Update 2.22.19Due to club rules I have upgraded my hunting bone knife for a real bone knife. This
knife was on Amazon for less than $10. It is a buffalo bone carved knife.

First thing I needed to do is make the bone knife blend into my existing kit with weathering and match the existing “bone” knife I made (the one with a metal blade).

I started by wrapping the handle in the same leather I used for my kama. I then tried painting the knife with black and tan spray paint. It didn’t work very well on the bone itself but made the leather wrap look weathered.

I then used some super glue to adhere dirt and grime to cover the blade and make it look weathered.

The bone knife is a bit smaller in the handle area then my previous knife, but the blade is longer so it fits in my sheath. Tomorrow I will apply my heat gun to the leather wraps to weather it some more.

I also hope that with the use of my heat gun I can reduce the build up of dirt on the blade and spread it to be more uniformed instead of being in one clump.
Update 3.2.19:Leather kama gets some loving weathering added. I tried to add some yellow like scales to this kama, but the effect looked fake and I removed them. Instead I used super glue to add rigid lines up and down the kama. I then added black spray paint and while still wet I rubbed the paint and super glue in together as seen in the second image below.

Next I added light tan and regular tan to the mix with black and did the same style with rubbing the paint while still wet into the leather or out of it as seen below. Since the temperatures are roughly around -14 with a -32 windchill right now, there is a lot of mud and snow that falls off my vehicles when parked in the garage. I was able to smear my kama into the mud to get a more realistic weathering on it (see bottom image in picture below). I focused on the bottom tips when I rubbed the mud into the kama, as this would be where the most dirt would build up.

After the mud was smeared in, I used some light sprays of army green and hunter green spray paints into a rag and rubbed those color tones into the kama. As a beasthunter I would be in among tall grass, weeds, and shrubs; ultimately there would be the effect of “grass stains” on my soft parts. In addition to the green I used my torch to add some blaster effects or singed from a beast or brush fire (as seen in top image below). In the bottom image of the picture below you can see my use of acetone to further weather my kama as it removed areas of paint and grime build up across the kama.

Below you can see that I have completed the outside portion of my kama, but still needed to weather the inside as it would be clean but not that clean. I used a combination of just black and tan spray paints rubbed into the inner side of my kama.

Then I put on my kama for a test fit and it fits right and looks fantastic. So I decided to kit up in my Late Crusader kit to see the final results.

As seen below it has the correct weathered effect to match the rest of my kit. It adds tot he thigh areas and really looks great to me and my Alor’ad. Still looking at adding some netting to my right thigh area hanging down from my waist and then on the left thigh area side I will have my snares (not pictured below).

I’m excited for progress on my kit and have included an action shot of me in kit outside in those below temps in the snow.
