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Single Knives · BeaverCraft C-Series · Morakniv Sloyd · Hook Knife SK1

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Single blades for every carving project

Carving knives sold individually rather than in sets: the BeaverCraft C-series with ten blade shapes, Morakniv Sloyd classics, the SK1 hook knife for spoons and kuksa, plus the kids’ C1Kid. You pick exactly the tool that’s missing – without buying a set you don’t need. Shipped from our Swiss warehouse, sharp and ready to use straight from the box.

Universal & Sloyd

C1, C2, C4m and Mora 106C/120C cover 80 % of all carving tasks

Detail blades

C6 and C7 for fine contours, eyes, feathers, small ornaments

Hook knives

SK1 and SK1L for hollowing spoons and kuksa cups

Kids’ blade

C1Kid with safety cap and child-friendly shape from age eight

At a glance
  • BeaverCraft C-series: ten blade shapes for every use case – from universal knife to skew blade
  • Blades from European high-carbon steel (1066 or 65G), heat-treated to 57–62 HRC, sharp and ready to use
  • Natural ash wood handles, hand-finished and oiled with linseed oil for ergonomic grip
  • Sloyd tradition: the C4m and the Morakniv classics 106C, 120C as standard carving knives
  • Detail work: C7 (small detail knife) and C6 for fine contours and sculpture details
  • Skew and stab knives C8, C12, C15 for geometric carving, squares, letters, ornaments
  • Roughing knife C16 for coarse stock removal on larger workpieces
  • Hook knife SK1 for spoon interiors, kuksa hollows, bowls – also as left-hand variant SK1L
  • Kids’ carving knife C1Kid with safety cap (age 8+ with supervision)
  • Left-hander friendly: many models like C1, C4m and SK1L are ambidextrous or available as dedicated left-hand version
  • Swiss warehouse – free shipping over CHF 100, dispatch within 1–2 business days

Single carving knives – why a targeted selection makes sense

Anyone who carves regularly knows the phenomenon: a complete set comes with three blades, one of which is constantly in use and two of which are barely touched. Once your carving practice develops, the focus shifts from complete sets to single blades with a defined purpose. That’s exactly what this filter category is for: individual carving knives, selectable by blade shape, application and brand.

If you’re looking for a complete set for the entry – with carving knife, hook knife and wood blank in one package – the filter category Carving Knife Sets is the right place. If you need a single knife to fill a specific gap in your tool drawer, you’re in the right place here.

Which carving knife for which purpose?

Carving knives differ mainly by their blade shape. Here are the six most important families from our range:

Universal and Sloyd knives

The Sloyd knife is Swedish carving tradition: straight blade, rounded tip, robust build, suitable for 80 percent of all carving tasks. In our range you’ll find the BeaverCraft C4m as the long Sloyd knife with ash wood handle, the C1 as a razor-sharp universal knife, the C2 as a small versatile model for rough carving and details, and the C16 as a roughing and all-purpose knife particularly suited to beginners. On the Morakniv side, the Swedish classics 106C and 120C are ready to go – both with straight blade and wooden handle, pure Sloyd tradition.

Detail knives

For fine contours, eyes, feathers, small ornaments and anything that can’t be shaped with a larger blade. The BeaverCraft C7 is the small detail carving knife with 160 mm overall length and 40 mm blade – precise and controlled. The C6 brings versatility for filigree sculpture work, caricatures and small elements in wood.

Geometric blades for chip carving

In chip carving, squares, lines, letters and ornaments are lifted from the wood. For this you need a special blade shape: the BeaverCraft C8 is made for it, as is the C15. Both have a holding edge for smoother cuts and are ready to use directly. If you’re looking for V-shaped or curved profile shapes, also check the filter category Wood Carving Chisels – you’ll find skew chisels, V-tools and gouges there.

Skew and stab knives

When the space for a conventional carving stroke is limited, you need vertical cuts. The BeaverCraft C12 is the matching skew knife, also referred to as a stab knife. The handle yields just enough to follow the contour of your carving, which would traditionally require multiple tools.

Hook knives – the tool for spoons and kuksa

As soon as you want to hollow out cavities – spoon interiors, bowls, kuksa drinking cups – you need a hook knife with a curved, semicircular blade. The BeaverCraft SK1 is the universal hook knife for these tasks, the SK1L is the left-hand version. A Sloyd blade alone is not enough for spoon carving – you need both tools.

Kids’ carving knives

The BeaverCraft C1Kid is the child-friendly version of the C1: sharp enough to allow real carving work, safe enough for guided work from age eight. With safety cap and ergonomic grip in child size. Important: cut-resistant gloves are mandatory when children carve – more in the filter category Cut Protection.

If you only want to buy one carving knife: get a Sloyd knife. The BeaverCraft C4m or the Morakniv 106C covers 80 % of all carving tasks and can be supplemented later with a hook knife or a detail knife.

The BeaverCraft C-series at a glance

BeaverCraft sorts its carving knives systematically by task. The most important models in the C-series:

ModelBlade shapeUse
BeaverCraft C1Universal, straight blade, razor-sharpAll-purpose carving knife, soft and hard wood
BeaverCraft C2Small, versatile, straight bladeSmall figures, details, combined rough carving
BeaverCraft C4mSloyd, long blade, rounded tipSpoons, walking sticks, slingshots, all-round projects
BeaverCraft C5Medium straight bladeGeneral carving work, beginner projects
BeaverCraft C6Filigree, straight bladeSculptures, caricatures, geometric shapes
BeaverCraft C7Small detail knife, 40 mm bladeFine details, eyes, feathers, precision work
BeaverCraft C8Geometric with holding edgeChip carving, squares, lines, letters
BeaverCraft C12Skew knife / stab knifeVertical cuts, tight spots
BeaverCraft C15GeometricSquares, lines, letters, ornaments
BeaverCraft C16Roughing, straight blade with rounded tipCoarse stock removal, beginner-friendly
BeaverCraft C1KidKids’ blade with safety capChildren from age 8 (with supervision), first carving steps
BeaverCraft SK1Hook knife, semicircular curvedSpoon interiors, kuksa hollows, bowls
BeaverCraft SK1LHook knife left-handLike SK1, but for left-handers

Looking for the complete range with all filter options? Check the Main Category Carving Tools – there you can filter by brand, use case and product type.

Morakniv vs. BeaverCraft – single carving knives compared

If you want to buy a single carving knife, two brands face each other:

Morakniv – Swedish Sloyd classics

Morakniv from Mora, Sweden has been known since 1891 for robust outdoor and carving knives. In the carving area, the most important models are the Morakniv Woodcarving 106C and the Morakniv Woodcarving 120C, both classic Sloyd knives with straight blade and wooden handle. Low-maintenance, reliable, deeply traditional – the right carving knife for anyone looking for exactly one universal tool.

BeaverCraft – Ukrainian carving tool specialists

BeaverCraft specialises in carving tools and offers the significantly broader single-knife range. Anyone who wants not just a Sloyd knife but also detail, roughing, skew or hook knives separately will find the matching blade at BeaverCraft. The C-series is systematically numbered and you assemble the tool setup you actually need.

Rule of thumb: Anyone looking for one carving knife is best served with Morakniv 106C or 120C. Anyone needing multiple blade shapes and not wanting a complete set picks from the BeaverCraft C-series.

Blade steel, hardness and handles

Material determines sharpness, edge retention and care effort. The two brands in our range approach the topic differently: Morakniv works with three different steel grades, BeaverCraft with one, but consistently across all blade shapes.

Morakniv: three steel grades – what C, LC and S mean

The letters in Morakniv model names are not size designations but a steel code. The same carving knife model is available at Morakniv in up to three steel variants:

CodeSteelPropertiesFor whom?
CCarbon Steel (single layer, approx. 1 % carbon)Very sharp, easy to sharpen, good edge retention, prone to rustBeginners and frequent carvers with care routine
LCLaminated Carbon Steel (sandwich)Hard carbon steel core (58.5–62 HRC) between two softer steel layers – maximum sharpness, best edge retention, traditionally laminated forging processDemanding carvers, pure Sloyd tradition
SStainless Steel (Sandvik 12C27 / 14C28N)Rust-free, low-maintenance, slightly less edge retention than carbonCarvers who find care tedious, or wet environments

The traditional variant of the Mora 106 and 120 is the laminated one (LC) – for decades it was the standard version. A few years ago, Morakniv additionally introduced the simple carbon version (C) because demand had risen sharply and lamination production was at its limits. Both carbon variants (C and LC) need to be oiled after each use, otherwise they rust. The stainless variant (S) saves you that step but is less traditional and usually the second choice for pure carving.

Rule of thumb: If you want pure Sloyd tradition, choose LC. If you want to start without going into the premium league, choose C. If you want rust-free and low-maintenance, choose S.

BeaverCraft: one steel type, many blade shapes

BeaverCraft goes the opposite way: one steel grade, but the broad blade-shape range. All carving knives of the C-series and the SK hook knives are made of European high-carbon steel – specifically 1066 (high-carbon tool steel) or 65G (spring steel) depending on model generation. Heat-treated to 57–62 HRC, with Scandi grind and 20° bevel angle from the factory.

Compared to the Morakniv world, BeaverCraft steel roughly corresponds to the C variant (single-layer carbon steel) – rust-prone, easy to sharpen, good edge retention. There is no laminated or stainless BeaverCraft variant. If you want that, stick with Morakniv-LC or Morakniv-S.

Model prefixes at BeaverCraft – what the letters mean

Unlike Morakniv model names, the letters at BeaverCraft are product categories, not steel codes:

PrefixMeaningExamples
CCarving Knife (single)C1, C2, C4m, C7, C8, C12, C16
SKSpoon Knife / Hook KnifeSK1, SK1L (left-hand), SK2
SSet (carving knife set, complete solution)S01, S02, S08, S13X, S43
BBBasswood Blank (lime wood blank)BB2, BB18
BSHBushcraft Knife (outdoor knife)BSH3, BSH4, BSH5
AXAxe (carving axe, bushcraft axe)AX1, AX6

Suffixes refine the variant: L marks a left-hand version (e. g. SK1L), m or s indicate size variants (C1m = small whittling knife, C4m vs. C4s with different blade lengths), X indicates a deluxe variant (S13X = Set 13 in premium edition with leather case).

Wooden handles – ash and birch

At BeaverCraft, handles are made of ash wood, hand-finished, polished and treated with linseed oil. Ash is tough and at the same time comfortable – turns evenly darker over time. At Morakniv, traditional birch wood is used, also oiled – somewhat lighter, light-weight and very ergonomic.

Sharpening, oiling, storing

Three points all carving knives in our range share:

  • Hardness and edge retention: 57–62 HRC at BeaverCraft, similar at Morakniv (LC: 58.5–62 HRC in the core). This results in blades that become razor-sharp and hold the edge for a long time.
  • Carbon steel rusts: all C and LC variants need a drop of oil after use. Only the Mora-S models (Stainless) are rust-free.
  • Hand-finished assembly: although BeaverCraft blades are laser-cut and thermally pressed, edge work, assembly and quality control are done manually – that’s the difference compared to mass-produced hardware-store goods. At Morakniv, the lamination of the LC blades is a traditional forging process practised in Mora (Sweden) since the 17th century.

Sharpening and care of your carving knives

A sharp carving knife is not just more productive but also safer – dull blades slip more easily. Three care rules:

  • Stropping as standard: a leather strop with polishing compound is enough for normal sharpening. Pull the blade flat across the strop, 5–10 passes per side. Leather strops, polishing compounds and any sharpening stones are in the filter category Abrasives.
  • Oil after each use: high-carbon steel rusts without care. Wipe the blade dry, apply a light film of blade-care oil, store in the protective sleeve or leather case – never leave it lying loose. Matching cases are at Carving Knife Cases.
  • Oil the wooden handle every few months: rub linseed oil into the ash or birch handles. This prevents drying out and cracking. Never submerge the handle in water or clean it in the dishwasher.

Recommendation: which single carving knife is right for you?

You’re looking for...Recommendation
...a first carving knife, one for everythingMorakniv 106C or BeaverCraft C4m (Sloyd)
...razor-sharp all-purpose knifeBeaverCraft C1
...small universal knifeBeaverCraft C2
...detail knife for fine workBeaverCraft C7
...filigree sculptures, caricaturesBeaverCraft C6
...chip carving (letters, ornaments)BeaverCraft C8 or C15
...skew knife / stab knifeBeaverCraft C12
...roughing knife for coarse stockBeaverCraft C16
...hook knife for spoons and kuksaBeaverCraft SK1 (or SK1L for left-handers)
...carving knife for your childBeaverCraft C1Kid
...rather a complete set for the entrysee Carving Knife Sets

Why carving knives from Swiss-Sale.ch?

We’re an official Swiss dealer for BeaverCraft and stock the full single-knife range of the C and SK series plus the most important Morakniv carving knives. All blades from our warehouse in Menzingen, sharp and ready to use, with personal advice in the showroom or by phone.

  • 🪵 BeaverCraft C-series – all blade shapes available individually
  • 🇸🇪 Morakniv 106C / 120C – Swedish Sloyd classics
  • 🪒 SK1 hook knife plus SK1L left-hand variant
  • 👶 C1Kid kids’ carving knife from age 8 (with supervision)
  • ⚒️ Blades from European high-carbon steel, 57–62 HRC
  • 🪵 Ash wood handles (BeaverCraft) or birch handles (Morakniv)
  • ✂️ Ready to use directly – no resharpening before first cut
  • 🇨🇭 Direct Swiss shop – no customs fees, no waiting times
  • 🏅 Lifetime Warranty at BeaverCraft, statutory warranty handled by Swiss-Sale.ch
  • 📞 Personal advice by phone, email or in our showroom
  • 📦 Swiss warehouse – free shipping over CHF 100

Browse the BeaverCraft carving knives: BeaverCraft Carving Tools. Or the Morakniv classics: Morakniv Carving Knives. For complete sets, see Carving Knife Sets; for matching wood, Carving Wood.


FAQ – Common questions about single carving knives

Which single carving knife is suitable for beginners?

For the entry, we recommend a Sloyd knife: the Morakniv Woodcarving 106C or the BeaverCraft C4m. Both have a straight blade with a rounded tip and cover roughly 80 % of all carving tasks – from spoons over walking sticks to simple figures. Later you can add a hook knife (SK1) for spoon interiors or a detail knife (C7) for fine work as needed.

What is a Sloyd knife?

Sloyd is the Swedish carving tradition from the 19th century – an educational movement that turned wood carving into a pedagogical discipline. The Sloyd knife has been the standard tool of Nordic wood carving ever since: straight blade, rounded tip, robust wooden handle. The BeaverCraft C4m and the Morakniv 106C / 120C are classic Sloyd knives in our range.

When do I need a hook knife in addition to the carving knife?

As soon as you want to hollow out cavities – spoon interiors, kuksa drinking cups, bowls or other concave shapes – you need a hook knife in addition to the straight carving knife. A Sloyd blade alone is not enough for this task because the straight blade can’t reach into a hollow. The BeaverCraft SK1 is the universal hook knife, the SK1L is the left-hand version.

What’s the difference between BeaverCraft models C1, C2, C4m and C16?

All four are universal carving knives with a straight blade but differ in size and shape: C1 is the razor-sharp all-purpose knife, versatile in use. C2 is smaller and especially suited to small solid-wood pieces (combines rough and detail work). C4m is the long Sloyd knife with a pronounced rounded tip – ideal for spoons and walking sticks. C16 is a roughing knife for coarse stock and at the same time beginner-friendly. For a first knife, we recommend C4m or Morakniv 106C.

What’s the difference between detail knife (C7) and universal knife (C1)?

The detail knife C7 has a small blade (40 mm) and is designed for fine detail work – eyes, feathers, small ornaments, precise contours. The universal knife C1 has a larger blade and is made for general carving work – from rough shaping to average detail work. If you only have one knife, take the C1 (or C4m / Morakniv 106C). If you carve regularly and do filigree work, add the C7 as a second knife.

Which carving knife is suitable for children?

The BeaverCraft C1Kid is the kids’ carving knife in our range: sharp enough for real carving work, but equipped with a safety cap and a child-friendly grip shape. Recommended from age eight under supervision. Important: cut-resistant gloves (Nitras Taeki 6730) and an adult companion are mandatory. More cut protection options in the filter category Cut Protection.

Are there carving knives for left-handers?

For straight carving knives (Sloyd knives), this is rarely a problem – most models like BeaverCraft C1, C2, C4m and Morakniv 106C / 120C are ambidextrous. With hook knives, however, the blade is bevel-ground and traditionally made for right-handers. For this there’s the BeaverCraft SK1L as a dedicated left-hand version with mirrored grind direction.

Which brand for single carving knives – BeaverCraft or Morakniv?

Both brands are high-quality and designed for carving. Morakniv from Sweden is the more traditional choice with focus on a few but proven Sloyd models (106C, 120C). BeaverCraft from Ukraine offers the significantly broader single-knife range with the C-series (C1 to C16) and the SK hook knives. Rule of thumb: if you’re looking for a single all-round carving knife, choose Morakniv. If you want to assemble multiple blade shapes individually, pick from the BeaverCraft C-series.

Are the carving knives ready to use directly or do I have to resharpen them?

BeaverCraft and Morakniv carving knives are sharp and ready to use straight from the box – you can start carving directly. For ongoing care, stropping with leather strop and polishing compound is enough. Some carvers run the blade across the strop once before first use to bring it to pro level – but it’s not necessary.

What steel is used in carving knives?

BeaverCraft carving knives are made of European high-carbon steel – specifically 1066 or 65G depending on model generation. Heat-treated to 57–62 HRC, with Scandi grind and 20° bevel angle. Morakniv woodcarving models are available in three steel variants: C (Carbon), LC (Laminated Carbon) and S (Stainless). Carbon steel becomes razor-sharp and holds the edge for a long time – but is prone to rust. Wipe dry after each use and apply a drop of oil.

What do the letters C, LC and S mean on Morakniv carving knives?

At Morakniv, the letters in the model designation indicate the steel grade. C stands for Carbon Steel – single-layer carbon steel (approx. 1 % C content), very sharp, easy to sharpen, prone to rust. LC stands for Laminated Carbon Steel – a sandwich of hard carbon steel core (58.5–62 HRC) between two softer steel layers. This results in maximum sharpness, best edge retention and a tradition-rich forging process from Mora. S stands for Stainless Steel (Sandvik 12C27 or 14C28N) – rust-free, low-maintenance, but with somewhat less edge retention than the carbon versions. Rule of thumb: LC for pure Sloyd tradition, C for the entry, S for low-maintenance or wet environments.

What do the model prefixes C, SK and S mean at BeaverCraft?

Unlike Morakniv, the letters at BeaverCraft are product categories, not steel grades. C stands for Carving Knife – single carving knives (C1, C2, C4m, C7, C8, C12, C16). SK stands for Spoon Knife / hook knife (SK1, SK1L for left-hand). S is the set designation – complete solutions with multiple blades (S01, S08, S13X, S43). Besides those, there are BB (Basswood Blank, i. e. lime wood blank), BSH (Bushcraft knife, BSH3 etc.) and AX (carving axe). Suffixes like L stand for left-hand, m/s for size variants, X for deluxe versions.

Do I need a sharpening stone if I only buy a single carving knife?

For normal care, no. A leather strop with polishing compound (stropping) is enough to keep your carving knives sharp. You only need sharpening stones when the blade is actually damaged (chipped) or has gone dull over years. Both – leather strops, polishing compounds and sharpening stones – are in the filter category Abrasives.

What about V-tools and gouges – are they carving knives?

V-tools, skew chisels and gouges are not carving knives in the strict sense but wood carving chisels. They have a different blade shape (V-shaped, semicircular concave) and are partly used with a hammer or mallet. If you want to cut V-shape profiles, grooves or hollow surfaces, check the filter category Wood Carving Chisels. These tools complement carving knives but don’t replace them.

How many carving knives do I need at the beginning?

A single Sloyd knife (C4m or Morakniv 106C) is enough for the entry. As soon as you want to carve spoons or kuksa, a hook knife SK1 joins it – that’s then two knives. Detail knife (C7) and skew knife (C12) are extensions you’ll only need once your projects become more filigree. Anyone who already knows multiple blade shapes are needed should also consider a Carving Knife Set – in the set, blades are often cheaper than bought individually.

Single carving knives – now at Swiss-Sale.ch

BeaverCraft C-series, Morakniv classics and SK1 hook knife from Swiss stock. Advice on +41 41 755 34 33 or info@swiss-sale.ch.

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