Four custom knife makers compete to make the best usable knife through a series of challenges.Four custom knife makers compete to make the best usable knife through a series of challenges.Four custom knife makers compete to make the best usable knife through a series of challenges.
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Featured review
This is NOT one of those craft competition shows that wastes time on manufactured drama and tiresome sob stories. They make the craft itself the focus, and the competitors' skills and choices keep it interesting.
There is a different challenge each episode, with, four contestants and three elimination rounds. The first round: forge raw metal into a blade meeting specific size requirements. The second round: add a handle and finish the blade. The results are tested head-to-head. In the final leg, the two remaining contestants are presented with a specific type of blade and asked to make their best version of it over three days at their home forges.
Seeing the different forges and processes is interesting, but they don't waste time on back stories, family tragedies, false alliances, or snarky comments. The judges show respect for the good decisions, acknowledge costly choices, and don't get too personal. They focus entirely on the blademaking. Making the craft the focus is a refreshing change, and other shows should follow their format. Anyone who enjoys skilled crafting might enjoy this show.
There is a different challenge each episode, with, four contestants and three elimination rounds. The first round: forge raw metal into a blade meeting specific size requirements. The second round: add a handle and finish the blade. The results are tested head-to-head. In the final leg, the two remaining contestants are presented with a specific type of blade and asked to make their best version of it over three days at their home forges.
Seeing the different forges and processes is interesting, but they don't waste time on back stories, family tragedies, false alliances, or snarky comments. The judges show respect for the good decisions, acknowledge costly choices, and don't get too personal. They focus entirely on the blademaking. Making the craft the focus is a refreshing change, and other shows should follow their format. Anyone who enjoys skilled crafting might enjoy this show.
- ladiesbane
- Aug 22, 2015
- Permalink
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaPer judge David Baker, the meat that gets cut up during the challenges is donated to a wolf sanctuary in upstate New York.
- Quotes
Self - Judge: It will keal.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Too Much TV: Episode #1.16 (2016)
- How many seasons does Forged in Fire have?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime42 minutes
- Color
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