Jump to content
I Forge Iron

Shamus Blargostadt

Members
  • Posts

    195
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Shamus Blargostadt

  1. I like the style! I was wondering about the texture too. It looks cool.
  2. I have some Nickolson Black Diamond files I picked up over the summer on the rumor they make good blade steel. Do they need to be ground completely smooth before forging?
  3. I don't know if URLs are frowned upon (I think I've seen some before) if so please delete and accept my profound apologies. Otherwise, I thought this was a very interesting article. http://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/the-ten-trials-of-the-master-bladesmith
  4. Thank you very much for the tip Daniel. I'll get some bars of those for my first try. I'm sure I can look up the hardening requirements for those steels but I was wondering, if two steels have different hardening specs for temperature and quench material, how do you decide which to use?
  5. I just saw that Anthony Bourdain show you were talking about. Oh my gosh that guy makes beautiful knives.
  6. noted! Sweat and ability to get burned, I have plenty of.
  7. pallet strapping being those metal bands wrapped around stuff for shipping? I would love to see a pic of a blade made from those and bandsaw blades if you have one around. Would you be willing to share your process? I'm wondering how you move from 25 very thin and I'm guessing narrow (1/2" wide?) strips of metal into a bar.
  8. I just love how it looks and would like to try after I make another 5 or so knives but I don't think I will ever buy a power hammer (this side of a lottery win and I'm not lucky.) Every youtube video I've seen of someone doing a pattern blade is using a power hammer. I'm hammering out truck leaf springs into blade thickness so I didn't think a billet would be too much harder.
  9. was just curious, does anyone do pattern steel by hand?
  10. Beautiful knife. Inspiring! Thank you for posting so many pics!
  11. I'm still trying to work through how to forge and move steel correctly and there is one area I'm struggling with.. well, several but was hoping to get advise on one. The piece I was working on developed a crack around where the tang ends and the blade begins.. so this is much smaller than I wanted it to be. The blade is now just around 6" (excluding tang) and I'm hoping to salvage. I want the blade definition to be sharp by the handle but could not get rid of this curve. The spine is curved so it rocked when I tried to hammer it. Trying to put the curve on an edge of the anvil didn't help much either. Is there a method to forging this curve out or did I make a error in process by letting it emerge in the first place? I was going to just cut it out with the angle grinder.. I'm just going to loose mass and will probably have to chop the tang off so it's not too long. Aside from those problems, this is the best I've done so far forging to a shape and consistent thickness.
  12. Really nice recovery. If a noob question could be forgiven, how did you go from a four sided block to an octagon shape on the handle? That looks perfect.
  13. I really like the design of those offset box jaws.
  14. Thank you I found it. Boy those v-bit tongs look like a very nice design. Many of the tongs I've looked at on sites make me think "for that kind of money I'd take a shot at making them". I think it will be a couple hundred simple tongs down the road before I attempt something like those though. These look well worth the $50 That's a great site in general. Thanks for the tip! Hey general question for the crew, when you make tongs what size stock do you start with?
  15. Would like to see the outcome S.. you're not the only one struggling with this. I've been trying to figure out how to make a "square nail" (and failing) with more effort than I care to admit.
  16. Thank you Charlotte I will! Thanks Nobody Special. That one on the left looks like it would be really useful for various widths and thickness’s, and shapes for that matter. That far-right one looks just like one of the two that I have. The nibs are long and flat. I probably use it the most but I find it hard to hold the piece secure with it.
  17. ah! haha! Good thing I'm not a proof reader. Wow horse shoeing tongs brings up a vast selection of images on google. Anthony thanks! I've never seen tips like that but they look like they'd hold a bar pretty solidly.
  18. what do the nibs of shoestring tongs look like? I did a search but this is all that comes up
  19. I have two tongs I use which really don't work well for holding a bar being forged into a knife. I have some ideas of what good ones might look like but was hoping some folks might be willing to post pictures of their favourite tongs they use when forging knives, before I try to make some.
  20. well... right before I noticed the crack I heated it to the point where sparks were flying off of it. I was trying to draw out the tang.
  21. oh my gosh that's beautiful work. I'm curious about the line in the middle of the handle spine. Is that the tang or decorative metal that looks like a tang?
×
×
  • Create New...