Video Guides
Japanese knives are crafted for precision, each shape designed with a specific purpose in mind. Here we've divided them into four main categories based on how they’re used. Whether you’re looking for a knife for slicing fish, cutting vegetables, or handling everyday prep, this guide will help you understand the differences and choose the right tool for your kitchen.
All-Purpose Knives
Santoku Knife
The Santoku embodies slicing, mincing, and dicing in perfect balance. Designed for those who seek simplicity with purpose, this all-purpose blade flows with intention. For anyone who approaches cooking with focus and respect.
Gyuto Knife
The Gyuto finds harmony in weight and sharpness. Reimagined from the Western chef’s knife, it doesn’t cut with power — it cuts with presence. Strength lies in stillness.
Kiritsuke Knife
The Kiritsuke blends the elegance of sashimi slicing with the power of a chef’s knife. Its sharpened line is a path of precision. Every motion, intentional.
Meat Slicing Knives
Gyuto Knife
The Gyuto finds harmony in weight and sharpness. Reimagined from the Western chef’s knife, it doesn’t cut with power — it cuts with presence. Strength lies in stillness.
Sujihiki Knife
The Sujihiki slices meat like silk — long, flowing, uninterrupted. No pressure. Just purpose.
Yanagiba Knife
The Yanagiba glides in a single motion. Designed for sashimi, its form preserves flavor and form alike. A blade that leaves no trace — only beauty.
Vegetable Cutting Knives
Nakiri Knife
The Nakiri respects the rhythm of vegetables. With its flat edge, it delivers clean, mindful cuts. Stillness reveals mastery.
Petty Knife
Peeling, garnishing, fine work — all in one compact blade. The Petty Knife is not just small. It’s precise, deliberate, and beautiful in your hand.
Deboning Knives
Deba Knife
The Deba is made for those who understand the anatomy of fish. Its weight is not force — it’s trust. With each movement, it honors both technique and tradition.