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After several uses make sure the whetstone surface is flat. Â Presoak your whetstone flattener then rub back and forth until the surface is completely flat.
NOTE: Â A whetstone flattener should be harder than the whetstone it will sharpen. Â This means the # will be a lower number grit.
Visually divide the blade into sections. Â When you sharpen count the # of strokes per sections - they should be equal. Â Uneven sharpening will change your blade profile over time. Â Keep them the same.
Keeping a consistent blade angle results in better sharpening.  Take your time to set up the proper blade angle, then maintain it as you move across the whetstone.  First side - position knife at 90° to the whetstone.  Raise the back of the knife until there is a 12-15 ° angle to the whetstone. Second side - position knife at 45° to the whetstone.  Raise the back of the knife until there is a 12-15 ° angle to the whetstone.
Note: Japanese knives are usually 12-15 °.  Western knives 18-20 °.  Remember - the sharper the angle the thinner the blade edge.
Use one hand to hold the angles firm. Place the finger tips at the edge of the blade where you want to sharpen. Â Use light downward pressure to keep it stable as the blade slides across the whetstone surface.