What grit progression is used for hand sharpening, and what does each stage accomplish for the final
Updated Feb 2026
The progressive sharpening process typically follows a four to five stage grit sequence, with each stage serving a distinct purpose. The initial stage uses coarse stones around 300-400 grit to establish the primary bevel angle and remove any forge scale or irregularities from the edge zone. This stage shapes the fundamental edge geometry but leaves a rough surface with visible scratch marks. The second stage advances to medium grit around 800-1000, which refines the bevel surface, removes the coarse scratches from stage one, and begins to create a more consistent edge line. The third stage uses fine grit around 2000-3000, which polishes the bevel surface to reduce friction during cutting and produces an edge that can slice paper cleanly. Premium pieces continue to a fourth stage using very fine grit around 4000-6000, which achieves a near-mirror finish on the bevel and creates an edge capable of extremely clean cuts with minimal resistance. Some precision-sharpened pieces include a final stropping stage on leather to remove any remaining micro-burr and align the edge at the finest level. Each stage removes less material and takes more time than the previous one, which is why progressive hand sharpening is significantly more labor-intensive and costly than single-pass machine grinding.