You can ask Mechslasher, Not sure of the spelling, he seems to make some nice knives. You can heat it with a blow torch,( Use with map gas ) to a bright cherry red, and leave it to cool to room temperature, to anneal it. And then take a band saw, or whatever you have to cut the metal to shape, and file or grind the bevel for the edge, , and drill,or punch the holes for the handle, and shape for a hilt, wether for a notch, or just up against the blade, either soldered,or pressure fit, with the handle. Anyway, after you have shaped and filed, or ground the shape you want, and put the edge bevel on it, you can again heat it with a blow torch. If you have drilled holes for your handle, you can hang it up with a piece of wire, and heat it up till it is bright cherry red, and quench it in either oil, cold water, or if you really want to bring the moleculer structure close together, use acetone, and dry ice, in a bucket, and just dip the blade in it. You can repeat this a couple of times, and it will keep aligning the moleculer structure. Then when you are ready for the final heat treating, you can quench it again, in whatever medium you want. You can treat the whole blade, or just the edge. You can heat the blade, and let it cool, to a dull red, and quench it, or just the edge, and then drop the whole blade in. That way, you will have the edge harder than the rest of the knife, and it will be stronger, and have more give in stressful situations. You can do this by dipping just the edge, or do it like the Japanese, and put clay mixed with ash, and cover the main part of the blade, and then leave the edge and about a 1/2 inch up into the blade open, or clear of clay. Then heat it, and drop her in. You will have a very hard edge, and a medium hard blade. Or you can have the whole knife tempered the same. There are a gazillion sites out there that can tell you much better than I can. But I have used these methods with great results. I used to heat treat pistol springs, out of thin spring steel. Made some nice little blades with it also. I want to make some knives, and a tomahawk, and an axe out of some good thick leaf springs. Would like to get it from an old car or truck from the fifties. I think it is better spring steel. I hope this helps some. But definately check out the websites. You can Google them. Also as for an anvil, you might try to get a piece of railroad rail, or see if you can get real anvil. You can then weld a piece of 1/2 to 3/4 inch plate steel to it, and you will have an even surface, that you can remove, and replace when it gets out of shape.
Stick Bender