here is my latest project just completed (except for the sheath, will work on that next).
I got fascinated with Italian Renaissance stilettos for some reason (elegant shape, general romance of the period, images of lurking assasins, intrigues of Medichis and Borgias, any and all of that?) and decided to try my hand at making a reproduction.
There was no way to obtain a bare blade of correct type (triangular cross-section) for my project short of going custom, though.
So I resorted to reworking a Mosin Nagant bayonet (cruciform cross-section). It isn't historically correct, but still looks right to me mounted as stiletto and I am sure would work just as well or even better for practical purposes.
I left only 8" of blade, reshaped the tip, and ground the rest of the blade down into a square tang (see one of the attached pictures).
The handle is 5" total, constructed very similar to the museum examples I found online.
Guard (3" wide) and pommel were filed out of 1018 mild steel and heat blued. Same octagonal shape for the pommel and guard finials. Interesting that I found it much harder to shape the small finials than the pommel, the surfaces were not wide enough for indexing the file by feel.
Grip is polished black buffalo horn, spiral wrap of twisted "silver like" wire set into a groove and held at the ends by tightly fitted nickel silver collars. Also some decorative nickel silver pins.
Everything held together by peening the end of tang over the pommel.
It was an interesting project for me: I worked out the filing technique for constructing steel pommels/guards of this general type, which is typical for daggers of the period; and this type of grip construction was also the first for me. I always plan my projects to include one or two new techniques to learn, doing same stuff over and over wouldn't be any fun!
See the attached pictures and let me know what you think. Any questions / comments / suggestions for improvement are appreciated!
Alex.

finished stiletto [ Download ]

parts before assembly [ Download ]

handle view from the side [ Download ]

handle view from the pommel [ Download ]

handle view from the guard [ Download ]