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Lansky Leather Stropping Polishing Hone, HSTROP, One Size

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$13.29

$ 5 .99 $5.99

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About this item

  • Lansky Knife Sharpener Kit Accessory: Designed to be used with your Lansky Sharpening System, this specialty leather polishing hone is used only on blades that are already extremely sharp to achieve a razor sharp mirror-polish on your blade's edge that other knife sharpeners can't achieve alone.
  • Leather Strop: Stropping with leather is an age old technique for polishing a blade edge that delivers unparalleled results. Use by dragging along and away from the edge (never toward the edge). This is the only Lansky Hone that is moved in the opposite direction of all the other hones. Proper stropping instructions included in the packaging.
  • Versatile: Add this hone to your pocket knife sharpening kit as it makes a great polishing accessory for your pocket knife sharpener. It also makes a great kitchen knife sharpener, chef knife sharpener, and works well for many other knives that need a polished edge.
  • Color Coded: The distinct brown color makes this sharpening stone easy to identify in your knife sharpening kit. Add this accessory to your Lansky knife sharpener tool set without worrying about mixing it up with other hones.
  • Maintenance Tip: The Stropping Hone can be used dry but using a jeweler's rouge (not included) will help increase the lifespan of the leather hone.



Product Description

Leather Strop Hone in use

Leather Stropping Hone

Designed for use with Lansky Sharpening Systems, this leather hone brings back the razor-sharp precision your blades had fresh from the factory. This traditional method, known as "stropping," involves polishing the blade edge with leather, refining it to an extraordinary sharpness and a mirror finish. Leather stropping, a time-honored technique, ensures your knives achieve an exceptional polish and sharpness that is unmatched by other methods.

Lansky Leather Stropping hone  being used

USING YOUR LEATHER STROPPING HONE

Enhance your blade's edge to a razor-sharp mirror finish with the Lansky Controlled Angle Systems using the Stropping Hone. This versatile tool can be used dry, but for extended durability, apply jeweler's rouge to the leather hone.

Step 1: Attach the hone to a Guide Rod. If using jeweler's rouge, apply it first to the Leather Stopping Hone before attaching it to the Guide Rod.

Step 2: Align the guide rod with your knife's pre-existing sharpening angle, then insert the rod into the clamp's guide hole. By maintaining the correct angle, you'll achieve the finest polish and sharpest edge possible.

Lansky Leather Stropping hone

IMPORTANT!

Unlike other hones where you push against the blade's edge, the Leather Stropping Hone requires a pulling motion away from the edge. This technique effectively polishes off any burrs or wire edges, leaving your blade with a gleaming, polished finish. It's important to avoid using any abrasive pastes, as they can prematurely wear out the leather hone. By using this method, you'll achieve a superior, long-lasting sharpness and polish for your knives.

Leather stropping hone product image

Master Chief
Reviewed in the United States on March 18, 2025
I have one of these and got this for my son. He uses it to sharpen his military knives and love it.
Ozzie
Reviewed in the United States on February 5, 2025
This will do it.Recommend you get some metal polish and strop away in a downward motion to get a sharp edge.
Robert L Clark
Reviewed in the United States on June 19, 2024
This works fine. Does what it says on the tin. Add some rouge for a better edge. And if/when the leather is shot you can peel it off and cut a new strip (a 8-9 oz. shoulder is like $50 and enough for literally hundreds of replacements).
Thor
Reviewed in the United States on March 17, 2024
I really like the diamond set, figured I would fill that last slot in the case with a strop. It works fine, but I think I would have been better off buying a larger 2 sided strop.
Thomas
Reviewed in the United States on February 6, 2024
Works fine and was nice to add to my kit. Small but works. I have a larger strop to use but it has to be used free handed which is just fine. Gets that nice razor edge on the blade.
alm
Reviewed in the United States on December 28, 2024
Perfect for what I needed
Rb
Reviewed in the Netherlands on December 2, 2024
Better of with a normal strop
ivars
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on April 27, 2024
Really useful for bringing my knives back to being sharp
Kindle Customer
Reviewed in Canada on July 12, 2023
Really nice addition to the basic set if you're doing very fine edges.
craig smith
Reviewed in the United States on January 19, 2022
I use this with a bit of diamond paste. Does a great job of giving a wonderfully shiny edge. But a note of caution, this leather is very soft and by the time you get to use it, your blade is very sharp. The very slightest movement in the reverse direction will leave a nasty cut in the leather. My Son totaled one of these when he was working a bit too fast. It was only the second knife he tried to do. Even mine has some rough edges from a tiny slip when bringing the strop back for the next pass.Just as a test I used this on one of my good knives. B this knife is a folder with an M390 blade. This is a very hard steel and somewhat hard to sharpen. My last step is normally a Sapphire stone. So I took the sharpen knife after the sapphire stone and checked the sharpness on my sharpness tester. 120- A very very sharp blade ( razor knife tested at 165). Then I used this strop with .1 micron diamond paste. After the strop, the knife tested at 95! That’s one of the sharpest blades I have ever tested! Since then I have finished a number of knives with very fine steel, and after the strop I get many blades that test at close to 100!I should mention that this isn’t any real improvement on some of the cheap steel knives I have done. In fact on many cheap steel knives I stop at the “fine” stone and leave a little “tooth” in the edge so I will hold up to the cardboard I seem to cut a bunch of every day!I also tried using my plain leather full size strop after using this. The results are “about the same” as some blades improve 5 points while some others might get as much as 10 points less. I assume that this is a product of me using the full size strop free hand which doesn’t give as consistent results
Evrard Harrison
Reviewed in France on September 12, 2020
pour complété mon kit lansky pour une finition miroir
カワサキ
Reviewed in Japan on September 8, 2019
難しい!あまりやりすぎると悪くなっちゃうし(やり方が悪いかな?)ピカールを使用するからかな?力の加減?でした。
Customer
Reviewed in the United States on July 9, 2016
The best way to get truly sharp blades is by using a progressive system of harder and harder stones. But there comes a point where its more effective to create a surface of that hardness, not a solid stone....hence the strops and various STROPPING COMPOUNDS.Wicked Edge makes the best ones.....to a ridiculous degree, where you can't even use leather anymore to hold the compound which is instead sprayed on to a fine brush designed for the purpose.Your typical Lansky system, you may or may not start out with a with an extra course (70 grit), or course (120 grit) diamond stone and then a medium (280 grit) diamond stone or a soft Arkansas stone (300 grit). Creating a new edge or a new edge angle, it's best to use all three, in my opinion. An already sharpened blade, however, you will be working backwards, although that is not always a bad thing if you can't get the original edge angle correct, simply make a new one. The end result will be better.From there, use a fine (600 grit) diamond stone. Then a hard Arkansas (650) grit. An ultra fine diamnond stone (100 grit) and black hard Arkansas (1200 grit). By now your blade will be razor sharp and have a nice polish. And now your sharpening media is probably measured in microns instead of grit. 1200 grit is 15 microns.Here is where you want two of these strops and a pair of Wicked Edge Stropping compounds in 14 microns and 10 microns. To give it a nice, ludicrously sharp edge and then finish off with a fine sapphire hone. The sapphire hone is just under 10 micron but it is a lot of work going from 1000/1200 grit to 2000 grit (10 micron). Which is why you want the strops and the compounds. The result is about as sharp as can be reasonably expected in most knives.In case you are not a reasonable person, you could also get 4 more of these leather strops and two more pairs of stropping compounds. These come in 5 micron/3.5 micron and 1 micron/0.5 micron.More than this and the compounds are spray on and go down to .025 microns. Why? Why not. Only the hardest steel or ceramic will hold that fine an edge. Way, way sharper then you would use for a straight razor. Maybe a specialized blade for taking slices for microscope samples. Blade sharpening has grown into a cult thing in recent years, in no small part due to the Lansky system itself.