I'm a home chef, but I like good tools. I was on a Japanese knife kick 10 years ago, and picked up a few.
- Masakage Shimo 210mm Gyuto, white #2 carbon steel with damascus iron cladding. The edge when new was just crazy sharp. It would almost gravity fall through carrots.
- Gihei 165mm Santuko, HAP40 steel. This steel is extremely hard, and once sharpened well it retains its edge for a very long time. I grab this knife at least 50% of the time.
- Yoshimune 240mm Gyuto, white #1 carbon steel with funky hammered stainless cladding. I grab this knife when I have a lot of stuff to process, like making salads or large dinners.
Also shout out to the old Wusthof Classic 8-inch chef's knife. Mine is 20 years old and still gets used quite a bit.
Lastly, I have an older Sabatier 4 star elephant carbon steel carving knife my wife bought me about 15 years ago. It's steel is rather soft, but when steeled just before use, it carves meat like nothing else.
I picked up water stones when purchasing the Japanese knives, but my sharpening ability is hit or miss. Some days I get it perfect, other times I learn to walk away. Lately I've been just stropping occasionally, and haven't used the stones in over a year.