Beneath the weight of history and the glint of folded steel lies the Egyptian Pharaoh Collection Damascus Knife—not merely a blade, but a conduit between realms. Limited to 100 souls worldwide, this artifact channels the most sacred rite of ancient Egypt: the Weighing of the Heart Ceremony, where Anubis himself judged the worth of mortals against the Feather of Ma'at. To hold this knife is to grasp the scales of eternity.
A Blade Forged in the Hall of Two Truths
The feathered Damascus steel of the Pharaoh Blade is more than an aesthetic touch; it’s a work of metallurgical alchemy. Argentinian master blacksmith Mauricio Carlos has worked hard to break through the limitations of modern machinery, folding 512 layers of high-carbon steel and nickel alloy into a knife that mimics the delicate lines of Maat’s sacred feathers. After acid etching, the knife reveals its soul: a hypnotic wave pattern that seems to float in the light, as if driven by the breath of the underworld.
However, this is no fragile relic. With a hardness of 62 HRC, the blade combines razor-like precision with a flexibility that can withstand battle, reflecting the duality of its inspiration: light as a feather, tough as a god.
The Language of Gods, Inscribed in Gold
Along the spine, 24K gold hieroglyphs recount passages from the Book of the Dead, painstakingly inlaid using a technique lost since the fall of Thebes. Each symbol is a prayer cast in metal, invoking:
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Anubis – Guardian of the scales, rendered in obsidian-infused steel
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Ammit – The Devourer, her crocodile jaws etched into the titanium guard
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The Forty-Two Assessors – Their eyes inlaid with rubies, watching, weighing
The titanium hilt, cold as a sarcophagus and light as a shroud, is made for warriors. Its ergonomic curve fits perfectly with the pressure points of the palm, ensuring that the blade becomes an extension of the wielder's will.
Ownership as Initiation
This is not a knife to be placed in a display case. It needs to be held in the hand, tested, and examined. The balance point is exactly where the solar plexus meets the blade - this is a silent challenge that tests one's heart.
Each of the 100 pieces is numbered and accompanied by:
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A papyrus scroll from Nile delta reeds, inscribed with its unique provenance
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A lapis lazuli whetstone, mined from the same veins that adorned Pharaohs’ death masks
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A black light-reactive certificate, revealing hidden ankhs when illuminated
The Final Judgment
The Pharaoh Collection transcends "collectible." It is:
✅ A weapon – For those who understand steel is alive
✅ A talisman – For seekers walking the edge of mortal and divine
✅ A mirror – For the bold enough to weigh their own worth
To own one is to be chosen by history.