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Wednesday, 29 February 2012
Some work by John Haley III
Here is a great example of an artist that manages to twist a style into something very unique. The Art Nouveau influence on Haley's work is obvious, but his take on it is totally unique. A common criticism of Art Nouveau is that it is overly feminine, but the work below is far from that. John Haley manages to take the organic flowing curves usually found in Art Nouveau motifs and mix them with violent edges and sharp points that make his work look like a mix of Alphonse Mucha and Frank Frazetta translated into forge work.
Monday, 6 February 2012
Forging my own stock with the Massey
A video of me forging my own stock, just like a real blacksmith! I had to make my own 40 x 20 mm from 30 mm square because I waited until the last minute to order my material and it didn't show up in time.
Forging a set down with the Massey
Here is a video of me forging the set downs for my gate elements using the Massey and the Blacker. The method came from the Lillico book and some trial and error test pieces. In later pieces I forged down the section using a set black tool before moving over to the Blacker.
Sunday, 5 February 2012
Forging a halving joint on the Massey power hammer.
Here is a quick video of me forging a halving joint for my gate project. The material spread nicely and the joint ended up looking very good.
Drifting a big hole on the Sahinler power hammer.
Here is a video I made of drifting a hole out from round to tapered octagon for flypress weights. I got the method from a video of Claudio Bottero punching and drifting a hammer eye. As you can see in the video, the method is trial and error. It ends up working quite well in the end.
3DSP Samples
Here are some of the samples I have made for my 3DSP project. All samples have been made using the power hammer with minimal hand work with the exception of the tooling.
Rodded chisel punch forged from EN9 high carbon. The hole was punched and drifted by hand, and everything else was done using the power hammer. |
Texture and spread sample forged from 5 diameter pipe section. Half of the pipe was compressed and forged under the fullering dies, while the other half was untouched. |
Another view of the same sample. |
Here is part of my gate for design development that uses side set tooling to set down material under the power hammer. |
A close up of the set down. Please view the video for a full demonstration of how it was done. |
Cut off tool forged from spring steel. |
This sample plays with the possibilities of set downs and material isolation. |
Punches made from EN9 high carbon tool steel. All three were forged smith and striker using mostly the flatter. |
This is a sample using an interesting spring swage that I found on the rack. It has a single round fuller on top and two round fullers on bottom. |
The opposite side of the same sample. |
An interesting finial sample made using the side set tool to isolate the end of the bar on two sides. The end was then squashed on the blacker mechanical hammer. |
A sample using the same spring swage as the sample above. |
Made using the side set tool to isolate material then a flat block tool to forge down the center area. |
Floral study using the fullering dies on the Kugn power hammer. |
Box section that has been forged down using the fullering dies on the Kugn hammer. |
The other half of the same sample cut off on the bandsaw. |
Friday, 3 February 2012
Albert Paley Forging Videos
Here is some video I shot while at his residency at Steneby School in Sweden. While working there, he did almost all work on a Beche 125 kg power hammer with flat dies. I never saw him use any tooling, swages, etc. He really shows the versatility of flat dies to achieve sculptural form and texture. All video was shot with my iphone so the quality is not great, but it still illustrates the work.
Wednesday, 1 February 2012
More pics of power hammer work.
Here some more pictures of free form power hammer forging used in different pieces of work. These pieces really exploit the plasticity of the material.
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