Fredrik Spåre

Örebro, Sweden · High Performance, Handcrafted Kitchen Knives

Fredrik Spåre

Spåre Knives

Fredrik Spåre produces kitchen knives from Örebro, Sweden, with an unusually complete in-house process spanning forging, grinding, sharpening, and handle construction. Working primarily with Swedish steels and locally sourced materials, his knives are known for high-performance geometry, excellent fit and finish, and a quiet Scandinavian restraint. The collection reflects a maker focused less on spectacle and more on producing refined tools that reward serious daily use.

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The latest from Spåre Knives

Recent work

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

MCx design studio

MCx collaborations

MCx Fredrik Spåre — limited pieces from a continuing collaboration.

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About the maker

On the workshop

For Fredrik Spåre, knife making began as a way to bond with his father — a simple weekend knife-making course in the 1990s. The process of creating something from raw steel and wood took hold immediately, and over time the hobby developed into a serious practice. He made kitchen and hunting knives for friends and family for years before knife making became his profession, and that long, unforced arc is still visible in the way the workshop operates today. Based in Örebro, Sweden, Fredrik now focuses mainly on kitchen knives, with the patient cadence of a maker who arrived at full-time work by accumulation rather than by leap.

From start to finish, every step is completed in house: steel making and forging, grinding and sharpening, handle construction and fitting. Fredrik works mostly with Swedish steel from Uddeholm and Sandvik, paired with locally sourced handle materials, and the resulting knives carry a clear sense of regional grounding without leaning on it for effect. Recurring details across the range include hand-hammered bolsters and high-performance geometry, with his honyaki and mono steel blades pushed to ultra-high HRC — an approach that demands precise heat treatment and rewards careful sharpening with very stable, keen edges over long use.

What stands out in Fredrik's work, from our experience at Modern Cooking, is the combination of premium fit and finish, artisan design and genuine cutting performance held at an accessible point. The knives are unshowy, technically capable, and clearly the product of a maker who controls every step of his own process. For the Collectors Selection, his work offers a Swedish counterpoint to the European and Japanese-influenced makers in the catalogue: regional steels, in-house process, and quietly confident kitchen tools that reward serious use without asking to be treated as anything other than what they are.

Steel preference

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Signature construction

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Cutting edge steel

Aogami Super

High-carbon tungsten-chromium-molybdenum steel

Typical HRC
63–66
Corrosion class
Carbon
Production
Conventional
Origin
Japan (Hitachi YSS / Proterial)

Aogami Super — Blue Super, in plain English — is the most heavily alloyed of Hitachi's blue-paper steels, and the one most associated with the long-edge-life end of the traditional Japanese kitchen knife world. Roughly 1.45 percent carbon, half a percent each of chromium and tungsten, plus molybdenum and vanadium additions, give it noticeably more carbide content than Aogami #2 or #1.

In a competent gyuto it typically lands at 63–65 HRC and holds an edge for an unusually long time for a non-powder steel. The trade-off, predictable from the chemistry, is that the larger carbides mean slightly more work at the stone and a slightly less smooth edge than Shirogami #1 at its peak. Most users do not notice; the ones who do tend to come from a finishing-stone tradition. Toughness is moderate — similar to or slightly below the white papers at the same hardness — and the steel will patina with normal use.

Aogami Super is the steel you reach for when you want a long-running edge from a maker who refuses to use powder metallurgy. It is widely used across the Sakai and Sanjō traditions and remains one of the most-asked-for Hitachi steels on the secondary market. Among the makers Modern Cooking carries, Neil Ayling, Konstantinos Noulis, and Jonas Johnsson work in Aogami Super. It is, in many ways, the canonical "blue paper" experience.

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Cutting edge steel

Damascus

Pattern-welded composite construction (term, not an alloy)

Typical HRC
Determined by core / outer steel
Corrosion class
Varies
Production
Pattern-welded
Origin
Global

"Damascus" is a construction technique, not a steel. Modern damascus billets are made by forge-welding alternating layers of two or more steels — typically a higher- and a lower-carbon partner, or a contrasting-nickel pair — and then folding, twisting, ladder-cutting, or otherwise manipulating the billet to expose the layer interfaces in a pattern. The visual interest comes from the etch, which preferentially attacks one of the two steels.

For a kitchen knife the relevant question is always: what is the cutting steel? Many premium Japanese damascus knives are *clad* damascus — a VG-10, SG2 or carbon core inside a multi-layer damascus jacket — in which case the patterning is decorative and the cutting metallurgy is the core. In *full* damascus knives (more common in custom Western work) the entire blade is pattern-welded, and the cutting steel is the harder of the two laminate components.

This is one of the points where a customer-facing entry needs to be honest: a beautiful damascus pattern is a craft achievement, but it does not on its own tell the buyer how the knife will cut. The core steel does that, and a good maker will list both.

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Blade construction

Mono Steel

A knife forged from a single piece of steel — no laminations, no clad layers. The simplest and most direct construction. The entire blade is the cutting steel, with no softer outer jacket to protect or contrast it. Most contemporary Western kitchen knives in carbon and stainless steel are mono-steel constructions, as are honyaki and most European bladesmith work.

The trade-off is straightforward: mono-steel knives are easier to forge, sharpen, and reason about, but the entire blade carries the cutting steel's properties — including its reactivity if it's a clean carbon. There is no soft jacket to protect a more brittle core from impact, so the heat treatment and geometry have to do all the work.

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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

Fredrik Spåre'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 Fredrik'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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