What makes T10 steel a preferred choice for tanto collectors?
Updated Mar 2026
T10 is a high-carbon tool steel with a fine grain structure and roughly 1.0% carbon content, which makes it exceptionally well-suited to differential clay hardening. When the blade is coated in clay and quenched, the uncoated edge cools rapidly and hardens while the spine remains comparatively tough. The result is a visible hamon — a temper line formed by actual crystalline activity in the steel rather than etching or polishing. Collectors value T10 specifically because this process produces a natural, non-repeatable hamon pattern unique to each blade, giving every piece a one-of-a-kind character. Stainless steels cannot undergo this process meaningfully, which is why T10 remains the material benchmark for collectors who prioritize authentic Japanese blade metallurgy.