HAYDEN SCOTT | CHAMPION KNIVES


WHAT TYPE OF WORK/ART DO YOU DO?

I make hand-forged culinary knives and patterned steel. I love being able to express myself through the craft of forging. The difficulty of knife making makes me feel that I am forging myself along side the steel. 

HOW WERE YOU FIRST INTRODUCED TO THIS TYPE OF WORK/ARTISTIC PRACTICE?

I was introduced to forging knives whilst visiting Hobart, Tasmania in early 2013. Being a Chef, I have used knives all of my adult life but had never considered how they were made. This meeting instantly sparked my curiosity and I began tinkering straight away. 

 

HOW HAS YOUR  WORK/ARTISTIC PRACTICE CHANGED AND DEVELOPED OVER THE YEARS? WHAT FACTORS DO YOU THINK AFFECTED THIS?

When I started out I reconditioned vintage knives, made knives using manufactured blades and focused on injecting new life and soul into the knife through the materials I used. I always had a vision of me forging knifes to have total freedom over the appearance and design of the blade. Starting with raw materials allows me to take a knife in any direction I choose. 

 

PLEASE DESCRIBE WHERE YOU WORK FROM? WHAT DO YOU FIND SPECIAL ABOUT LIVING OUT WEST? 

Starting in a small shed in Ranui, to now having multiple workshops in the Waitakere Ranges I feel emerced in an environment that inspires what I create. Having these spaces at home keeps me to be closer to my family and allows me to work when I choose. 

 
 

WHAT CAN VISITORS EXPECT TO SEE WHEN THEY VISIT YOUR STUDIO DURING OSW? 

Visitors can take a look at my workshops, view my knives in all stages of development. Expect fire, rust and a chaotic bench top. 

WHAT ARE YOUR TOP SPOTS YOU LIKE TO VISIT IN THE WAITAKERE RANGES AND OUT WEST?

I like walking anywhere in the Ranges where I can be surrounded by nature and water. I also like going to Bunnings for fresh drill bits, scrounging at the dump shop and eating tacos from Cielito Lindo Cafe and Taqueria. 

 

You can meet visit Hayden and his partner Janel (Okay Ceramics) at 19 Kitewaho Road, Swanson.

Photos by: Charlotte Church
www.alittlebit.co.nz