Seki Magoroku Migaki
Migaki (磨き) — The art of the polish
Migaki is Japanese for “polished” or “refined.” In the knife world it refers to a high-gloss blade finish — silky and shining, but not quite as reflective as a full mirror polish. In the Seki Magoroku Migaki series the name carries two layers of meaning: the literal high-gloss polish of the cutting edge, and the philosophy behind it — the continuous pursuit of perfection through repetition and mastery.
Master Line, second edition
The Migaki is the second edition of the Seki Magoroku Master Line — the absolute pinnacle of what KAI releases under this brand. Where the first edition (Kaname) drew its curved form from the torii arch of the Kamakura period, the Migaki takes inspiration from the katana. The characteristic curve of both blade and handle, the Damascus patterns that evoke rippling water, the clean hexagonal grip — everything references the aesthetics of the Japanese sword, yet fully placed at the service of the modern kitchen.
The series consists exclusively of the Gyūtō blade shape, available in three blade lengths. This is a deliberate choice: the Gyūtō is the most versatile kitchen knife in existence, and by offering a single blade type across three lengths KAI gives the user the freedom to work to measure without compromising the character of the series. The Migaki also introduces the Gyūtō shape for the first time to KAI’s European range.
The steel: VG Xeos core, 32 layers of Damascus
The Migaki blade features a VG Xeos steel core clad in 32 layers of Damascus steel. The softer outer layers envelop the hard core, absorb shocks, protect the cutting edge, and produce the characteristic visual pattern that makes every blade unique.
VG Xeos
VG Xeos is a premium alloy from Takefu Special Steel (武生特殊鋼材) — the same company that developed the renowned VG-10. It is produced via a special melting process that yields an extremely fine microstructure, resulting in measurably improved wear resistance, strength and hardenability compared to VG-10. Typical hardness: 61–62 HRC. The refined grain structure delivers longer-lasting edge retention under comparable use.
Damascus, 32 layers
Damascus steel is created by forge-welding and folding two or more different steels together. The 32 alternating layers produce the characteristic rippling pattern that evokes waves on a water surface — every blade is visually unique. After forging, the blade is chemically etched to emphasise the pattern contrast.
Migaki edge
The cutting edge itself receives an additional high-gloss polish — the migaki finish. This reduces drag during cutting, promotes clean food separation, and gives the blade its characteristic mirror-bright edge zone that distinguishes the cutting area from the Damascus-patterned body of the blade.
The blade type: Gyūtō
Gyūtō (牛刀) literally means “beef sword” — originally used for breaking down large cuts of beef. Today the Gyūtō is the Japanese equivalent of the Western chef’s knife: a knife for (almost) everything.
Compared to Western chef’s knives, the Gyūtō is ground thinner (typically 1.5–2 mm at the spine versus 2.5–3 mm for European knives), lighter in weight, and sharper in geometry — with an edge angle of around 12–15° per side instead of 20–22°. This enables a finer, cleaner cut, but calls for a little more care: harder steel is more brittle and sensitive to lateral forces.
Applications
- Meat & poultry — The pointed tip and slender blade allow precise work alongside bones. The length enables long, flowing cuts when carving. Suited for raw meat, cooked meat, carpaccio and sashimi.
- Fish & seafood — The thin geometry makes the Gyūtō highly suited to filleting, portioning, and precision-slicing fish. Fillets release cleanly without crushing or tearing.
- Vegetables & herbs — The flat section near the heel is ideal for push-cuts through hard vegetables. The belly towards the middle suits rocking motions when mincing herbs.
Cutting techniques
The Gyūtō supports all common cutting techniques: push-cut (straight down and slightly forward, for hard vegetables), pull-cut (drawing towards you for meat and fish), rock-chop (tip on the board, heel moving up and down for herbs) and tap-chop for fast, controlled chopping. The double-bevel blade is suitable for both right- and left-handers.
The handle: hexagonal pakkawood
The Migaki handle is hand-crafted from grey-marbled pakkawood with a hexagonal cross-section. Pakkawood is a composite material in which thin wood veneer is impregnated with resin under high pressure and temperature. It combines the warmth and aesthetics of wood with the moisture resistance and dimensional stability of a synthetic material.
- Hexagonal shape — Provides excellent grip and tactile orientation. The hand automatically feels the blade position without looking. Reduces hand and wrist fatigue during extended use.
- Moisture resistant — Virtually waterproof due to the resin impregnation. Does not shrink, swell or crack when exposed to moisture. Not dishwasher safe; always hand-wash and dry immediately.
- Handcrafted — Each handle is made by hand. The grey marbling varies slightly from knife to knife — evidence of artisanal production.
Heritage: 800 years of Seki
The name Seki Magoroku carries a history of almost eight centuries of swordsmiths’ craft. Seki, a city in present-day Gifu Prefecture, emerged as a swordsmithing centre during the Kamakura period (1185–1333). The legendary swordsmith Magoroku Kanemoto — also known as “Seki no Magoroku” (関孫六) — worked here during the late Muromachi period. His blades were prized by Oda Nobunaga and Toyotomi Hideyoshi. The principle his name represents — “does not bend, does not break, cuts well” — is the founding philosophy that KAI carried into its kitchen knife line when it was established in 1908.
With the Meiji era (1868) came a ban on carrying swords. Seki’s swordsmiths redirected their craft towards kitchen tools — and the city became the centre of Japanese kitchen knife production that it remains to this day. KAI was founded in 1908 by Saijiro Endo and grew into the world’s largest Japanese knife manufacturer.
Specifications
- Blade type: Gyūtō
- Core steel: VG Xeos
- Cladding: 32-layer Damascus
- Hardness: 60–62 HRC (±1)
- Grind: Double bevel (50/50)
- Finish: Migaki high-gloss + Damascus
- Handle: Hexagonal pakkawood, grey marbled
- Handedness: Right- and left-handed
- Steel maker: Takefu Special Steel, Japan
- Origin: Seki, Japan
Care
- ✅ Use a wooden or plastic cutting board. Stone, glass and ceramic will severely damage the edge.
- ✅ Hand-wash immediately after use. Dishwashers damage both the blade and handle material.
- ✅ Dry immediately after washing. Prolonged moisture can cause staining or oxidation, especially with acidic foods.
- ✅ Sharpen on a whetstone (1000–3000 grit for maintenance, 6000+ for finishing). Pull-through sharpeners and honing steels are not suitable for this steel.
- ✅ Store on a knife block or magnetic strip. Loose storage in a drawer damages the edge.
- ⚠️ Do not use for chopping bones, breaking cheese or as a lever. The thin, hard blade risks chipping or snapping under lateral force.
Other categories in Knives & accessories
Seki Magoroku Migaki
Migaki (磨き) — The art of the polish
Migaki is Japanese for “polished” or “refined.” In the knife world it refers to a high-gloss blade finish — silky and shining, but not quite as reflective as a full mirror polish. In the Seki Magoroku Migaki series the name carries two layers of meaning: the literal high-gloss polish of the cutting edge, and the philosophy behind it — the continuous pursuit of perfection through repetition and mastery.
Master Line, second edition
The Migaki is the second edition of the Seki Magoroku Master Line — the absolute pinnacle of what KAI releases under this brand. Where the first edition (Kaname) drew its curved form from the torii arch of the Kamakura period, the Migaki takes inspiration from the katana. The characteristic curve of both blade and handle, the Damascus patterns that evoke rippling water, the clean hexagonal grip — everything references the aesthetics of the Japanese sword, yet fully placed at the service of the modern kitchen.
The series consists exclusively of the Gyūtō blade shape, available in three blade lengths. This is a deliberate choice: the Gyūtō is the most versatile kitchen knife in existence, and by offering a single blade type across three lengths KAI gives the user the freedom to work to measure without compromising the character of the series. The Migaki also introduces the Gyūtō shape for the first time to KAI’s European range.
The steel: VG Xeos core, 32 layers of Damascus
The Migaki blade features a VG Xeos steel core clad in 32 layers of Damascus steel. The softer outer layers envelop the hard core, absorb shocks, protect the cutting edge, and produce the characteristic visual pattern that makes every blade unique.
VG Xeos
VG Xeos is a premium alloy from Takefu Special Steel (武生特殊鋼材) — the same company that developed the renowned VG-10. It is produced via a special melting process that yields an extremely fine microstructure, resulting in measurably improved wear resistance, strength and hardenability compared to VG-10. Typical hardness: 61–62 HRC. The refined grain structure delivers longer-lasting edge retention under comparable use.
Damascus, 32 layers
Damascus steel is created by forge-welding and folding two or more different steels together. The 32 alternating layers produce the characteristic rippling pattern that evokes waves on a water surface — every blade is visually unique. After forging, the blade is chemically etched to emphasise the pattern contrast.
Migaki edge
The cutting edge itself receives an additional high-gloss polish — the migaki finish. This reduces drag during cutting, promotes clean food separation, and gives the blade its characteristic mirror-bright edge zone that distinguishes the cutting area from the Damascus-patterned body of the blade.
The blade type: Gyūtō
Gyūtō (牛刀) literally means “beef sword” — originally used for breaking down large cuts of beef. Today the Gyūtō is the Japanese equivalent of the Western chef’s knife: a knife for (almost) everything.
Compared to Western chef’s knives, the Gyūtō is ground thinner (typically 1.5–2 mm at the spine versus 2.5–3 mm for European knives), lighter in weight, and sharper in geometry — with an edge angle of around 12–15° per side instead of 20–22°. This enables a finer, cleaner cut, but calls for a little more care: harder steel is more brittle and sensitive to lateral forces.
Applications
- Meat & poultry — The pointed tip and slender blade allow precise work alongside bones. The length enables long, flowing cuts when carving. Suited for raw meat, cooked meat, carpaccio and sashimi.
- Fish & seafood — The thin geometry makes the Gyūtō highly suited to filleting, portioning, and precision-slicing fish. Fillets release cleanly without crushing or tearing.
- Vegetables & herbs — The flat section near the heel is ideal for push-cuts through hard vegetables. The belly towards the middle suits rocking motions when mincing herbs.
Cutting techniques
The Gyūtō supports all common cutting techniques: push-cut (straight down and slightly forward, for hard vegetables), pull-cut (drawing towards you for meat and fish), rock-chop (tip on the board, heel moving up and down for herbs) and tap-chop for fast, controlled chopping. The double-bevel blade is suitable for both right- and left-handers.
The handle: hexagonal pakkawood
The Migaki handle is hand-crafted from grey-marbled pakkawood with a hexagonal cross-section. Pakkawood is a composite material in which thin wood veneer is impregnated with resin under high pressure and temperature. It combines the warmth and aesthetics of wood with the moisture resistance and dimensional stability of a synthetic material.
- Hexagonal shape — Provides excellent grip and tactile orientation. The hand automatically feels the blade position without looking. Reduces hand and wrist fatigue during extended use.
- Moisture resistant — Virtually waterproof due to the resin impregnation. Does not shrink, swell or crack when exposed to moisture. Not dishwasher safe; always hand-wash and dry immediately.
- Handcrafted — Each handle is made by hand. The grey marbling varies slightly from knife to knife — evidence of artisanal production.
Heritage: 800 years of Seki
The name Seki Magoroku carries a history of almost eight centuries of swordsmiths’ craft. Seki, a city in present-day Gifu Prefecture, emerged as a swordsmithing centre during the Kamakura period (1185–1333). The legendary swordsmith Magoroku Kanemoto — also known as “Seki no Magoroku” (関孫六) — worked here during the late Muromachi period. His blades were prized by Oda Nobunaga and Toyotomi Hideyoshi. The principle his name represents — “does not bend, does not break, cuts well” — is the founding philosophy that KAI carried into its kitchen knife line when it was established in 1908.
With the Meiji era (1868) came a ban on carrying swords. Seki’s swordsmiths redirected their craft towards kitchen tools — and the city became the centre of Japanese kitchen knife production that it remains to this day. KAI was founded in 1908 by Saijiro Endo and grew into the world’s largest Japanese knife manufacturer.
Specifications
- Blade type: Gyūtō
- Core steel: VG Xeos
- Cladding: 32-layer Damascus
- Hardness: 60–62 HRC (±1)
- Grind: Double bevel (50/50)
- Finish: Migaki high-gloss + Damascus
- Handle: Hexagonal pakkawood, grey marbled
- Handedness: Right- and left-handed
- Steel maker: Takefu Special Steel, Japan
- Origin: Seki, Japan
Care
- ✅ Use a wooden or plastic cutting board. Stone, glass and ceramic will severely damage the edge.
- ✅ Hand-wash immediately after use. Dishwashers damage both the blade and handle material.
- ✅ Dry immediately after washing. Prolonged moisture can cause staining or oxidation, especially with acidic foods.
- ✅ Sharpen on a whetstone (1000–3000 grit for maintenance, 6000+ for finishing). Pull-through sharpeners and honing steels are not suitable for this steel.
- ✅ Store on a knife block or magnetic strip. Loose storage in a drawer damages the edge.
- ⚠️ Do not use for chopping bones, breaking cheese or as a lever. The thin, hard blade risks chipping or snapping under lateral force.

Frying pans & Sauté pans
Non-stick
Stainless steel
Carbon steel
Cast iron
Cooking pots
Demeyere Silver
Scanpan Impact
Scanpan Fusion 5
Silampos Supreme Pro
Silampos Grand Hotel
Stellar Profile
Stellar Equinox
Stellar Eclipse
Habonne Royal
Korkmaz Proline
Korkmaz Perla
Sauteuses
Dutch ovens
Chasseur
Lava
Victoria
Other
Grills & Grill pans
Woks
Carbon steel & cast iron
Stainless steel
Non-stick
Kettles
Fondue
Tajines
Pressure cookers
Smoking pans
Poffertjes pans
Lids
Splatter screens
Miscellaneous
Paella
Japanese knives
Kai Shun Classic
Kai Shun Classic White
Kai Shun Premier
Kai Shun Premier Minamo
Kai Shun Pro Sho
Kai Kinju & Hekiju
Kai Seki Magoroku KK Yanagiba
Kai Seki Magoroku Kaname
Seki Magoroku Migaki
Kai Seki Magoroku Redwood
Kai Seki Magoroku Shoso
Kai Wasabi Black
Kai Specialties
Miyabi 7000 D
Miyabi 4000 FC
Miyabi 800 DP
Miyabi 6000 MCT
Miyabi 5000 MCD
German knives
Wüsthof Classic
Wüsthof Classic Ikon
Wüsthof Ikon
Wüsthof Epicure
Wüsthof Gourmet
Burgvogel Oliva
Robert Herder
French knives
Elephant ****Sabatier forged stainless steel pakkawood
Elephant ****Sabatier forged stainless steel olivewood
Elephant ****Sabatier forged carbon steel pakkawood
Elephant ****Sabatier forged carbon steel olivewood
Elephant ****Sabatier stamped stainless steel
Laguiole en Aubrac Gourmet
Laguiole en Aubrac Classique
Pallares Solsona
Carbon steel kitchen knives
Stainless steel kitchen knives
Cleavers
Steak knives
Folding knives
Steak knives
Pallares Solsona
Wüsthof
Laguiole en Aubrac
Kai / Shun
Saladini
Laguiole Style de Vie
Other
Honing and sharpening
Naniwa Chosera Pro
Naniwa Advance
Naniwa Standard
Other whetstones
Sharpening rods
Honing steels
Knife sharpeners
Accessories
Accessories
Knife guards
Knife magnets
Knife blocks
Knife bags
Bread knives
Cleavers
Knife sets
Simple kitchen knives
Folding knives
Victorinox
Spyderco
Böker
Coutellerie G.R.
Laguiole en Aubrac
Cheese knives
Oyster knives
Miscellaneous
Stellar Poise
Graters, shavers, mandolines
Mandolines
Microplane Master
Microplane Premium Classic
Microplane Gourmet
Microplane Professional
Other Microplanes
Other
Silicone tools
Whisks
Strainers & Colanders
Spatulas
Stainless steel
Silicone
Wood & Pressed wood
Plastic
Mortars & Pestles
Tongs & Tweezers
Kitchen shears
Garlic presses
Mills & Grinders
Peugeot Paris
Peugeot Paris Chef
Peugeot ParisRama
Peugeot Paris Rouge Passion
Peugeot various
Zassenhaus
Brushes
Ladles & Serving spoons
Nutcrackers
Peelers
Oyster, lobster, snail
Mashers
Skimmers / frying scoops
Funnels
Ice cream scoops
Pizza shovels & Pizza stones
Can openers
Squeeze bottles
Meat mallets
Skewers
Miscellaneous kitchen aids
Tortilla presses
Baking tins & molds
Springform pans
Quiche & flan tins
Bundt pans
Cake & bread tins
Muffin trays
Madeleines, savarins, angel food
Non-stick
(Anodized) aluminum
Silicone
Cast aluminum
Ceramic
Baking trays
Pastry rings
Small baking molds
Baking cups
Paper Panettone molds
Chocolate
Polycarbonate molds
Silicone molds
Miscellaneous chocolate tools
Chocolate food coloring
(Cookie) cutters
Cutter sets
Cookie cutter sets
Individual cookie cutters
Piping bags & nozzles
Sets
Piping bags
Round piping nozzles
Star piping nozzles
Miscellaneous
Accessories
Mixing bowls
Rolling pins
Bread
Dough scrapers
Palette knives
Fondant tools
Modeling tools
Impression mats
Smoothers, combs & spatulas
Fondant cutters / modelers
Mats, paper and foil
Acetate foil
Silicone mats
Cooling racks
Brushes
Turntables
Cake servers
Cake cutters / knives
Candles
Cake boxes
Cake drums
Other
Food coloring | gel
Food coloring | oil based
Food coloring | liquid
Food coloring | powder
Color spray & Velvet spray
Edible markers
Flavors
Patis Decor natural flavors
Patis Decor flavors
PME flavors
Extracts
Glitters & decorations
Magic sparkles (glitter flakes)
Lustre snow
Sugar flowers and decorations
Sprinkles
Fondant, Marzipan & Icing
Fondant
Royal icing, lace, etc.
Biscuit Icing
Cake drips
Misc. ingredients
Sugars and sugar substitutes
Gold and silver leaf
Mixes
Ravioli stamps
Ravioli molds
Pasta wheels / rollers
Rolling pins
Pasta makers
Various
Peugeot Ceramics
Rectangular
Square
Other
Casseroles
Roasting trays
Terrines
Thermometers
Measuring jugs
Scales
Kitchen timers
Measuring cups & spoons
Other
Japanese tableware
Gift sets
Bowls
Salad bowls
Plates
Chopsticks
Cutlery
Stellar Rochester
Stellar Sterling
Stellar Winchester
Stellar Raglan
Salad bowls
Salad servers
Butter dishes
Butter knives
Heim Söhne spoons
Trivets and coasters
Glasses
Serving trays
Other
Percolators / moka pots
Bialetti parts
French presses
Milk frothers
Coffee grinders
Tampers
Espresso tools
Milk jugs
Coffee filters
Tea
Teapots
Wine tools
Waiter's friends / corkscrews
Decanters
Wine coolers
Other
Cocktail tools
Misc. bar tools
Aprons
Kitchen towels
Oven mitts & pot holders
Other
Wood
Plastic
Pressed wood fiber
Wood oil


