Crucible Steel
Historically, steel made by the crucible process — wrought iron melted with a carbon charge in a covered crucible to produce a homogeneous, high-quality steel. Wootz and Bulat are the most famous traditional crucible steels; Sheffield's nineteenth-century crucible steel production drove the city's reputation.
In the modern kitchen knife world, true crucible-steel construction is rare and almost exclusively found in collector's pieces. The technique survives mostly in revivalist work — a small number of contemporary makers reproduce wootz with painstaking historical accuracy. The visual signature is a fine, watery pattern in the steel, distinct from forge-welded damascus.