Jump to content
I Forge Iron

Touch Marks - in or out?


ohowson

Recommended Posts

The different design makes different impressions.  If you have a design that makes indentations into the metal such as number and letter stamps, only the lines in the metal are moved. Think of a chisel mark.

If you want a raised impression on a depressed field in the metal, you then must move ALL the metal to make the depression as well as leave an area for the metal to raise up and fill making the raised impression.  This takes a much larger amount of force.

Contact Stampman on IFI as he makes both types of dies professionally. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If you do a positive and make the negative from that, be sure and make the raised/depressed areas of the positive a bit taller/deeper than you need.  There will always be a bit of a "blurry" edge (for want of a better word) on the negative you create from it so you can grind a fraction off and polish the end of the negative to get the crispness that looks good when stamped.

Personally, I'd lean toward a professionally made stamp if I was marking a lot of stuff. Reproductions as well as scaled versions for other work would be a LOT easier..not to mention dumping the initial hassles on someone set up to do it daily.

As to choice of methods...lots of factors including complexity of the image.  Because of that, I'd lean toward the deciding factor being whether it's more easily "carved" on the stamp or the positive.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, Benona blacksmith said:

They understand what you mean. There trying to give you another idea to achieve the same/different result (if that makes sense)!

Not to me - I may be perennially stupid though. 

2 hours ago, Kozzy said:

If you do a positive and make the negative from that, be sure and make the raised/depressed areas of the positive a bit taller/deeper than you need.  There will always be a bit of a "blurry" edge (for want of a better word) on the negative you create from it so you can grind a fraction off and polish the end of the negative to get the crispness that looks good when stamped.

Thanks, that was the answer to the question I intended to ask. I don’t want to go professional - if I had the money I’d spend it on steel. I have a touch mark design which is simple like chisel marks so I guess I’ll try method 2 and follow your advice, see how it goes  

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

To elaborate a little bit, use a simple example of the mark being nothing but an "X".  That's actually hard to make as a positive (to stamp a recessed X) by "carving" because the point where the lines cross is a devil to carve:  The  sharp inside corners  in the "V"s are really hard to carve as a sharp meeting point and always end up rounded from the tooling.  However, as a negative (recess), it's as easy as pie to make--just 2 crossing cuts.  

So, if my stamp was an X and I wanted the final parts I was stamping into to have the X image recessed (like your standard letter stamp), I'd make the punch by using the pattern method because cutting that X would be a 3 minute process...then stamp my hot punch into that pattern and clean it up.  That'd keep all the lines and V areas as sharp as possible, with the rest being easy to clean up with a file.

One other factor as these get more complex...you can make your pattern to stamp the hot punch into in multiple pieces rather than one single piece.  You can't really do that if you are making the actual punch.  By making the pattern in individual bits (and cleverly), you can tack weld the back side of the bits in place and use the most appropriate carving method for that individual segment.  Takes planning though.

And you can hybridize too...but this is already getting so convoluted and complex write that I have probably lost everyone already.

Point is, use the method that makes each part as easy as possible to carve cleanly.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

There is nothing wrong with practicing with a wooden stamp and making an impression into modeling clay.  It will show you many of the problems involved and allow you to work things out without a whole lot of expense.

There are discussions on the site as to how to make touchmarks and or stamps.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

17 hours ago, ohowson said:

Sorry pnut I think you've misunderstood

Yes indeed I did. I was at work when I read your post. I reread it and realize your talking about two different methods of making a negative stamp and not the difference between a positive and negative touchmark as I first thought. That's what happens when I'm doing too many things at once. :huh:

Pnut

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, pnut said:

Yes indeed I did. I was at work when I read your post. I reread it and realize your talking about two different methods of making a negative stamp.:o

Pnut

No worries - I appreciate the effort in getting back to me :)

Thing is you see I bought a rotary tool and needed to decide what to do with it! 

 

I'm going for a simplified pushmi-pullyu

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I've done some work by making and using small chisels from flat cut masonry nails---heat treatable! to get the crisp lines and then a rotary tool to waste the background material pushed away by the chisels.

One quickly learns that the excessive prices requested by professionals are really dirt cheap.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...