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I Forge Iron

easilyconfused

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Posts posted by easilyconfused

  1. Most tongs you adjust by heating the jaws past the rivet and fitting with vice/hammer. Open and close the jaw while hot to loosen the rivet and don't quench the rivet to prevent tightening again.

  2. It is also a very important vaccine as by the time you see symptoms, it is the toxin primarily working and the bacteria producing it are easily treated by antibiotics. By getting your immune system primed for the toxin release, your body can fight off the toxin the bacteria produce, before it affects your nervous system.

  3. Getting a few views. you have to be active on the forums and advertise elsewhere too though. You get buried very quickly in the listings so people don't see you right away otherwise, unless you spend the $.20 every time you relist and relist often. No sales on etsy yet which in and of itself is probably leading to no-one taking a risk as someone said earlier. I have had some sales locally through it though but people didn't want to pay shipping when they bought it online.

  4. While not the best for tools, it does work for lots of things. I've just finished making bottle openers out of it. I also made some really good tent pegs. The ridges helped them hold. It can be inconsistent, but I've had issues with regular hot rolled steel too. As long as you pay attention to your heats and such, and accept that you may have some failed projects, it's fun to see what the twists can become.

  5. I just got told on Etsy that when the person saw the anvil in my avatar on the forums, they thought I was doing jewelry and I should come up with something else that would point out it wasn't! I have no idea what silversmiths and such used for their guild symbols but since when is the anvil not associated with blacksmithing and, shudder, horseshoes?!

  6. It's hard to say if it pays. Like every marketing tool, it's what you make of it. Be prepared to spend time advertising it and posting on the forums to get the community looking at your stuff and maybe catch an admin's eye to be promo'd.

    Frosty, you sure that's your wife's shop? Have her look up Ridgwayforge for stuff for you to make ;)

  7. Like Frosty said, it's a large market place. If you're worried about advertising and having someone else get your sale on etsy, the same can be said for any website because most people google the name rather than enter the address in. That's why I make sure my shop name is the main focus of advertising, not etsy.

    It's also a relatively cheap access to a large marketplace with a trusted shopping cart system and it's regulated so people can feel a bit safer knowing there are ways to cancel transactions and dispute things.

    As well, our aspect of metalwork is relatively under competitive. I've seen lots of people also link their website and use it as their store.

    Frosty: The terms of agreement sate that you can link to your website, as long as everything listed for sale there is on etsy. Otherwise it's considered fee avoidance. But you can set up your portfolio for people to see and get custom works.

  8. so far, not well but I just joined and it's not a holiday yet and I don't have much inventory. Other's I've seen have done relatively well though. Depends on your advertising. Things get buried so you have to relist a bit to keep on top.

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