

Using my Rockwell Bladerunner table saw, I split these down the middle. I wanted a thicker handle and being my first try, I wanted enough of an over-sized cut to correct any errors I’d make. Once I split it down the middle, I took the edges off and was left with a 3/4-inch thick piece on each side or so. As you can see, there were some holes in the wood from bugs or something, so I mixed a few more grains of Alumilite and carefully poured them in. In hindsight, I would have waited until I sanded the knife handle and just filled in the holes with gobs of resin and sanded it down to match.

I can’t say enough about this Rockwell table saw. It really made the project easier with the ability to cut and measure all built in. I used it to cut the scales to the blade’s shape too without a hitch. For this, I simply placed the sides I wanted to see facing out, and traced the blade with a red permanent marker leaving a lot of breathing room.

When cutting the scales to shape, I also left a wide birth to really insure that the scales would cover the knife with room to spare. You can always take away material, but you can’t add material back.

The scales are rough cut with brass pins inserted

I cut my brass pins out of the 1/8-inch brass rod oversized. You want working room here as brass sands down easily. I cut the same length of my 1/4-inch brass tube for my thong hole. Again, a hacksaw or Bladerunner would work.

Next, I used my power drill and the appropriate sized drill but to match the scales to the handle holes. I used a 1/8-inch bit for the handle holes, and a 1/4-inch bit for the thong hole. As a process, I laid down one side of the scale over a piece of wood I’d drill into and place the knife blade on top. After each drilling, I would place a length of brass pin I made from the 1/8-inch rod down to keep everything lined up.

After drilling all of those holes through one of the scales, I repeated the process on the other scale using the knife blade as my guide. Make sure things are facing the relative directions for each side in regards to the blade.

If done correctly, everything should line up and you should be able to sandwich both scales over the blade with all the brass pins and tubes put in. If not, using the proper drill bits and small amount of free-hand movement to create some space shouldn’t hurt, since we’re using epoxy to clamp everything together. Be reserved in this and keep checking for a snug, but easy fit.

Once everything seems to fit, rough up all the bonding parts with some sand paper and clean. After that, you can start the epoxy process. I used a cheap 3M wet surface epoxy on mine and I didn’t like working with it. It was the consistency of cold peanut butter and dried grey. When I do this again, I’ll be using Devcon 2-ton epoxy as it has been the most recommended and has a decent amount of working time after mixing. You’ll want to do this quickly if you’re using a 5-minute epoxy, though I can’t recommend it.

This will be messy, so wear gloves. Take everything apart and start slathering mixed epoxy on both scales, put the knife blade down on it to match, and sandwich loosely. Start applying the pins while turning to get the pins covered in epoxy. This is where the extra room from free-handing the drill comes in to play as I had to install 6 small pins and a brass tube. Your mileage may vary.

Once the pieces are all together with lots of epoxy between, clamp it down with some wood clamps and let it sit for 24-hours.

After the epoxy cures, use a peening hammer to lock the brass pins in.

After sanding the over-sized Alumilite scales

Shaping and Finishing the Alumilite Resin Knife Handle:

At this point, you should have a lot of material over the knife blank. I used 80-grit blaster sand paper made for stripping paint from cars. A rasp may work as well, if you have that on hand. Simply lay down the 80-grit on a flat surface and start on the back of the knife. Then do the same to the flat sides of the knife to get the pins flush with the knife scale. The idea is to get a flush surface to the knife.

Once you have the rough outline, start adding contouring with the same 80-grit sheet to round off the sides. Some painters tape over the blade’s edge will help in handling of the knife for sanding.

What helped me form the shape of the handle is cutting the 80-grit into strips so that I could wrap the sandpaper around the handle and twist. Again, make sure you wrapped the blade up well while doing this or it’ll be a trip to the hospital. Take your time in this process as you’re shaping the knife handle to how you want it.

Contoured knife handle with painter’s tape along the blade, sanded to a high grit

At this stage, I did find air bubbles or imperfections on the knife handle. I simply mixed more Alumilite resin and laid it into the holes and sanded them flush.

Once you have the rough contoured shape of the knife handle, use the assorted sandpaper pack to start bringing the color and grain out of the handle and roughed up metal.

I started with 200-grit until everything was smooth and uniform, then 400-grit, then 800-grit, then 1600-grit, then 3000-grit. You can stop at 800-grit or 1600-grit if you’d like. This is all up to your preference.

After all that sanding, things should be looking pretty good. I threw on some Feed-and-Wax Wood polish to bring out some color, but any polish or wax would work, I’d imagine. The wax coating gives me a piece of mind for the wood’s surface.

Good luck and happy DIY-ing!

About Author Jon Bao Writer and personality exploring the natural world by means of survival, bushcraft, hunting, fishing, and general outdoor adventures. See author's posts