Leszek Sikoń is an award-winning blacksmith who has spent the better part of a decade studying traditional methods and developing his own distinctive artistic voice. Working from his Polish workshop in Przyszowa, he is as much a metal sculptor as a knifemaker, and that sculptural sensibility runs through everything he produces. His recognition includes the 2020 QEST Howdens Scholarship Award for knifemaking, which set up a period of training under master smith Nobuya Hayashi at the renowned Kurogane Workshop in Japan, an experience that has clearly deepened an already considered practice.

The work itself sits in a deliberate space between rustic expression and exacting refinement. Leszek forges his own san mai, go mai and Damascus billets in house, and many of his knives feature uniquely shaped integral bolsters that read as small sculptural events along the blade. Steel is hardened with care and edge geometry treated as a non-negotiable, so that knives which appear primarily artistic still cut with the precision expected of premium kitchen tools. Materials are chosen for both visual interest and structural honesty, and the finishing carries the marks of an artist working in metal rather than simply replicating tradition.

What makes a Sikoń knife distinctive is that constant dialogue between artistic gesture and technical control. The surfaces feel composed, the geometry is finely judged, and the balance reflects long hours of refinement rather than a single dramatic flourish. Each piece reads as an object that could just as easily live on a shelf as in the daily rotation of a serious kitchen, yet performs convincingly in both roles. For Modern Cooking, Leszek represents one of the most individual voices among contemporary European bladesmiths, and we are pleased to carry his work to a wider audience.