SKU: 26475859475

kiritsuke knife spectreiv

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Description

kiritsuke knife spectreivJapanese Kiritsuke Knife, Spectre IV The 4th variation of the Kaitsuko Prestige Collection The Spectre IV is the fourth piece in our Spectre series, a collection of 7 premium Kiritsuke knives where each variant is defined by a unique handle. Its exotic wood handle in green and beige tones, enhanced by epoxy resin, makes it the most organic and artistic variation in the series. A visual signature inspired by natural palettes, designed for cooks who see

Japanese Kiritsuke Knife, Spectre IV

The 4th variation of the Kaitsuko Prestige Collection

The Spectre IV is the fourth piece in our Spectre series, a collection of 7 premium Kiritsuke knives where each variant is defined by a unique handle. Its exotic wood handle in green and beige tones, enhanced by epoxy resin, makes it the most organic and artistic variation in the series. A visual signature inspired by natural palettes, designed for cooks who see their knife as a statement piece as much as a precision tool.

Beneath this aesthetic lie the technical standards of the Prestige collection: 10CR15CoMoV steel, 58–60 HRC hardness, 67-layer Damascus blade.

The Spectre IV Identity: An Exotic Wood Handle in Green and Beige

The Exotic Wood and Epoxy Resin Combination

Where the Spectre I plays with vibrant shades of deep red and brown, and the Spectre II embraces a bright, luminous identity, the Spectre IV explores a botanical and earthy palette. The exotic wood reveals its natural grain in shades of green and beige, while the epoxy resin fills the fibers and locks the pattern in place. The result: a semi-artistic handle that extends the knife's organic character all the way into the cook's hand.

A Comfortable, Balanced Grip

The exotic wood and epoxy resin pairing is more than aesthetic. The wood is stabilized in depth by the resin to resist moisture and temperature changes, while the resin reinforces the handle's structure and long-term durability. You get a comfortable, balanced grip that won't slip even with wet hands, allowing effortless use through long cooking sessions.

Between the Usuba and Yanagiba: What Is a Kiritsuke?

The Versatility of a K-Tip Blade

The Kiritsuke is recognized by its long blade and straight profile ending in a characteristic Reverse Tanto tip. This angular tip isn't purely aesthetic, it provides superior agility for delicate incisions and tip work, where a classic chef's knife (Gyuto) often lacks finesse.

A Demanding Hybrid Profile

The Kiritsuke combines the length of the Yanagiba (fish) with the straight profile of the Usuba (vegetables). This hybrid geometry requires a degree of technical skill to fully exploit the Spectre IV's blade length — particularly when transitioning fluidly from pull-cutting proteins to tip work on vegetables.

Blade Anatomy: Shared Across the Entire Spectre Series

The Molecular Structure: 58–60 HRC Hardness

The core of the Spectre IV blade is forged from martensitic stainless steel 10CR15CoMoV, enriched with cobalt. This premium alloy reaches a hardness of 58–60 HRC and allows sharpening to an acute 15° angle, delivering a razor edge that holds significantly longer than standard steel. Unlike the Chef Tanaka range (53–54 HRC), the Spectre IV sits firmly in the high-performance segment of our catalog.

67-Layer Damascus: A Unique Pattern on Every Spectre IV

The core is protected by 67 layers of Damascus steel. This San Mai (sandwich) construction ensures structural resilience while revealing unique wave patterns, a hallmark of our manufacturing precision. Combined with the Spectre IV's green and beige handle, the Damascus pattern creates a strong organic contrast that extends the natural palette from handle to blade.

Kitchen Performance: A High-Performance Hybrid

The Spectre IV effectively replaces several knives thanks to its unique geometry:

  • Fish work: Its long blade allows you to fillet and slice sashimi in a single fluid motion, without tearing the fibers.
  • Vegetable precision: Its flat heel provides full contact with the cutting board, ideal for chopping herbs or achieving perfect julienne cuts.
  • Meat slicing: Its tapered profile glides effortlessly through boneless proteins, ensuring clean and precise cuts.

Mastering the Gesture: Why the Kiritsuke Profile?

The Kiritsuke is not a knife you simply pick up, it's an instrument you master. Its hybrid geometry demands a specific technique:

  • Pull cutting: Thanks to its 10CR15CoMoV core and razor edge, use the full length of the blade to slice proteins in one fluid motion from heel to tip. This preserves fiber integrity, essential for sashimi or roasts.
  • Tip work (K-Tip): The Reverse Tanto tip enables surgical precision for delicate incisions. It's the ideal tool for finely dicing shallots or trimming meat with an agility a classic Gyuto simply cannot match.

Technical Comparison: Kiritsuke vs Santoku vs Gyuto

Feature Kiritsuke Spectre IV Santoku Tanaka Gyuto (Chef's Knife)
Tip profile K-Tip (Reverse Tanto) Rounded Curved
Hardness (HRC) 58–60 (high performance) 53–54 (robustness) 53–58
Skill level Proficient / Expert Beginner / Home cook All levels
Ideal use Hybrid precision Everyday cooking High volume, rocking cuts

Kiritsuke vs Gyuto: A Misleading Similarity

The Gyuto is the Japanese equivalent of the Western chef's knife. While the Kiritsuke shares a similar blade length (often 20 cm), the key difference lies in the profile. The Gyuto has a more pronounced curve (the "belly"), facilitating a rocking motion. The Spectre IV is straighter: its flat edge promotes full contact with the board, making it more effective for vertical chops and push cuts, where the Gyuto prioritizes the versatility of a rocking motion.

A Hybrid Between European and Japanese

The Prestige range Kiritsuke is what's known as a modern hybrid. It borrows the ergonomic handle (Yo-style) and robustness of the European chef's knife, while retaining the Japanese soul: a sharp 15° sharpening angle and 60 HRC hardness. It's the perfect tool for those who want the cutting performance of a Japanese blade without sacrificing Western-style handle comfort.

Kiritsuke vs Bunka: A Matter of Scale

The Kiritsuke is often confused with the Bunka. Both share the same K-Tip (Reverse Tanto). The difference is purely dimensional: the Bunka is shorter (16–18 cm) and taller, ideal for tight spaces and intensive vegetable work. The Spectre IV is longer, giving it superior slicing capacity for large cuts of meat or fish fillets.

Kiritsuke vs Nakiri: The Specialist vs the All-Rounder

The Nakiri is a dedicated vegetable knife with a rectangular, tip-free blade. While the Spectre IV shares a similar flat heel for chopping vegetables with equal efficiency, its Tanto tip gives it a decisive advantage: the ability to perform piercing and fine trimming work that the Nakiri simply cannot.

Kiritsuke vs Sujihiki: Managing Length

The Sujihiki is a long, very thin slicing knife designed exclusively for trimming fat and slicing boneless meats. The Spectre IV can replace a Sujihiki thanks to its thinness, but its taller blade height offers greater stability for board work.

Key Difference from the Yanagiba

The Yanagiba is a single-bevel knife (sharpened on one side only), the exclusive tool of sushi masters for sashimi. It demands extensive practice because the blade naturally drifts. The Spectre IV is double-beveled (symmetrical). It delivers the aesthetics and tip of a Yanagiba with the ease of use of a conventional knife. It's sushi-master performance, accessible to the passionate home cook.

Is the Kiritsuke a Good First Japanese Knife?

No, if you're a complete beginner. Yes, if you already have disciplined knife technique. For a first purchase, we generally recommend the Santoku Tanaka. Why? Because the Spectre IV is a "hard" steel (60 HRC). A 15° angle on rigid steel is unforgiving: a twisting motion or impact against bone can cause chipping. If you're still weighing different profiles, our guide Which Knife for Which Use will help you decide.

It makes an excellent second knife, the one you treat yourself to once you've mastered honing on a more forgiving range and want to experience the absolute glide of high-carbon Damascus steel. It's the tool that marks your transition toward excellence.

Care Guide

The Art of Sharpening: Preserving the 15° Angle

The 60 HRC hardness guarantees extreme cutting fineness, but makes the steel more sensitive to impact. Unlike the Chef Tanaka range, which accepts a honing steel, the Spectre IV requires whetstone maintenance to preserve its 15° angle. We recommend using only water stones (3000/8000 grit): the 3000 grit restores edge bite, while the 8000 grit polishes the edge for a mirror finish and absolute glide through any ingredient.

Handle Care: Preserving the Exotic Wood

Dishwashers are strictly forbidden: harsh detergents and heat would permanently damage both the steel and the epoxy resin handle, which may dull or crack over time. Hand washing with soapy water followed by immediate drying with a soft cloth is essential. This also preserves the depth of the green and beige tones of the exotic wood, the Spectre IV's visual signature.

Steel Preservation: Choosing the Right Surface

Steel of this hardness is inherently less flexible and therefore more sensitive to lateral impact. The surface you work on is as critical as the knife itself:

  • End-grain boards are essential: We recommend an end-grain cutting board. Unlike long-grain wood or hard plastic, the vertical fibers of end-grain wood spread apart on impact, "receiving" the Spectre IV's edge rather than crushing it.
  • The science of hygiene: Studies (notably from the University of Wisconsin) have shown that wood surfaces possess natural antibacterial properties superior to plastic. By choosing wood, you protect both your edge and your health.

The Kaitsuko Expert Verdict

The Spectre IV is the Prestige collection variant we recommend to cooks looking for a premium Kiritsuke with an organic, artistic visual identity. The pairing of green and beige exotic wood with epoxy resin brings a natural character that suits both professional kitchens and warm domestic settings where the knife remains on display.

What won us over during testing is the rigidity of the 60 HRC core, which delivers extremely precise tactile feedback, and the way the Spectre IV's green and beige handle creates true visual continuity with the 67-layer Damascus pattern. Its K-Tip remains a formidable asset for delicate fish work or millimeter-precise julienne.

For cooks drawn to more contrasted or saturated palettes, the six other Spectre variants offer alternatives — but it's the Spectre IV that defines the "natural and artistic" end of the collection.

Technical Warning: The Limits of Excellence

Technical precision in service of the gesture means knowing your tool's limits. The Spectre IV is a precision instrument, not a brute-force tool. Strictly prohibited: never use this blade on frozen produce, bones, or carcasses. The 15° angle and the rigidity of 10CR15CoMoV steel are not designed for these mechanical stresses, which could cause irreversible micro-chipping along the edge.

Accessories & Complements: Maintaining Technical Excellence

The Art of Sharpening: Japanese Water Stones

  • Double-sided whetstone (3000/8000 grit): The essential companion to the Spectre IV.
  • Angle guide: For cooks who haven't yet mastered manual angle control, it ensures a consistent 15° angle and preserves the geometry of the Damascus blade.

Protection & Storage: Securing the Tanto Tip

  • Wooden magnetic bar: Protects the edge and showcases the 67 Damascus layers alongside the Spectre IV's green and beige handle.
  • Blade guard (Saya): Mandatory when transporting your knife, to prevent any twisting or impact on the Tanto tip.

Work Surface: Protecting the 60 HRC Edge

  • Teak cutting board: Prevents the edge from being crushed against an overly rigid surface.

Technical Specifications

Model Spectre IV, 4th variation of the Spectre series (7 variants)
Collection Prestige
Type Kiritsuke (K-Tip / Reverse Tanto)
Blade 10CR15CoMoV steel, 67-layer Damascus
Hardness 58–60 HRC
Length 21.5 cm (8.5 in)
Handle Green and beige exotic wood enhanced with epoxy resin (artistic signature)
Sharpening angle 15° per side

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SKU: 26475859475

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Ken
Natrona Heights, US
★★★★★ 5
Good cabinet choice
Color: White, Style: Wall Cabinet
I needed a wall cabinet for a recessed area above the toilet. This one fits the area perfectly and provides a good amount of storage in an otherwise wasted space. It looks good as it coordinates well with my white shaker style cabinets elsewhere in the room. It was easy to assemble, doors lined up perfectly, and mounting was a breeze with the included screws and hardware. It doesn't get hard use in this location, but seems sturdy after almost a year.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 7, 2025
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Amazon Customer
Natrona Heights, US
★★★★★ 5
Versatile Room Divider With Easy Assembly and Strong Coverage
Size: 3 Panel 12FT W
I picked up this Siebwin 3-panel folding room divider mainly for privacy and room separation, and overall it works very well. Assembly is very straightforward, and the divider can be set up, taken apart, and stored without much effort. The fabric quality feels good, and the frame construction is stronger and more stable than expected. The support tubes especially feel well built and help keep the divider standing securely. One feature I really liked is the flexibility of the design. The panels can be used together as a complete divider or separated depending on the setup and available space. That makes it much more versatile for different room layouts or temporary privacy needs. The coverage is also very good, and the size matches the manufacturer’s description accurately. The fabric blocks light and background visibility well enough to provide solid privacy without feeling overly heavy. The wider feet also help improve stability compared to thinner folding dividers. Another positive detail is that everything arrived complete with no missing parts or damaged pieces, which made assembly much easier and faster. Compared to cheaper privacy screens, this one feels more durable and easier to customize depending on the situation. In terms of value for the money, it feels like a very practical and worthwhile purchase considering the size, flexibility, and build quality. Overall, a versatile and well-built room divider with easy assembly, strong privacy coverage, stable construction, complete included parts, flexible panel configuration, and excellent everyday functionality.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 27, 2026
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Fred
Whiting, US
★★★★★ 5
Stable, flexible in deployment configuration, creates true privacy and looks great.
Size: 3 Panel 12FT W
This is the second room divider panel I have installed, and there are several features about this one that I like much better than my older one. The fact that there are no gaps and that the material is thicker means you get more privacy or more hiding power, if you wish. My older divider has vertical spaces between each of the panels and the panels are half as wide as the Siebwin panels, so there are many vertical spaces. The Siebwin divider really creates privacy. Another feature that I really appreciate is that the legs are wider and stand off from the floor. On my older one the legs are flat and they're rather awkward to adjust because they create more drag on the floor. The feet on the older one also loosen if you turn them counter clockwise, so adjustments of configuration that require the feet to be moved are more complex. The older divider also must be deployed in a zig-zag fashion because he feet are not as wide, but this new one can be deployed and stable in a straight, an "N" shape or an arc. They are both the same length, but because the older one must be use in a zig-zag deployment it doesn't reach to the length of the new one. The Siebwin divider definitely costs more at $103.48, but it sports several features and advantages over the other brand, so it does a better job and is worth the extra cost.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 25, 2026
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Computer
Birmingham, US
★★★★★ 4
Easy to assemble, does the job, material is shiny nylon and shows creases, minor defects, sloppy
Size: 3 Panel 12FT W, Size: 3 Panel 12FT W
The Siebwin room divider is a good idea, and for the price, it mostly delivers on the intended functionality. I ordered the 12 foot, 3-panel version mainly to hide an unfinished basement storage area that had become an eyesore. It works well for that purpose and gives the space a cleaner appearance without spending the kind of money that more decorative dividers or custom partitions cost. If you need something temporary, portable, or mainly functional, this is a viable option. There are a few limitations that became obvious during setup and use. The first thing I noticed was that the weld quality on some of the metal poles is fairly sloppy. Once the cover is installed, you do not really see it, but up close, it does not look especially refined or professional. The blackout material also is not a matte canvas style fabric as I expected. It has more of a shiny nylon appearance, and the creases are fairly visible. Being that it’s more of a nylon, I’d be hesitant to try steaming it to remove the creases. However, the creases do not matter if you are using it in a basement, dorm, or shared room, but for photography, video work, or a professional office setting, the appearance could be disappointing. The fabric is thick enough, though. It blocks visibility well enough, but strong light behind it still shows through to some extent, nothing deal-breaking. Also, my fabric appeared to be slightly defective. The hook and loop strip on one of the bottom sections was off-center and couldn't be totally attached because it was lined up with one of the legs. I originally hoped to use this as a video backdrop, but I will probably end up replacing the fabric with a proper green screen or canvas material while continuing to use the frame itself. For now, it does a good job of covering my basement junk. Assembly was actually easier than I expected and took roughly 15 to 20 minutes. The longer vertical poles are tethered together similarly to tent poles, which made setup straightforward and fairly intuitive. The shorter horizontal pieces slide and snap together to the top and bottom of the vertical assembly. After each section is assembled, the divider panels connect together with metal plates and two knurled screws (at the top and bottom), so no tools are really required. A few screws were difficult to start because paint had gotten into the threads, but once they caught, they tightened down normally. The feet install with similar knurled fasteners and help keep the divider reasonably stable. One thing to watch for during setup is the fabric orientation. There is one arrow indicator in the middle of the fabric to indicate up. However, if you need another indicator, the smaller hook and loop strip goes on the bottom while the longer strip goes on top. I realized mine was upside down right before finishing and had to redo it. I wasn't difficult to redo, despite the defect in mine. The overall design is practical and easy to move around. I do like that the panels can fold and bend into different shapes depending on the space. The widened feet help stability, although when trying to stretch the fabric tight, I noticed the poles sometimes wanted to overlap slightly at the joints. Tightening everything helped somewhat, but it still happened occasionally. The divider feels adequate for normal indoor use, though I would not expect premium durability or luxury-level fit and finish at this price point. The entire device can also be easily disabled and stored in a tote if you need it completely out of the way. It comes with assembly instructions, but even if you didn’t have them, it’s easy to build without them (save a mistake or two). In terms of value, I think the Siebwin divider mostly matches its price. Around $100 gets you a large freestanding partition with decent usability and easy assembly, but there are compromises in materials, appearance, and refinement. The defects are also off-putting, but hopefully you won't have them. Higher-end room dividers can easily cost two or three times more, so some of the tradeoffs are expected. I also noticed cheaper alternatives online, but based on the quality here, I suspect those would probably have even more issues. For practical home use, temporary privacy, hiding storage areas, or separating shared spaces, this is a good option as long as expectations stay realistic.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 18, 2026
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Trendy Tales
Natrona Heights, US
★★★★★ 3
Works well but takes up more space than expected
Size: 2 Panel 8FT W, Size: 2 Panel 8FT W
This room divider does the job for creating a little extra privacy and was easy enough to set up. The panels feel decent quality and the wider feet help keep it more stable than some cheaper screens I’ve tried. My only issue is that it takes up a bit more room than I expected, especially with the feet sticking out. It’s still portable and folds away nicely, but definitely measure your space first. Overall it works well for separating a room or blocking off an area temporarily. i wish it came in other colors
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Reviewed in the United States on May 26, 2026

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