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I Forge Iron

JHCC

2023 Donor
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Everything posted by JHCC

  1. In the upper right corner? That's the head of a quarry pick, used for cutting or carving stone. You can see a larger one being used in Mr. Chickadee's video of making a stone base for his anvil, starting at about the 8:05 mark.
  2. The books were better. In particular, "The Mysterious Island" has an extensive description of the castaways smelting iron from ore they find on the island and then forging progressively more sophisticated tools.
  3. "I shed many tears before the thin moon rose up, frail and faint as a sickle of straw." -- Dorothy L. Sayers, The Nine Tailors
  4. Get with the times, Frosty: everything is laser-cut nowadays.
  5. And this just arrived in the mail: four different densities of “therapy putty” (basically industrial strength Silly Putty) which I’ll be trying out as a pitch replacement in my Repoussé on the Road kit. (The Soft is about the same density as the SP in the egg, which works okay but sometimes feels a bit too soft.)
  6. A few more goodies, these from a used tool liquidation place, also in southern New Hampshire. Nothing I particularly needed apart from the buffing wheels, but they were having a 20% off moving sale (and they rang up the $9.99 pick head at $0.99).
  7. That’s an interesting one, although it’s arguably more “fabrication” than “blacksmithing” per se.
  8. It’s The Vintage Tool Shop in Fremont. Interestingly, the guy who runs it is also one of the suppliers for Colonial Homestead in Ohio, which I mentioned visiting in an earlier post.
  9. The problem is that mugwort easily regrows from its roots, so cutting it back doesn't get rid of it. Instead of forging a sickle, you need to think about making some kind of weeding claw that will help you get the entire root system out of the ground, as it can easily regrow from a single rhizome.
  10. Here are two good videos about scythe forging, the first from Torbjörn Åhman: And the second from the Northmen channel:
  11. Also stopped in at a used bookstore and found this interesting volume. A few random pages:
  12. Addendum: the smaller of the sinking hammers has been repaired with an interesting approach to securing a loose head.
  13. For those who missed the update on “What did you do in the shop today?”, I ended up making an oversized screw extractor and twisting the die out with a pipe wrench: In other news, a visit to a vintage tool shop in southern New Hampshire yielded a quartet of old hammers: two sinking and two chasing. I paid a bit of “antique premium”, but not excessive. We actually went across the road to their house and up to the spare bedroom on the second floor to dig three of these out of a dresser drawer, and then closed the deal over the kitchen table. Nice folks.
  14. He's got a couple of follow-up videos that I haven't watched yet.
  15. I thought Venice was in Florida, not North Carolina.
  16. Cool idea, and very creative approach. My only qualm is that he’s not getting any mechanical advantage out of his linkage, but that’s a minor detail.
  17. There’s a good thread on homemade chaser’s pitch HERE. Here’s a tip I picked up on the Chasing and Repoussé Facebook group for a backing material that can be easily molded onto the non-working side of your piece, comes right off with needing to be heated, and actually has the intriguing non-Newtonian property of getting harder as it’s struck: Silly Putty! This is now an indispensable part of my “repoussé on the road” kit, since it can be applied, removed, repositioned, and reapplied at will and without needing a heat gun or a torch.
  18. It's certainly possible, if the steel is wrapped tightly enough. Might be a combination of both.
  19. Put in a couple of hours at the forge, at the opposite end of my range from the repoussé. Before I started to run out of propane, I got some forging done on the mounting brackets for the current railing project: And made some progress on upsetting and shaping the top end of the 1-1/4” round shaft for the stake anvil project: I also knocked out some long hook-ended stakes to help keep the patio swing from blowing over in the wind.
  20. They made a mistake when he ordered AI. Instead of Artificial Intelligence, they gave him Aggravating Idiocy!
  21. Another repoussé tryzub (Ukrainian trident) competed, this one with the background textured with the heraldic patterns that indicate the blue and yellow of the Ukrainian flag.
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