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I Forge Iron

Karn3

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Posts posted by Karn3

  1. Hi All,

    I've made a set of railings that I got galvanised and subsequently treated with t wash/mordant solution. I painted it on, left it to dry, and it finished up with the really nice grey finish. After fitting them, and a day in the rain, a white powder coating has developed on top of the grey finish. This has only developed where the rain has landed on the railings, or where water has run down. You can see this in this image

    image.png

    The coating can be cleaned off with a wire wheel, but I don't want to go through all that effort if this is going to happen again the very next time it rains. Have I done something wrong in my application? or missed a step?

    Thanks in advance for any help and advice!

  2. Thanks for the kind comments everyone!

    Smart work. You obviously made the antlers to fit comfortably in the hand.

    Is the shovel brass or did you burnish the steel? The beaten brass look is neat.

    I like the tenon (?) on the business end of the poker. Very clever.

    Where do you get the brushes for fire tools? Or perhaps you have adapted an ordinary bristle brush??

    Thanks! The shovel is brass. I had a couple of small sheets hanging around so I thought I'd put them to use. For the brush, I just bought a wooden hand brush from my local hardware shop and chopped the handle off. 

  3. Thanks Dognose (great name and pic btw)! The wood on the wall is left behind from the old rails that my work was replacing. Consequently it was already in the correct positions and the wall underneath is extremely uneven and made of very hard rocks (granite I think). Drilling into them would have been a pain. It just saved an awful lot of work and the client was perfectly happy with it like that. I think she is going to paint it though as she is in the middle of a lot of work on the house and garden. For the stair rails, I dug them in about 30cm (1ft) and secured them with post-crete. They are good and solid, not going anywhere for a long time hopefully. The finish is a custom mixed carbon-laced paint that polishes up to a metallic shine in a way that highlights hammer marks and other detail, preserving the hand forged look. This was very important to the client and it took me a while to find something that would do the job nicely.

  4. These followed me home: http://imgur.com/a/yD2fx

     

    They are about 1.5m tall and the base plates are solid steel about 40mm thick. The box section is pretty thick as well, about 8mm or so. Found them at my local scrap yard, got them for £10 (~$15) each. I'm collecting materials to make a junkyard power hammer so I'm going to use one of them as the central pillar for that, and I'm going to turn the other one into a stand for a leg vise I acquired a few years ago.

  5. Hi all, I'm in the middle of a project that will be going outside so I want to finish it with graphite paint. Now, I've never used it before so I was wondering if anybody could give me a bit of advice on correct usage. Also I seem to have run into a problem getting it. I don't know if I'm just looking for the wrong things in shops or they simply don't have it. If anyone has links to places that sell it that would be awesome as well (I live in the UK). Many thanks in advance.

  6. Karn3: Ok, so where are the four, eight, ten, twelve and twenty siders?

     I've been trying to work out how to make a d20. I think I need to read a geometry book or something. In the meantime I did a test roll to see what it sounds and feels like. Check it out: 

  7. I saw a picture of this, and thought it would be a good test of my abilities. The resulting object is extremely pleasing, and has some M C Escher  qualities to it. It's really fun to look at it from different angles and roll it around. The very same qualities that made it extremely difficult to photograph properly! What do you guys and/or gals think?

     

    http://imgur.com/a/Zf3YP

  8. Thanks for all the kind words! It means a lot coming from fellow smiths. Time to answer some questions.

     

     

    That is some fine work.  Amazing that you could heat and do the tenons in the way you did.  Maybe an O/A setup is in your future.  Sure would save a lot of lifting.

     

    I definitely need to get an O/A setup, it's at the top of my 'Things to buy' list. A list which is getting distressingly long :P.

     

     

    Nicely done! Would love to know if you feel what was paid for it was worth the time spent doing it? I know that personal satisfaction is payment of sorts but three weeks is a lot of work!

     

    I'm pretty satisfied with payment I got for the piece. I could have done it quicker I think, but I was taking everything nice and slow because I was straying into completely unfamiliar territory and didn't want to make any mistakes.

     

    Nice job. Thanks for sharing the tenon mess up. You're human, we're human, and we all make mistakes. Overcoming them is the key and you surely did!

    Beautiful piece to be proud of for sure.

     

     

    Strong work there Karn, really nice. I thought only dyslexic left handers like myself put things together sdrawkcab though!

     

     

    Still can't believe I did that! There was much swearing that day. It actually ended up being easier to fix than I thought it would be.

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