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I Forge Iron

Gobae

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Posts posted by Gobae

  1. I was looking at these DVD's

     

    Forging a Viking Bearded Axe

    http://www.amazon.com/dp/B006OBC5D4/ref=wl_it_dp_o_pC_nS_ttl?_encoding=UTF8&colid=5T6E8LBDPU1X&coliid=I1C5DD5K0IJV5Z

     

    Forging a Viking-Age Broad Axe

    http://www.amazon.com/Forging-Viking-Age-Broad-Axe-Austin/dp/B00PW9WDKE/ref=sr_1_1?s=movies-tv&ie=UTF8&qid=1422470187&sr=1-1&keywords=forging+a+viking-age+broad+axe

     

    Does anyone have experience with them? Is there a significant difference between the two processes, such that having both is helpful?

     

    Are there any other Axe making tutorials that are better?

     

    Thanks!


  2. So when I do a plumbing repair and see all that green on the inside of the pipe - that means my tap water is toxic?
    I drink that water daily.

    Bill


    Only if you rinse your pipes with vinegar (or some other acid) to release it and then drink. Which is where it becomes a problem with cooking. If you're cooking an acidic food the oxides are released from the copper and enter your food.

  3. A lot of times the girls do better than the boys


    Yes, very true. They don't necessarily do better in the strength category, but the girls tend to be more willing to listen & be diligent and therefore come out ahead. Many of the boys come up with excuses for their poor work ("I wanted it to look rough/rustic/Orcish", etc) instead of practicing.
  4. We just use a swage block and round stock to form them. Once you get some practice it's pretty quick; my wife can make around 200-250 nail rings and hour.

    Initially we tried to protect the nail from marks by lining the swage with a piece of copper sheet, but the nails are often harder than the block and the round stock so marring is minimal. Final sizing is done at the time of sale with a standard ring sizer.

  5. Yeah, the question is pretty broad, "Ancient" means a lot of things to different people. But here's some 'Celtic' and Migration era stuff I've found helpful.

    "The Mästermyr Find: A Viking Age Tool Chest from Gotland" by Greta Arwidsson & Gosta Berg
    "Early Irish Ironworking" by B.G. Scott
    "Pagan Celtic Ireland" by Barry Raftery
    "The Celtic Sword" by Radomir Pleiner
    "Werkzeug und Gerät aus dem Oppidum von Manching" by Gerhard Jacobi
    "Celtic Britain and Ireland, Ad 200-800: The Myth of the Dark Ages" by Lloyd Robert Laing & Jennifer Laing

    Some of these dive really heavy into the archaeological metallurgy side of things (which you may or may not find interesting too), while others are general history books that happen to a chapter or two on metal/iron working.


  6. Aha! Now I understand (sort of). I had always thought the thing you actually put the keys onto was the "key ring." The photo shows the forged work being attached to the same ring as what I might call a "fob."


    Yes, technically it is a fob. Though many people refer to the whole thing (ring and fob) as a key-ring.

  7. Quality of the work and the presentation are what sells your ironwork. I always try and make a booth as inviting as possible for people to be attracted to what you are selling. First impression really matters.


    And although it may seem like a no-brainer, be friendly and acknowledge people as they come up. You'd be surprised at how many crafters/vendors sit down, read, text or otherwise ignore customers. Even having a disinterested or bored look on your face sends a real strong signal that you don't care about them. It's a lot of emotional work to stay pleasant and focused all day long but you'll need to in order to get the event to pay off. Remember the rule of thumb for a successful craft fair is that at the end of the day your table fee should represent no more than 10% of your gross take for the event.

    But back to key rings. We often cut apart interesting sections of failed projects to make them instead of making them from scratch. No two are alike, and you can end up with more variety than trying to design something.

    keyring.jpg
  8. A few years ago I really XXXXX off an architect by suggesting to him that the popularity of "Contemporary" architecture is in part caused by the fact that it's really easy to draw straight lines on a computer.


    Absolutely true! I would love to see a research paper or book on how available tools have affected design throughout the ages. I would say it plays a larger part than most artists/designers admit; especially once that limitation becomes "tradition".
  9. But the ability to change scale, and orientation, ... and particularly the ability to regenerate images, ... saves so much time, and tedious repetition, that using the AutoCAD is simply faster, easier, and more rewarding.

    The only people who disdain the use of CAD Drafting Software, are those who have no experience with it.


    Nope not at all. I've had plenty of experience CAD programs but I find them far too time consuming for simple projects. It's more a matter of the "right tool for the job".
  10. Since I do like to do reproduction work, for me it's usually the other way around. Usually the client shows up with sketches or photos from archaeological digs and I make "copies".

    Even when I do have to make a presentation to a client I typically just use sketches. The learning curve is just too steep on most drawing programs to bother with; especially given the limited number of times I'd use it.


  11. Funny we have Guild Regulations from the Medieval/Renaissance periods restricting women to working only in the blacksmith shops of their Father, Brother or Husband---so we know that women were smithing centuries years ago as people tend to not make laws against something that's not happening...


    I've seen this mentioned a number of times but no one I've seen has ever sourced it. Do you have the actual source by chance?
  12. If you want a career in blacksmithing take BUSINESS classes in college! While it may seem like a good idea to know how to blacksmith the bulk of a SUCCESSFUL blacksmithing business has NOTHING to do with blacksmithing. In fact it has so little to do with blacksmithing that I quit the smithing business I had to go back working full time with computers. Instead I enjoying blacksmithing as a hobby instead of dealing with it as part of the xxxx of running a business.

    IMO it's far better to work for ANYBODY ELSE and let your extra cash support smithing as a hobby rather than to prostituting yourself out at craft shows and Renaissance Faires hoping to support yourself (and/or a family).

  13. A fellow Iron Age Celtic re-enactor has contacts with some of the participants that took part in that show. According to them (the participants) the BBC has no plans to release a DVD copy of that broadcast.

    Since it is aired regularly on the History Channel (albeit at very odd hours) and given that there is no official edition available, I decided to DVR the program, edit out the commercials, and burn my own copy.

    Oh, BTW, a retrospective of the 1978 living history experiment was broadcast on the BBC and can be found on YouTube "Living in the Past"

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