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I Forge Iron

tzonoqua

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Everything posted by tzonoqua

  1. Nearly finished now!
  2. Hmmmm... I spent three years in a degree discussing (arguing) about this topic. My degree subject, BA (Hons) Fine Art- Silversmithing and Metalwork. Was it a degree in Craft or Fine Art? I still don't know, a bit of both I reckon, although it depended on which tutor I was speaking to. Imagine doing a degree in such and being told by your tutor, "No one appreciates the hand made in our post modern world". (Perhaps that bitter, jaded old woman got stuck being a tutor because no one appreciated her handmade work and she couldn't make it as an artist/craftsperson in her own right, therefore subjecting students to her negative attitudes re:craft, I wonder). Perhaps she took that view so that I could argue with her and refine my own ideas about what it is I do (but I don't think so). I digress.. Best to conceptualize they said- make it art, not lowly craft. The term "Craft" holds connotations of grannies knitting sweaters, or stuck on macaroni pictures done by four year olds. Oh, poor, lowly craft, and thus the word became unfashionable. I think, In my humble opinion, that the word Craft has actually made a comeback. (and thus perhaps never really went away in the first place) When I have spent time and energy making a set of gates, I might call it Craft. Sometimes I call it Art, but most often I just refer to it as my work, and let others be the judge. When I have spent time and energy making a sculpture of which the ideas come straight out of my head, I will call it Art, I am not so inclined to call it Craft, but also, am more than likely to refer to it as my work. When I have spent time and energy making a hook, I will invariably call it Craft. It really is merely a hierarchy of lexicon. What is the difference between art and craft, I still don't know. How long is a piece of string, anyway? :confused: What I do know is that there ARE people out there in our post-modern world that DO appreciate the handmade. - Colleen
  3. wow, eagle eyes andy! Frosty - I once did a bit for TV, a home makeover show called HomeFront on the BBC. I made a tree candleholder for a swanky bespoke kitchen/conservatory. They filmed me forging parts of it and the director kept telling me to get my face closer to the fire so that they could get a reflection of the flames in my goggles. I told him to come and put his face next to the fire before he asked me to do the same.:mad: (He didn't, and I don't think he wanted to argue with a woman with a hammer in one hand and a hot bit of steel in the other:D) So I am sure that the photographer played a part in staging- especially since that article is for a notoriously conservative newspaper (with a page three girl and all!). - Colleen
  4. Yes, there are a few of us out there....!! I do think she sets a bad example in that photo by not wearing eye protection. (I will admit I too have been guilty of this) I know us girlies can be a bit vain... - Colleen
  5. Frosty, why thank you Sir! My customers are very, very patient, actually! These gates are taking such a long time, partially because I don't get out to the workshop full time because of my wee demanding daughter. And partially because at this stage I am forging the leaves and 'weaving' it all together. Funny, when I made the drawing I thought, "this won't be too difficult!". The design has actually strayed a lot from the original drawing and I have made it a lot more complex, but I can't help it. I am in no way a perfectionist, but if I see something is going to look better another way than I originally planned, then I go with it, even though now its taking twice as long as I thought it might... which is probably a result of me being inexperienced in large architectural work, so this is a good learning experience anyway. I have just been approached now for another bigger set of gates and am slightly trembling at the prospect...but I do like a challenge! Colleen
  6. Wow, Mooseridge, nice dragon! Jayco- I made some leaf chimes last summer- they make such a sweet sound! I strung them on some components I had lying around and they sold really well... I have been meaning to make more, but never the time! I have been busy with a set of double gates for a cottage called the 'grain store'.
  7. eeek, Dodge that spider gives me the creeps!! This little birdy has been hanging around my back yard... I call him Freaky Beak... I might add that this little bird is a blue tit, common in the uk, but they normally have short stubby beaks...
  8. tzonoqua

    Freaky Beaky

    This little blue tit has been hanging around my back yard- its got a seriously long beak!
  9. Hello Adrian! Nice to see you here also! You should put a link to your website - I am sure everyone here would love to see more of your lovely, lovely work! X Colleen
  10. no you aren't being naive... you can use vegetable oil I use a mixture of meths or turpentine, tannic acid and a drop of oil. apply with brush when hot. gives a matt rich black/brown finish. Or sometimes I use just oil, or another favourite is 'jacobean' briwax. Only suitable for indoor uses. After a while outdoors it will eventually rust. For outdoors I use paint, generally. Or if it's something like a big gate or railing that someone has spent a lot of money on, I send it away to be galvinized then powder coated. Colleen
  11. Very nice, the fish is great! Art exhibitions are funny things, sometimes you never know how successful they are until months later when that person who picked up your card rings you out of the blue and commissions some work... I try to look at them as good publicity and then it's always a bonus if you get a sale or two. Colleen
  12. To patina mild steel I sometimes use a concoction of Tannic Acid, little drop of veg oil and meths (acts as carrier). Brushed on metal when warm. Gives a nice antique- looking matt brown black finish. Incidentally sometimes the rivers up here run brown because of the tannins in the peat, pine leaching into the water.
  13. Hi Thomas, This piece is really lovely, very original, and nicely organic. Great! Colleen
  14. Thanks, guys... my horse is not a patch on the real thing though! I nearly became a farrier, well, I went so far as to enrol in college for it back when I was in Canada- before it was due to start they informed me they were no longer going to run the course due to lack of interest... (apparently I was the only one who enrolled!!) I used to ride and show Appaloosas, and sold my last horse an Appaloosa/Quarter horse mare named Jammer and used the money to go travelling, that was over 15 years ago. (and consequently I only discovered Blacksmithing 9 years ago) The point of this story is that Jammer was born with a slightly turned in rear right hoof, which when I took her on at the age of four, (she was gifted to me as a ''problem child'' with a penchant for rearing) I discovered that it could have been corrected if she had been properly shod, but as it had been neglected was now permanent. She wasn't a "problem child'' really, she just needed some extra attention. Moral of this story- Farriers have my respect also. oh yes, and if only I had a penny for the number of times people come into my shop and see all the ornamental stuff and still ask," so how do you like shoeing horses?"
  15. Sorry about your knee Pete46 Been a while since I had one of my own so this one will do for the moment. She doesn't kick, rear or bite, but is not half as fun to ride...
  16. i have good locks, window bars, thick stone walls, a dog and most of a all a comprehensive insurance policy. if someone is hell bent on breaking in i am not going to try to stop them and get possibly maimed or injured in the process. I love my family far too much for that, that is why I pay for insurance. ditto Johannes, violence is so passe. I have no problem with shooting, for hunting purposes, to eat, or a neccessary cull (we replaced top predator in many places of the world and therefore must ensure some animal populations don't damage forests etc deer for example) but ending a creature's life for our amusement is a plain waste. my 2 cents... Colleen
  17. simple, elegant, beautiful.. although I suspect not so simple to attempt getting that completely round.... and i like the sound of "tweek your inner scrolls" sounds like some sort of new age blacksmith speak for who knows what!:)
  18. may I bring to your attention this photo given to me by the man who runs our local museum- of the Smiddy where I now live/work- its from around the 1920's give or take a decade. You can just make out the man wearing a kilt to rasp the horse's hooves... I think its staged though, as the other lads in the photo are wearing leather aprons, covered in soot, and wearing dark colours, I am not sure in that day they would wear a white shirt to work!!!!
  19. Looks like a great idea, and sorry to be a spoil-sport, but would the flat stock not warp/distort when hot and worked and therefore lose its gripping capabilities? Also, allowing the round rod to pivot horizontally, if you catch my drift? Just posing the questions, eh. Like most things, using them will tell... do report back!
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