Carl's advice is sound. It's a whole lot easier to use annealed steel to make a knife by the stock removal method.
It is possible, however, to make a good knife with a file without annealing it. If your files are good steel and not case hardened, you can temper it back in your kitchen oven to about 450 degrees for a couple of hours. This will soften it to the point that it's not brittle but will still hold an edge very well. You have several options for the handle. You can grind it for a hidden tang and just make sure the blade portion doesn't heat up while you're grinding by dipping it in water occasionally. For a full tang design, if you have access to a torch, even a propane plumber's torch, you can suspend the blade end in water with a c-clamp or vice-grips and heat up the tang end until you get a little color in it. Or if you sand off the teeth 'till it's shiny, you can heat it 'till it changes from blue to dull gray. Either way, now it'll be soft enough to drill holes in it for your handle. If it still seems too hard, get a pack of masonry bits in the correct size. They won't last long, but they'll drill your holes. Now, use your 1"x30" sander to grind in your bevels. It's gonna take a lot of belts and a good bit of time, but it can be done. Work bare handed and dunk the blade in water when it begins to heat up.
It's a whole lot easier, cheaper, and will take less time, to just buy some 1080 from somewhere
and heat treat it yourself.
I bought one of those 1"x30" grinders to use when I have free time at work. I ground two smaller blades and one larger one out of 440C and one larger camp knife out of D2 last Friday night at work on that little grinder. It took over twice as long as on my 2"x72" at home, but was a whole lot faster than a file and sandpaper. Tonight I'm using an orbital sander from Harbor Freight to polish them up before I send them out to Mr. Bos for heat treating.
Todd