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I Forge Iron

jj2k

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Everything posted by jj2k

  1. I've made a scrolled base from the stem. Drilled a hole in a rock. Mounted one in a piece of cool driftwood. That one didn't last long.
  2. Ya know what's wrong with those?..... They ain't mine! LOL nicce job
  3. Ya done good nice idea to use a treadmill motor. I think a motor setup like that would do well in a tumbler application as well.
  4. Will be watching your build with great interest as I am about to start my own. Good luck with your build and post lots of pictures.
  5. I love this! Consider this idea stolen!
  6. Done a lot of time and motion studies of the stuff I make to sell at craft shows. Knowing exactly how long an item takes to manufacture is a good base to start with. If you are doing production work you can produce an item quicker when you are doing a bunch at once. My shop rate is $60 an hour. I figure the materials and the shop rate and THEN mark up a modest profit margin. I know exactly how long an item takes, how much material it uses, and what the market will bear. Sometimes an item will sell for much more than time and materials. I will ask and get that higher price to make up for the items that won't. Years of experience tell the tale tho. A few years ago I was at a show and another blacksmith was there selling his stuff for the cost of his materials, (pretty much). I bought everything he had, cleaned up what he had done and marked it all up to market levels. He was a little ticked when he saw what I had done, but he learned an important lesson. I'd rather hang on to my product, (labor) than to give it away because someone else is to cheap to pay what it's worth. Never let a customer price your work. It's your work. The only thing you owe them is a good job for the value.
  7. IForgeIron Blueprints Copyright 2002 - 2011 IFORGEIRON, All rights reserved BP0302 Eternity Rose by John Jobe aka jj2k Start with a 1” square tube, 1-1/4” square tube, two leaves and an 18” piece of ¼” round. Cut 45 degree cuts in each of the 4 sides. In the 1” square tube on one side cut the angled cut half way into one of the next side. Taper one end of the ¼” round and texture for stem Forge the end of each tube on the horn as shown Texture each petal as shown Using a sanding disc on your angle grinder, grind away the point and round the top of the petal. About ½” back from the cuts, fuller the tubes down to a stem size. Maintain your bell shape on the horn as you go, it will make things much easier. On the 1” tube, on the side we cut half way into the next side, use your scroll pliers to wind this piece up and then center it over the middle of the bud pulling up toward the top as you go. Close up the bud hammering down and around on each remaining petal. Use a swage block or a half round swage of some sort to keep the roundness in the bud. Cut off the 1” bud and weld it to the stem. Cut off the 1-1/4” piece and while holding the stem and bud upside down on the table, slide the other piece over this bud and weld it in place. Clean up your weld while being careful not to get into the stem. Wrap up the new piece around the bud. Using your scrolling pliers roll the top edges outward as shown. Start a scroll on the base of the stem and then finish the scroll. Make minor adjustments to the rose. And weld on the leaves. You can heat up those welds and hammer them to blend into the stem. Polish with a wire wheel and shoot clear. This Eternity Rose was donated to Habitat For Humanity for their fundraiser and will be in the silent auction. View full article
  8. I have a 1923 Trenton Anvil, 175 lbs. The anvil is in decent shape and needs a good home. I live just south of Ft Worth Texas. It would be prudent if it were picked up as the weight is greater than most shippers will handle without huge increases in shipping costs. Selling price $400.00. You can PM me with any questions or offers. The Little Giant power hammer and the Trenton anvil have sold.
  9. I purchased a Saltfork Craftsmen Swage Block. I use it at least once a week but often more. I use it on every leaf and candlecup I produce. I have built it it's own stand and can move it out of the way when needed. But I can't imagine my shop without it now.
  10. jj2k

    More Work

  11. jj2k

    Bakers Rack

    From the album: More Work

  12. This is kinda different, but i think it applies to this thread. I am gonna have to have surgery here real soon and so I had to end my craft show season early this year. But I still needed a way to generate some income. So I rented a booth at a local mini mall. Here are some pics of my initial set up there. I bought the glass case at a local pawn shop and built the stand it is sitting on.
  13. JWB, Man that's awesome!!! You can really tell you went to a lot of time, trouble and expense to make your rig look great. Thanks a lot! Now have to work just THAT much harder! Honestlt though that is a realy nice looking booth. jj2k
  14. Christmas is coming????????????? LOL This year I am building my wife a bakers rack. I'll post pics when it is finished. Others in the family are getting inventory leftovers. No since paying tax on stuff I can give a way. (grin)
  15. Looks like it's coming along well. What changes did ya make? Let me know how it works for ya.
  16. This thread has contributed a lot to bettering my attitude with those we'd like to strangle when doing a craft show demo. We did a show today as a matter of fact. I had several walk up whose grandfather etc was a blacksmith. I heard the same joke about pickin up the hot horseshoe 3 times. But we had to run the propane forge today because of high winds and so many vendors being right next to us. It was late in the day and I was TIRED! This one guy walks up and calls me a cheater for using propane. Told me I was to have coal and a bellows or a crank blower. I told him to stick his hand in there to see if the fire was hot enough. And did he really think that if they had had propane and gas burners back then, would those blacksmiths have used it? And finally I said with a big ole grin on my face, Can't you read the sign?!? I have a sign posted on my anvil base that reads: Please Do Not Feed Poke or Tease the Blacksmith At which point I grabbed my hammer and said," Don't make me use this!" It was all in good fun, but I got my point across. Nobody likes to be called a cheater for any reason. Besides, I still swing that hammer just as hard.
  17. I guess the rudest comment I ever got was, " My grandfather was better than you!". At the first moment I realized what had been said, I got mad. But looking at the young man I realised how young he was and he was obviously trying to impress the girl he was with. So I calmed down and took a breath and said," Well when get to be as old as he was when you saw him in his greatness, I hope I can be half as good." He walked away, I and couldn't help thinking how small he must have felt. I politely pinned his ears back without being rude or a smartXXX. others standing nearby commented how well I handled the situation after he had left. And a few even bought a couple items. Ya never know.
  18. Here in Texas we don't get a lot of days where it is cold enough to need much extra heat once the forge is lit. However we do get a few days that require a bit more than just a flannel shirt with sleeves. I save all of the sticks from the trees in my yard and any other scrap wood that comes along through the spring summer and fall. I'll burn that wood in my cleaned out coal forge if I am not using it. I keep the blast low and the wood burns well. That'll raise the temp in my uninsulated shop a good 20 to 30 degrees. Makes it downright bearable when I am not in a forging mode on a real cold day. I have on occasion had to add just a bit of coal here and there to that wood and that makes a really big difference.
  19. I always ear muffs when power hammering. Otherwise I don't wear any ear plugs. I don't like the idea of sticking stuff in my ear. (grin) I have suffered quite a bit of hearing loss over the years due to several activities that I have taken part in that have damaged my hearing. In some frequencies it has been quite severe.
  20. I used Irns design to make my posts for roping off my forging area. I used rebar as the material for the posts because I had had a bunch given to me. Anyhow I forged the points on one end and the loops on the other end. On several of these, as I went to use them last saturday, broke at the loop. I was driving them into the ground and wasn't even hitting that hard. Is rebar just that brittle or do I need to handle quenching differently or what? I am gonna do some experimenting this morning but I was curious what other folks excperience with rebar might be. Thanks,
  21. This past Saturday we went to Cranfills Gap Texas. They had Septemberfest and a wild game cook off. What a hoot! We had a ball. Made some friends and sold a bit as well. This is how our booth looked with the my redesigned canopy. I had rebuilt the canopy over the summer and the wife made the canvas top. I used Irns design for the posts to rope off my forging area. (thanks Irn, they worked great!)
  22. Well this year we entered a piece in the State Fair of Texas. And once again we received a Blue Ribbon for first place. Just thought y'all would like to know. Here is a picture of this years entry.
  23. jj2k

    church rail 3

    From the album: More Work

    one last view
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