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I Forge Iron

Started smithing today


Peter R

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I just wanted to share that I have officially picked up smithing as a hobby today.  I'm looking forward to having more to contribute.

Bottle torch, an old hammer, old pliers, railroad track, and a bench vise.  I forgot to take a pic after I drilled a hole.  I'm avoiding jigs or round nose pliers for bending, I want to practice with just hammer, heat, and "anvil" surface.

I'll try to post a follow up picture when I've made a lot more, I'm curious to see how I progress.

Big thanks to the folks who run this site, and especially to those who take time to make free education available and answer questions.

 

 

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Excellent first day at the anvil Peter! That's as nice a nail hook as I've seen, you even turned the finial scroll the right direction! Several thumbs UP! 

One suggestion is to make the finial scroll a little larger so it's less likely to make holes in heavy coats. 

Don't wait till you've made a LOT of stuff to show us pictures, we LOVE pics you know.;)

Frosty The Lucky.

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Thanks guys!  To answer a few Qs, yeah I think a JABOD is in my future, but free charcoal likely isn't - curse of living in cityburbs creates more challenges than that's worth for me at the moment.  But I'm in Maryland and coal-land adjacent, so I'm hopeful there are other good inexpensive options nearby.

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You can run the JABOD with wood. 

If Maryland will not allow you to use your back yard, there should be a park somewhere close.  Make the shop portable.

Find a solution to the problem.  Propane  or induction heating comes to mind.

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  • 3 weeks later...

Finally got a piece of cedar that I liked enough to do a burn finish and mount this pair of hooks to.  The hooks were done by me (right hook) and my wife (left hook)during a 2hr intro class in February before the pandemic put a stop to pursuing more.  I've been making more nail hooks and hope to have some mounted on maple and take some pics this weekend.

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Thanks Thomas! The design was from the instructor (probably to keep class to the necessary length) and the hooks didnt swivel.. until I descaled them in vinegar (after riveting to the plate) and of course the joint was loose after losing that material.  I had a scrap piece of steel rod that I beat and filed into something kind of shaped enough to set the rivets tighter.  I'm glad to have a better solution for future hooks, thanks!

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I use a lot of nails: 8 penny, 16 penny and 20 penny as rivets. To make them "decorative" I'll often drop them in a bolster plate and peen the head so it's domed and hammered.  Cut them to length and use them like a store boughten rivet.  (Some folks consider me the tiniest little bit on the cheap side...)

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Keys are the intended use.  I was inspired by a set of hooks on a key shaped board I got from my wife's great grandma's farmhouse.  I've started keeping keys, COVID masks, earbuds, a pocket measuring tape (on a keychain), and a small card wallet hanging right by the door - most useful thing I've put on a wall ever, so I wanted to make something similar in use.  The boards are 10 inches wide, close to 2.75 inches tall probably.

What I love about the hooks is that small hooks by the door don't accumulate a bunch of junk (like tables near an entryway do) from the household's comings and goings. Flat surfaces are the enemy to organization!

 

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  • 2 months later...

I've been busy not forging much since I last posted.  These icicle ornaments were pretty fun to practice longer gentle tapers and play with temperatures for twists - really evident how some twists were at a high yellow and others at an orange.  Twisting the skinny points is tricky, as is straightening after twists.  I probably could use a good stump and wood mallet, maybe that'll be an upcoming project.

Santa brought me no coal, but did bring a box of 50 railroad spikes.  I think I'll need to find a good use for those.

 

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