Perhaps create a flat on the top or bottom of your brand aligned with the logo. That way it would be easier to line up the brand with whatever item you’re branding
Chris Daigle personally I find a flat easier to align with something unless you have a mark on both sides of the brand and a visible line on the work to line it up with. Remember, the center of the brand is not positively located so it’s easy to have the mark on center of your work but have the center of the brand off-axis still leaving you with a tilted branding.
ive always loved your work. no annoying music, no gimmicks - just tools, skills, passion, and the sounds of the workshop! keep up the great work and i will keep watching.
I admire how you always take the time to fine finish your work. It is very satisfying watching the process and I bet it is even greater pleasure using the tools you create. Thanks for sharing.
Very skilled craftsmanship....but the part I like best is that you provide your son with a hands-on learning experience. That is worth everything. Best wishes.
Just be sure to remind your son that, Pride in your own workmanship, not arrogance of your ability, is what will set him apart from people who may have more talent. Keep doing what your doing TA
I have binge watched almost all of your videos, all are spectacular! As an artisan myself I enjoyed a different take on adhering the toner to the brass, never seen that one before. I use acetone and a cotton swab to transfer the toner on all of my bone, antler, and metal carvings, works very well also. Thank you for sharing all of your skills with us!
I love how there is a reason behind everything you make... you make something to make something to use for something else and at the end it all makes sense...
It's common practice for home made printed circuit boards - you print a mirror image on paper and use a clothes iron to re-fuse it on the copper clad circuit board. After removing the paper, you place it in a corrosive bath (ferric chloride or a mix of hydrochloric acid and oxygen peroxide) and eat away the unwanted copper, leaving you with the printed circuit. This can also be used for artistic engraving. In this case, it was possible to use a salt water solution and a battery charger to erode electrochemically part of the excess brass, making the hand engraving a bit easier.
@@jeffreycoulter4095 Your suggestion is a bit tempting. However, I recently changed home and I have not the shop installed (most things are still packed). You can search UA-cam for DIY PCB - there are a lot of videos, but many are made in a very messy way, even if using the right methods. I recently found one that is a bit more proper and uses acetone instead of heat, to transfer the tone (never tried it that way, but the procedure is reasonable - I also used supermarket leaflets, before I started using the backing of self-sticking films): ua-cam.com/video/cVhSCEPINpM/v-deo.html In the meantime, I'll see what I can do on my side - I'll post it here, when I get something. Hope this helps :-)
One of the biggest mistake I ever made.......not teaching shop basics to my kids at an early age. PLEASE, you young guys (and gals) follow suit here and get your kids involved, it will make a difference in their lives. Thanks for video and life lesson for others young man. 👍🏼
It's well known you've had a burning desire to do this.☺ I made mine from a $2 thrift store 100 watt electric soldering iron with a generous hunk of copper as a tip, I carved directly into that, worked out very well for me.
Very nicely done if you have a good hand with a Dremel tool! For those of us who suck with that tool, there's an alternative, but you use mild steel instead of brass, and it helps if you have access to a stencil maker - the kind that can cut stick-on vinyl sheets. Disclaimer: this is not my original idea, there are plenty of YT tutorials! Create the logo with whatever graphics editor you prefer, then transfer the image to the stencil maker program to make a stencil out of it. Create the stencil using stick-on vinyl, and transfer that to a square (or disk) of cleaned mild steel at least 1/8" thick. Suspend the steel in a bath of copper sulfate and table salt (100 g, or 1/2 cup, each in 1000 ml warm water) and leave for a half hour or more, depending on how deeply you want the steel etched. It helps to have an aquarium airstone and air pump, or a magnetic stirrer plate, to circulate the solution. I've found with a stirrer at room temperature, three to four hours is enough for a brand. Also, tape up the back and edges of the steel with something like duct tape to keep those surfaces from being etched. Just be careful if your stencil has very narrow parts, as the steel can be etched away from the sides inward underneath the stencil. I've created several satisfactory brands with this method, and the results were much neater than I could achieve with a Dremel 😊
I love watching metal turning because of how precise and well made of a tool a metal lathe is. But when I see a wood lathe it just looks so much more fluid and artistic compared the the more surgical metal one - almost like molding clay. Thank you and keep up the great videos, friend.
I was expecting you to create a full set of gravers to do the carving. An amazing job as always, both with the item you make and the video. Thanks for the amazing content Torbjorn.
Nice job Torbjörn! One tip that may not have been mentioned you can also polish your handle with the wood shavings from making the handle. I liked tour toner transfer idea. I have used this in the past for many things. Lettering, PCB manufacturing even symbols and instructions for machine plates. It works quite well. A protective layer of clear coat helps!
I was a bit surprised by 2 things -- first, that the handle didn't get branded before it was assembled, and second that you didn't have or make small chisels for cutting the brand, rather than using the rotary tool. Lovely video, as always, thanks.
Très belle réalisation. Très beau pas à pas très détaillé, complet, rien à redire. Je n'ai plus aucune excuse pour ne pas en réaliser un également après avoir vu ce tutoriel. Merci pour ce partage. Bravo. Bonne continuation.
A lovely tool. I have been toying with the idea of a branding iron for a while. Now I know how. Love the way you included your son(?) in the work. He is a lucky lad.
Far more than a blacksmith, Sir. So enjoyable & relaxing. Thank you. Nearly 300 dislikes ?????????????. What's not like other than some people are just dissatisfied with their life & inabilities & can't appreciate someone who has skills they don't .
Good Morning Torbjörn! Well done, I whish my initials would make up a cool logo like your's. What made me subscribe immediately was the fact that you teach your son this craftsmanship. Remembers me of the time, when I learned these from my father back in the early 70ies. Will check out your other videos over christmas. Take care, stay safe God Jul Andreas
In the near future I am going to high school. I will focus on the specialization of Art smithery. Thanks to your videos I learn and prepare for what awaits me.
A new video from Thunder Bear, life is good. Enjoyed it immensely! Nice to see little Bear working with you. Thank you for sharing this with us. Greetings from Alabama, USA. Wishing all here a good evening.
The only suggestion I have is to sand a small flat on the side which would represent the bottom so to be able to register it more easily. Nice piece! 👍🏻 Doh! Now I read the comments; someone else got there first. 🤷♂️
Excellent work again Thunder Bear! Also...glad to see the next generation willing to try out what Dad is doing. I need to get my two sons involved with me since one is 20 and the other is 17. ( both have birthdays at the end of this year.)
Amazing! My awl also has a flat spot to prevent me from dropping it all the time (turned the handle with my father-in-law). Now I want to make a brand and do the same thing...
Very Impressive I liked the trick with the printer paper putting it onto the Brass its kind of funny as a retired Woodworker i always routed things Straight on with rotary tools not from the side as you demonstrated of course all that matters is it worked with the bit you chose i originally was a little Stumped on what type of a jig you would need for the flex shaft untill i realized you would just freehand the logo the way you did
I've just got into your site and subscribed. Very interesting indeed. I don't know if anybody has mentioned, but the flat on your handle, also helps prevent the tool rolling off the bench.
It look like Thunder Cub really enjoys learning the skills that Papa Bear has to offer. Even my wife loves watching your videos, Herr Åhman, which says a lot. Beautiful result, as always.
For that you can buy a $170 3d printer and print one. I did a little plate with my daughters name sunk and reversed, and she can emboss her name onto paper.
Certainly, anything to be stamped / printed (like a signature will need to be prepared in reverse before carving out). This will be an added challenge. For the uninitiated, Dremel type equipment revs will skid off metal surface unless as it requires a level of competence in controlling it, as it slips off surface. All in all, it is a fun process.
I absolutely love Cherry wood. I have worked with it an have made a lot of furniture with it. It is So enjoyable to work with an gorgeous looking after you stain it. That branding iron fantastic looking !!!!!!!!!
Hey, so, tip from the jewelry world if you haven’t heard it yet. Acetone will get the same results. So, you get that face rough like you did, put the paper with toner like you placed it, but then dampen the paper with as it one from a rag or something. Not too wet. It’s a technique that takes a little practice to do. Same for getting the toner off, just a rag with acetone. I would have acid etched the design from there, but I do that on quite a few things, so I have ferric chloride and hydrochloric acid around anyway.
Горячий штамп, конечно, красив, как и шило. Но больше всего меня умилил вид мальчугана лет 10 у станка и отец, стоящий за его спиной и контролирующий процесс точения. Желаю семье автора видео крепкого здоровья и долгих лет жизни!
Даже на дереве клеймо!!! Тоже надо, мастер высокого уровня!!! У вас уже трава зеленая, точно зимы и не было? Видео качественно снято - приятно смотреть. Молодец!!!
Haha! Nice!! A mans work needs its mark! Especially grade A. I like how you made the branding iron. Others can be used with the same handle. Spring is coming soon! Hope all is well Torborn.
Perhaps create a flat on the top or bottom of your brand aligned with the logo. That way it would be easier to line up the brand with whatever item you’re branding
That's probably what I will do!
Was going to say a little witness mark, good idea.
Yep! I was going to say the same :-)
Not a flat, just a shallow v cut at the top of the brand.
Chris Daigle personally I find a flat easier to align with something unless you have a mark on both sides of the brand and a visible line on the work to line it up with. Remember, the center of the brand is not positively located so it’s easy to have the mark on center of your work but have the center of the brand off-axis still leaving you with a tilted branding.
ive always loved your work. no annoying music, no gimmicks - just tools, skills, passion, and the sounds of the workshop! keep up the great work and i will keep watching.
Seeing you teach your son how to use these tools is so heartwarming.
Is there anything this man cannot do or create? Just in awe of his skills.
I admire how you always take the time to fine finish your work. It is very satisfying watching the process and I bet it is even greater pleasure using the tools you create. Thanks for sharing.
Simple but elegant. I am glad to see that you now have an assistant in the shop.
It is great to see you are bringing your Son along. I hope one day he realizes how lucky he is to learn from such a talented, perfectionist Th
Very skilled craftsmanship....but the part I like best is that you provide your son with a hands-on learning experience. That is worth everything. Best wishes.
I like the way you involved your son. Well done. And nice job on the branding iron!
And the birth of "TA" signature series limited edition tools.
Just be sure to remind your son that, Pride in your own workmanship, not arrogance of your ability, is what will set him apart from people who may have more talent. Keep doing what your doing TA
That's a "brand" new branding iron. I would like to have something like this if i was working with wood. Great work and beautiful tool.
Thanks!!
What a neat trick with the toner to transfer a design!
Yes it worked quite well! Took a bit of trial and error to get the temperature right. It needs to be quite hot!
@@torbjornahman huh i would probably burn the paper before it's hot enough 😅
It's used a lot by hobbyists, including myself, to etch circuit boards. But I use a clothing iron.
You can also do toner transfer with acetone. I have done it to transfer artwork onto wood.
@@Bikeeast ooh, thanks a lot for the tip!
I have binge watched almost all of your videos, all are spectacular! As an artisan myself I enjoyed a different take on adhering the toner to the brass, never seen that one before. I use acetone and a cotton swab to transfer the toner on all of my bone, antler, and metal carvings, works very well also. Thank you for sharing all of your skills with us!
Thanks! Cool, I will try that also!
Very nice work as allways.
Fun to see a kid getting some real life experience in actually making something.
The toner transfer trick was nice👍
Very intricate work to make the branding iron. Beautiful!!! Now you have one for both metal forging and wood working!!! Awesome!! 👍👍
I love how there is a reason behind everything you make... you make something to make something to use for something else and at the end it all makes sense...
Great to see your son taking interes, reminds me of the old days with mine. Stay safe out there Happy Trails
Maybe I'm just late getting to the party, but I have never seen that transfer technique before - way cool! Thanks for sharing and have a happy day!
It's common practice for home made printed circuit boards - you print a mirror image on paper and use a clothes iron to re-fuse it on the copper clad circuit board. After removing the paper, you place it in a corrosive bath (ferric chloride or a mix of hydrochloric acid and oxygen peroxide) and eat away the unwanted copper, leaving you with the printed circuit. This can also be used for artistic engraving. In this case, it was possible to use a salt water solution and a battery charger to erode electrochemically part of the excess brass, making the hand engraving a bit easier.
@@JoseSilveira-newhandleforYT can you do a video on that? I'd love to see it
@@jeffreycoulter4095 Your suggestion is a bit tempting. However, I recently changed home and I have not the shop installed (most things are still packed). You can search UA-cam for DIY PCB - there are a lot of videos, but many are made in a very messy way, even if using the right methods. I recently found one that is a bit more proper and uses acetone instead of heat, to transfer the tone (never tried it that way, but the procedure is reasonable - I also used supermarket leaflets, before I started using the backing of self-sticking films): ua-cam.com/video/cVhSCEPINpM/v-deo.html
In the meantime, I'll see what I can do on my side - I'll post it here, when I get something. Hope this helps :-)
I got myself branded on my shoulder with this system. Great job and great result
Papa Fulfilling His Responsibility To His And Our Next Generation For Excellence. Thank You Very Much Your Excellency Mr. T.A.
Mr. Torbjorn! Your work and tools are of the highest standard. Congratulations on your skills!
Thank you!
One of the biggest mistake I ever made.......not teaching shop basics to my kids at an early age. PLEASE, you young guys (and gals) follow suit here and get your kids involved, it will make a difference in their lives. Thanks for video and life lesson for others young man. 👍🏼
It's well known you've had a burning desire to do this.☺
I made mine from a $2 thrift store 100 watt electric soldering iron with a generous hunk of copper as a tip, I carved directly into that, worked out very well for me.
Very nicely done if you have a good hand with a Dremel tool! For those of us who suck with that tool, there's an alternative, but you use mild steel instead of brass, and it helps if you have access to a stencil maker - the kind that can cut stick-on vinyl sheets. Disclaimer: this is not my original idea, there are plenty of YT tutorials! Create the logo with whatever graphics editor you prefer, then transfer the image to the stencil maker program to make a stencil out of it. Create the stencil using stick-on vinyl, and transfer that to a square (or disk) of cleaned mild steel at least 1/8" thick. Suspend the steel in a bath of copper sulfate and table salt (100 g, or 1/2 cup, each in 1000 ml warm water) and leave for a half hour or more, depending on how deeply you want the steel etched. It helps to have an aquarium airstone and air pump, or a magnetic stirrer plate, to circulate the solution. I've found with a stirrer at room temperature, three to four hours is enough for a brand. Also, tape up the back and edges of the steel with something like duct tape to keep those surfaces from being etched. Just be careful if your stencil has very narrow parts, as the steel can be etched away from the sides inward underneath the stencil. I've created several satisfactory brands with this method, and the results were much neater than I could achieve with a Dremel 😊
Yes these pieces deserves the badger of honor. Thank you TA.
The craft that you possess is priceless! No words spoken... while craft speaks! Cheers!
I've got a lump of brass to do this with, but you have raised the bar to god mode!!
Oh, no I haven't!? Carving is the tricky part, but with the right tools and good eyes it's not difficult just tedious!
@@torbjornahman it's not just the carving, the handle, the turning and getting your son? To help as well, great stuff!!
The work you do is meditation boss.
Absolutely personal.
Thank you.
Thanks!
Great work as always
Really nice to have you try and train your business boy the next generation is one that really needs to be trained
I love watching metal turning because of how precise and well made of a tool a metal lathe is. But when I see a wood lathe it just looks so much more fluid and artistic compared the the more surgical metal one - almost like molding clay.
Thank you and keep up the great videos, friend.
Another wonderful video and project. I was happy to see you teaching your son on the lathe. Cheers from the States
Wow Torbjorn that was so nice seeing your Son helping you. you made a Awesome Branding iron with your work sign on it
Your kids are getting a good education there.
and you can mark them at the same time! ;p
not in safety
Allways a pleasure watching you make a new tool. Well done.
I was expecting you to create a full set of gravers to do the carving. An amazing job as always, both with the item you make and the video. Thanks for the amazing content Torbjorn.
Nicely done! You are getting real good at making those ferrules! Thanks for sharing!
you have the most phenomenal skills of any crafts person we have ever seen . thank you for this fine presentation. : )
Nice job Torbjörn! One tip that may not have been mentioned you can also polish your handle with the wood shavings from making the handle. I liked tour toner transfer idea. I have used this in the past for many things. Lettering, PCB manufacturing even symbols and instructions for machine plates. It works quite well. A protective layer of clear coat helps!
Polishing with the wood shavings leaves a beautiful finish!
Wonderful job , Torbjörn ! Great video! Love seeing, you passing the knowledge to your son!
I was a bit surprised by 2 things -- first, that the handle didn't get branded before it was assembled, and second that you didn't have or make small chisels for cutting the brand, rather than using the rotary tool.
Lovely video, as always, thanks.
That turned out perfectly ! Next you need to make a ornate wind chime for your Greenhouse
Très belle réalisation.
Très beau pas à pas très détaillé, complet, rien à redire.
Je n'ai plus aucune excuse pour ne pas en réaliser un également après avoir vu ce tutoriel.
Merci pour ce partage.
Bravo.
Bonne continuation.
That is awesome and sharing your knowledge with your son is priceless! God Bless you guys!
A lovely tool. I have been toying with the idea of a branding iron for a while. Now I know how. Love the way you included your son(?) in the work. He is a lucky lad.
Far more than a blacksmith, Sir. So enjoyable & relaxing. Thank you. Nearly 300 dislikes ?????????????. What's not like other than some people are just dissatisfied with their life & inabilities & can't appreciate someone who has skills they don't .
Good Morning Torbjörn! Well done, I whish my initials would make up a cool logo like your's. What made me subscribe immediately was the fact that you teach your son this craftsmanship. Remembers me of the time, when I learned these from my father back in the early 70ies. Will check out your other videos over christmas.
Take care, stay safe
God Jul
Andreas
Thanks Andreas! God Jul
What a great, well shot, clearly presented video. 😊👍🏼 A branding iron for my wooden bowls has just risen to the top of my fun makers list.
In the near future I am going to high school. I will focus on the specialization of Art smithery. Thanks to your videos I learn and prepare for what awaits me.
Cool, good luck!
@@torbjornahman Thank you very much!
Very nice job ThunderBear, great to see your apprentice on the tools 😀👍
Superb work! The challenge is.. the right temperature or seconds of heating....
A new video from Thunder Bear, life is good. Enjoyed it immensely! Nice to see little Bear working with you. Thank you for sharing this with us. Greetings from Alabama, USA. Wishing all here a good evening.
Thanks Robert glad you liked it!
Nice, Don’t you just love making it for yourself! Means so much more.
That's exactly what I was hoping you would make! Great job.
Cool, thanks!
I love the fact that you've made a tool to use on a tool you've made.
The Dremel you have seems to be of superior quality than the ones sold in the United States. Nice project!
All that's missing now in a brading iron to brand the branding iron. Can't leave that one unmarked! Well done, Torbjörn!
Actually, technically all that's missing is a second handle.
@@Gameboygenius Shhhh, don't tell Torbjörn that, I rather watch him make a whole other branding iron that just a handle.
Riesci sempre a stupirmi con le tue capacità e la tua creatività, mi mancano le parole per farti ancora una volta i COMPLIMENTI
you did it again wow what craftsmanship
All your making tools and components are speaking great work mr ahman
The only suggestion I have is to sand a small flat on the side which would represent the bottom so to be able to register it more easily. Nice piece! 👍🏻
Doh! Now I read the comments; someone else got there first. 🤷♂️
Excellent work again Thunder Bear! Also...glad to see the next generation willing to try out what Dad is doing. I need to get my two sons involved with me since one is 20 and the other is 17. ( both have birthdays at the end of this year.)
Thank you. Sounds good to me!
Amazing! My awl also has a flat spot to prevent me from dropping it all the time (turned the handle with my father-in-law). Now I want to make a brand and do the same thing...
Blacksmith, woodturner, what else does this marvelous craftsman do?
Very Impressive I liked the trick with the printer paper putting it onto the Brass its kind of funny as a retired Woodworker i always routed things Straight on with rotary tools not from the side as you demonstrated of course all that matters is it worked with the bit you chose i originally was a little Stumped on what type of a jig you would need for the flex shaft untill i realized you would just freehand the logo the way you did
This is such a clever transfer technique! I'll definitely use that thanks!
you can make just average tools that would work just as good. BUT yours are perfect with great care and craftsmanship. thank you for the video
Nice shape handle, just like my granddads hand tools. Beats moulded plastic every time. Thanks for sharing.
I've just got into your site and subscribed. Very interesting indeed. I don't know if anybody has mentioned, but the flat on your handle, also helps prevent the tool rolling off the bench.
Thanks!
It look like Thunder Cub really enjoys learning the skills that Papa Bear has to offer. Even my wife loves watching your videos, Herr Åhman, which says a lot. Beautiful result, as always.
Ha ha, that's great! Thanks!
Dear Torbjörn, Great to see this lovely creation. You make the difficult seem so easy. Cheers.
Thanks Peter!
Should be a arrow or mark which show you top or bottom while branding iron is in round shape . Any way many thumbs up you are a genius .
Oh, it is exactly what my daughter wants to stamp our clay pots with her signature!
Very well done, as always!
For that you can buy a $170 3d printer and print one. I did a little plate with my daughters name sunk and reversed, and she can emboss her name onto paper.
Certainly, anything to be stamped / printed (like a signature will need to be prepared in reverse before carving out).
This will be an added challenge.
For the uninitiated, Dremel type equipment revs will skid off metal surface unless as it requires a level of competence in controlling it, as it slips off surface.
All in all, it is a fun process.
I absolutely love Cherry wood. I have worked with it an have made a lot of furniture with it. It is So enjoyable to work with an gorgeous looking after you stain it. That branding iron fantastic looking !!!!!!!!!
Thanks!
I love your work no matter how big or small it is cause you do it with top care
An indicator line to know the orientation from the side would be handy. Neat video!
Thank you. I honestly love sanding down the awl. It won't roll off anymore.
Hey, so, tip from the jewelry world if you haven’t heard it yet. Acetone will get the same results. So, you get that face rough like you did, put the paper with toner like you placed it, but then dampen the paper with as it one from a rag or something. Not too wet. It’s a technique that takes a little practice to do. Same for getting the toner off, just a rag with acetone. I would have acid etched the design from there, but I do that on quite a few things, so I have ferric chloride and hydrochloric acid around anyway.
Your work finishing is awesome. Very nice hand crafted tool as all of your work bro 👍
Very nice! The rotary tool also seems really good.
Горячий штамп, конечно, красив, как и шило. Но больше всего меня умилил вид мальчугана лет 10 у станка и отец, стоящий за его спиной и контролирующий процесс точения.
Желаю семье автора видео крепкого здоровья и долгих лет жизни!
Thank you for the "Toner Trick". Much appreciated. Cheers.
Фирменная подпись это очень красиво! Будет помогать в работе! Как минимум понимать настроение! Очень хорошо, что приучаете ребенка к труду! Удачи Вам!
Your are a god in the trade men and a ARTIST. I love your new videos.
Beautiful work as always! I didn’t know the toner heat trick. Super cool
That work bench likes like it's seen several lifetimes of service!
Yes it has been abused, but still going strong... I might restore it to a better state...
@@torbjornahman
Know the syndrome, I've loads of things I thought I might do, ............that are still waiting!
That's what i was hoping you would make exactly. Love it
So there's the makers mark you ended to when I commented about it in the awl video! Very nice!
eluded to*
Даже на дереве клеймо!!! Тоже надо, мастер высокого уровня!!! У вас уже трава зеленая, точно зимы и не было? Видео качественно снято - приятно смотреть. Молодец!!!
Cool With that tool you can make other brands that screw on to the handle like a smaller logo for awkward round surfaces.
Yes and again a super work I like that and especially nice and relaxed without hectic with eye for details.
And suddenly, the dog, the cat, the wife, and the children are hiding.
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
You got your boy involved.... Great to see 👍🏻😎
Wow! Incredible. Your videos look like poetry to me so calming and relaxing. 👍👍👍
Very nice indeed. A lathe is a cool tool to own.
Haha! Nice!! A mans work needs its mark! Especially grade A. I like how you made the branding iron. Others can be used with the same handle. Spring is coming soon! Hope all is well Torborn.
Yes, that's the idea to be able to switch between different ones/sizes.
Absolutely enjoy watching your videos. Thanks for sharing
Ratcheting tap handle!! Neat!!! 👍
Looks like a 'Yankee' screwdriver forward/locked/reverse toggle.
this video was oddly satisfying.....thank you for posting this
And..... Another beautiful piece of art... 😁