Sky Eilers

Auckland, New Zealand · High Performance, Handcrafted Kitchen Knives

Skye Eilers

Skye Eilers Knives

Skye Eilers represents a new generation of New Zealand bladesmiths bringing strong ergonomics, clean geometry, and careful finishing into contemporary kitchen knives. His work combines premium Japanese steels, refined handle shaping, and a highly balanced cutting feel that already shows considerable maturity for a young maker. The collection reflects a thoughtful, performance-first approach that feels both contemporary and deeply grounded in practical kitchen use.

View recent work

The latest from Skye Eilers Knives

Recent work

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

About the maker

On the workshop

Skye Eilers works from Auckland, New Zealand, part of a small but increasingly visible community of bladesmiths emerging from the country. He is young in years but has already drawn attention well beyond his local scene, balancing his own making with a wider role in the New Zealand knife community — he organises the Auckland Blade Show and represents the country's makers with quiet conviction. Recognition from the national bladesmithing community has followed early, and his trajectory points toward a long career rather than a brief moment.

His knives are built around performance-first geometry and premium Japanese steels, an approach that gives the work both edge stability and a familiar tactile language for cooks who have used high-end Japanese blades. Skye places real weight on ergonomics: handles are shaped with care for long prep, and grinds are tuned to release food cleanly rather than simply to look impressive on paper. Fit and finish are a clear signature — the transitions between handle, bolster, and blade are cleanly resolved, and the overall composition feels considered rather than incidental. The knives feel as good in the hand as they do on the board, which is precisely the brief he seems to set himself.

What stands out about Skye is the maturity of the work relative to where he sits in his career. The combination of comfort, geometry, and finish reflects a maker who is paying attention to every part of the knife as a system, not just to the headline details. His investment in the wider New Zealand community through the Auckland Blade Show only deepens that sense of a serious, long-view practice. We are proud to present Skye Eilers within the Modern Cooking Collectors Selection, where his ergonomic discipline and performance-led geometry add a distinctly antipodean voice to the lineup.

Steel preference

Signature construction

Cutting edge steel

V-Toku2

Low-alloy high-carbon tungsten-chromium tool steel

Typical HRC
63–66
Corrosion class
Carbon
Production
Conventional
Origin
Japan (Takefu Special Steel)

Editorial note: V-Toku2 is sometimes described in online write-ups as "semi-stainless." The steel's chromium content (around 0.25 percent) is too low to support that claim — V-Toku2 is unambiguously a clean, reactive carbon steel. It will patina and rust if neglected, and should be cared for accordingly.

The composition is approximately 1.05 percent carbon, 0.25 percent chromium, 1.25 percent tungsten, and a small vanadium addition. Conceptually it is Takefu's answer to Aogami #2: similar W-Cr-C balance, similar feel at the stone, similar performance at the apex. In a finished knife it runs at 62–65 HRC, sharpens cleanly, and produces a refined edge with good wear resistance from the tungsten carbides.

V-Toku2 is increasingly seen in mid-tier Japanese clad knives where the maker wants an Aogami-feel carbon without committing to Hitachi stock. Among the makers Modern Cooking carries, Adonis Forged Arts and Oatley Knives work in V-Toku2. It is a quietly capable steel and a good answer for a cook who wants the "blue paper" experience from a non-Hitachi maker.

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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.

View full construction guide →

Limited release

Reserve your place

Skye Eilers'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 Skye'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.

Reserve your place

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