
Making a Deer Antler Knife Handle — Drill, Shape, and Epoxy a Hidden-Tang Grip
Deer antler is harder and more durable than most woods, with a natural grip texture and moisture resistance that improves with age. The dense outer cortex resists scratching while the spongy inner core locks epoxy around the tang for a permanent bond. Antler handles have been used from the Stone Age through to modern custom knifemaking.
This blueprint covers making a hidden-tang knife handle from a single deer antler beam section: sawing, drilling, shaping, sanding, epoxying the blade in place, and finishing with beeswax and linseed oil.
ការណែនាំ
Select a dense beam section
Select a dense beam section
Choose a straight section of the lower main beam — this has the thickest cortex and smallest spongy core. You need about 12-13 cm of length. Avoid sun-bleached or cracked antler. Fresh antler or recently shed (under one season old) is best.
Materials for this step:
Deer Antler Section1 piece
Deer1 pieceSaw the beam section to length
Saw the beam section to length
Clamp the antler in a bench vise with protective jaw pads. Cut to length with a fine-toothed hacksaw (24-32 TPI). Saw slowly — antler dust is unpleasant to inhale, so work outdoors or wear a mask. Square off the butt end with a second cut if needed.
Tools needed:
Bench Vise
HacksawDrill the tang hole
Drill the tang hole
Clamp the blank upright, find the centre of the spongy core, and drill with a bit matching the tang width (6-8 mm). Drill slowly at low speed, clearing chips every 10-15 mm. Drill to tang depth, usually 7-9 cm. Test-fit — the tang should slide in snugly without wobble.
Tools needed:
Cordless Drill
Drill Bit SetShape with rasp and file
Shape with rasp and file
Rough-shape with a coarse wood rasp, then refine curves with a half-round hand file. Aim for a comfortable grip: slightly swollen in the middle, tapered at both ends, with a gentle palm swell. Check the feel in your hand frequently — comfort matters more than symmetry.
Tools needed:
Wood Rasp
Files (Hand File)Sand through progressive grits
Sand through progressive grits
Sand through 120, 220, then 400 grit. The dense cortex polishes to a glossy finish with visible grain lines. Sand in one direction along the length. Wipe with a damp cloth between grits to reveal remaining tool marks.
Materials for this step:
Sandpaper (120 Grit)1 sheet
Sandpaper (220 Grit)1 sheet
Sandpaper (400 Grit)1 sheetEpoxy the tang into the handle
Epoxy the tang into the handle
Roughen the tang with sandpaper. Mix two-part epoxy, apply to tang and hole, push the tang in firmly. Stand upright with blade pointing up and check alignment before the epoxy sets. The spongy core absorbs epoxy and creates a mechanical lock stronger than the antler itself.
Materials for this step:
5-Minute Epoxy1 pieceFinish with beeswax and linseed oil
Finish with beeswax and linseed oil
Mix melted beeswax with boiled linseed oil (1:3 ratio). Warm the handle, rub the finish in with a soft cloth, and buff after 15 minutes. The oil prevents the bone from drying out; the wax seals the surface. Reapply once or twice a year for handles in regular use.
Materials for this step:
Beeswax30 g
Boiled Linseed Oil50 mlសម្ភារៈ
8- 1 pieceកន្លែងទុក
- 1 sheetកន្លែងទុក
- 1 sheetកន្លែងទុក
- 1 sheetកន្លែងទុក
- 1 pieceកន្លែងទុក
- 50 mlកន្លែងទុក
Connected Blueprint Materials
ប្លង់ពាក់ព័ន្ធ
ប្លង់ទាំងនេះចែករំលែកចំណេះដឹង — បច្ចេកទេស សម្ភារៈ ឬគោលការណ៍
CC0 សាធារណៈ
ប្លង់នេះត្រូវបានចេញផ្សាយក្រោម CC0។ អ្នកមានសិទ្ធិចម្លង កែប្រែ ចែកចាយ និងប្រើប្រាស់ដោយមិនចាំបាច់សុំអនុញ្ញាត។
គាំទ្រអ្នកបង្កើតដោយទិញផលិតផលតាមរយៈប្លង់របស់ពួកគេ ដែលពួកគេទទួលបាន កម្រៃជើងសារអ្នកបង្កើត កំណត់ដោយអ្នកលក់ ឬបង្កើតកំណែថ្មីនៃប្លង់នេះ ហើយបញ្ចូលជាការតភ្ជាប់ក្នុងប្លង់របស់អ្នកដើម្បីចែករំលែកចំណូល។