Brook Turner

Sydney, Australia · High Performance, Handcrafted Kitchen Knives

Brook Turner

Brook Turner Blades

Brook Turner is a Sydney-based bladesmith whose work reflects a restrained, thoughtful approach to handmade kitchen knives. Working across mono steel and laminated constructions, he combines clean geometry, subtle forged character, and carefully resolved handle work into knives that feel calm, balanced, and highly usable in the kitchen. Produced entirely by hand in small numbers, his work has become one of the standout voices in contemporary Australian bladesmithing.

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The latest from Brook Turner Blades

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Recent work

Recent releases from this workshop. Each made by hand in extremely limited numbers.

About the maker

On the workshop

Brook Turner is an Australian bladesmith based in Sydney whose work reflects a deep respect for handcraft, material integrity, and performance-led design. His path into knife making began organically through a broader interest in working with timber and making objects by hand; limited workshop space pushed that interest toward knives, where the smaller footprint allowed him to begin experimenting with steel, files and simple tooling. What started as a practical creative outlet has steadily evolved into a disciplined pursuit of high-performance culinary knives, shaped through years of refinement and hands-on making while he continues his career as a radiographer alongside the workshop.

His knives span mono steel and laminated constructions across steels including 52100, White #1, Blue #1, Blue #2 and 26c3, often paired with wrought iron or stainless cladding. Subtle forged hollows, distal tapering and thin convex bevels recur through his kitchen work, giving a cutting feel that balances ease of penetration with controlled food release. The woodworking background remains evident in the calm, well-resolved handle work found throughout his pieces, with proportion and tactile quality treated as carefully as the steel itself. Across the catalogue there is a clean, geometry-driven coherence rather than any single signature flourish.

What distinguishes Brook's work is the sense of restraint and honesty carried through each knife. There is little excess or ornament for its own sake; the focus stays on proportion, cutting performance and feel in hand. His knives draw on Japanese profiles and forging approaches while retaining a distinctly individual character shaped by his own workshop practice. Produced in relatively small numbers and entirely by hand, they have steadily gained recognition within the Australian artisan knife community for their performance, consistency and quietly confident craftsmanship — qualities that sit naturally within the Modern Cooking Collectors Selection.

Steel preference

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Signature construction

Cutting edge steel

52100

Low-alloy chromium bearing/tool steel

Typical HRC
61–65
Corrosion class
Carbon
Production
Conventional
Origin
United States (AISI 52100); identical to 1.3505 and 100Cr6

52100 is the most respected non-stainless steel in the Western kitchen knife tradition — a chrome-bearing alloy that began life as a ball-bearing grade and has, over decades of custom-maker use, become a reference for what a thoughtful carbon steel should feel like. Roughly one percent carbon and one and a half percent chromium put it just below the stainless threshold but well within the territory where chromium meaningfully refines grain and tightens the carbide structure.

A good 52100 kitchen knife typically lands between 62 and 63 HRC. It sharpens with little drama on almost any stone, takes an edge as clean as the simple carbons, and holds it for longer thanks to those Cr-rich carbides. Toughness is excellent for the hardness — published comparative data positions it as one of the better-balanced carbon steels available, especially when the heat treat includes the cryogenic treatment that this steel rewards. It will patina, but more politely than a white paper, and it is forgiving enough that a single rinse-and-dry routine is usually enough.

52100 is the canonical choice for cooks who love carbon-steel feel but want a touch more refinement than 1084, W2, or even 80CrV2. It dominates the American custom scene and shows up across high-end stock-removal work from a wide range of forging custom shops. Among the makers Modern Cooking carries, Fredrik Spåre, Brook Turner, and Nordquist Designs work in 52100. Note that it is the same alloy as German 1.3505 and the European 100Cr6; if a maker tells you they have used one, they have used all three.

Also known as:1.3505, 100Cr6

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Cutting edge steel

26C3

High-carbon, low-alloy fine-grain steel

Typical HRC
63–67
Corrosion class
Carbon
Production
Conventional
Origin
Sweden (Sandvik / Alleima)

26C3 is one of the most quietly important kitchen knife steels of the past decade. Originally engineered by Sandvik as a razor steel — its lineage runs straight to UHB-20C — it carries about 1.25 to 1.30 percent carbon, very low manganese and sulphur, and a small chromium addition to control grain size. The result is a steel that hardens cleanly into the mid-sixties HRC while retaining genuinely useful toughness for its hardness, an unusual combination outside the powder-metallurgy world.

For the cook, 26C3 sharpens the way the best Japanese white papers sharpen — a quick burr that wipes off cleanly, and a polished edge that holds a screaming apex without microchipping. Toughness at 64 HRC is comparable to or better than 52100 at the same hardness in published testing, which is part of why the Larrin-Thomas-and-friends generation of makers gravitated to it; it lets you grind thinner without paying for it later. Like all clean carbons, it patinas willingly and benefits from a wipe between tasks.

26C3 has become something of a default among UK and European bladesmiths who want a no-compromise carbon edge, and it is the chemical parent of SheffCut, which adds a sliver of niobium to refine grain further. Among the makers Modern Cooking carries, Birch & Bevel, Karol Karyś, Jonas Johnsson, Tobias Heldqvist, Brook Turner, and Fredrik Spåre work in 26C3. It is one of the few non-stainless steels you can recommend to a cook coming from VG-10 without apology.

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Blade construction

Laminated Steel

A category covering knives built from multiple layers of different steels forge-welded together. The hard cutting steel is sandwiched between softer outer layers (cladding) that protect the core, add toughness, and often contribute visual contrast.

The most common laminated constructions in the Modern Cooking catalogue are:

SanMai (三枚) — three layers: hard cutting steel in the centre, softer cladding on both sides. The traditional and most common form.

GoMai (五枚) — five layers: a hard core, two intermediate layers, and two outer layers. Adds visual depth and structural complexity.

KuMai (九枚) — nine layers: similar logic, with more cladding layers for additional pattern and structural variation.

GoMai and KuMai are often chosen not only for the additional layers and visual depth, but also because the intermediate layers can act as a nickel diffusion barrier — limiting carbon migration out of the core into the cladding during forge welding, and protecting the core's intended carbon content through the heat of the forging process.

In all cases the cutting performance is determined by the core steel; the outer layers are cosmetic and structural. The lamination contributes corrosion protection (when a stainless jacket clads a carbon core), reduced reactivity, and the visible boundary between core and cladding that gives the knife its character.

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From the archive

1 piece

Past pieces

Pieces from this workshop's previous releases. No longer available, kept here for record.

Limited release

Reserve your place

Brook Turner's work is highly sought-after for its distinctive combination of craftsmanship, performance, and design, with each piece produced by hand in extremely limited numbers — a pace of production that naturally cannot keep up with demand.

For those hoping to secure a piece through Modern Cooking, joining the waitlist is the best way to register your interest in Brook's work and share your preferred dimensions, design preferences, and intended use. As opportunities become available, we use this information to guide future allocations with care and consideration.

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