@@Don69420 well as the son of a crack head I've seen my mom cook up , she's got a designated spoon for it . Puts coke, baking soda and a couple drops of water. Heat turns mixture to a "rock" . Chemicaly alters the coke making it smokeable. I'm 26 and will personally never touch the stuff
@@Osama-Bon-Jovi-01Can confirm, s what I've been doing. More so kitchen knives than daggers tho. Looking at it now, probably wouldnt recommend knives if u wanna practice your forging, cuz with a knife youll probably only spend like 20% of the time it takes to finish one actually at the anvil, a lot of it goes into sharpening it instead. Still good practice of course, but different part of the process, mainly.
It’s actually kind of hilarious how accurate that is. Yes literally just repeat something enough times until you’re great at it and you’ll have plenty of experience
@@The_Bird_Bird_Harderthere is no soup, with no bowl. What is soup, without a container? A mess on the floor. Jokes aside, prehistoric humans ate raw meat off animals with no utensils. You’d survive without a spoon.
That's awesome... I absolutely hate pressed steel cutlery with their sharp edges that are so common these days. I have to use silverware because old cutlery is beyond superior (plus I have autism so my brain has these ridiculous needs 🤣) so it's really cool to see this craft isn't lost and others out there are making amazing things like this for themselves and others. 😁
Solingen makes a great variety of stainless steel forged cutlery. They are famous in a 1000~2000 mile radius specifically for their knife forging (which after the war transitioned more to cutlery than just knifes).
Fellow autistic blacksmith here, why not make your own! I've always gotten a real kick out of being able to use stuff I made myself, and being able to brag about others using my work aint half bad either!
@@TheSpeep I'm soooo nearly doing it... But I know my typical ADHD trend to pick up new hobbies like they're gonna out of fashion so I'm trying to finish those I've started before I move on 🤣🤣 This will definitely eventually be happening though 🤣🤣🤣
I don't like these flat designs too. I want a round grip, you have way more control over it since it extends to 3 dimensions instead of 2. (Of course its still 3 dimensions, you know exactly what I mean). On some modern eating knifes everything is sharp except the blade.
I see a ton of young guys always underestimating the value of doing the same thing over and over. It really let's you hone in on a bunch of skills, identify shortcomings and work on your gaps.
I've always wanted a set of iron utensils. One's that scream hand made. I think having the tool marks and each piece being slightly different is pretty cool.
Awesome! I'm working towards retirement in my self built cabin and although I believe I'm skilled at woodworking I'd also like to be able to forge my own tools and nails etc and be one step closer to everything I own being self made. I need to start learning blacksmithing and welding asap haha
I'd love to see this guys silverware drawer. It's probably filled with dozens of metal spoons of varying quality. The early ones are probably pretty rough, and you can almost line them all up and see his progression as a blacksmith and a craftsman.
ngl i didn't even know blacksmiths were still a thing.... its awesome to know though! (its a really cool profession in my eyes that im super interested in)
I like the ornaments. That doesn't look like it can fit much liquid in it. You seem to be skilled with the anvil. My favorite metal spoon design is Kaj Franck's Scandia Dinner Spoon. It's cup is the most pleasurable for soups. I wonder what kind of embossings it could have if it was handmade.
I've mostly been doing kitchen knives in the few years since I've started, for much the same reason: I like to make stuff I or others can use. I must admit though, for the amount of other work that goes into it as well, a knife may not be the best project to specifically practice forging. Youve kinda got me wanting to try a spoon now...
I'm guessing there's a sort of post that they slot into the holes of those anvils. The post definitely is rounded at the top. Put the flat spoon on top of the rounded post and whack it until it takes shape.
You got it wrong right off the bat. I learned from a very talented, humble, and unknown blacksmith. I'd honestly call him a master. So, when I started out he told me to diversify and make as many different things as possible. Doing the same thing repeatedly isn't learning, that's homework or a warm-up. Making different things, you are constantly learning new things. I made Arrowheads, knives, spoons, tools, later on even some cross-guards for bigger projects, and by the time I got back around to making another of the first item I had ever created, the difference was noticeable. It was visible to such a degree that you would not guess that the older one was even made by me. That took about two weeks, and I improved an intense amount in that time because I was dedicated and enjoyed it. I usually see the smiths around the online, public, and youtube sphere claiming that it took them ages to "get good." It doesn't have to take you that long, and really the thing these people are forgetting is to just wing it. Do what you think you need to based on those around you. Watch a master work, then replicate him. Plan it out roughly, cut the pieces to shape, scale it all, guess work the amount of metal you'll need based on weight, content, how much of a buffer you'll need, how thick you need certain parts to be. In no time, you'll be making spoons, and everything else, and skipping steps that you previously had to do but no longer have to. Personally I was proud of how good I got at quenching. I was working with all different shapes and so it was much easier to learn the patterns of where warps will appear and in what metal under what conditions. I got amazing at quenching to the degree that I could (and probably still can if you put me back in front of a forge) quench anything perfectly.
I’d make forks, tool knives, the style or drill bit I’ve made by hand when I was homeless, s-hooks, c-hooks, oversized fishing hooks for a special non-fish purpose, some ladles, and probably a lot of German caltrops. I can carve the spoons out of wood or use an ember from a fire between two bits of wood to let the fire carve it for me. That’s how I made my first spoon back in the Boy Scouts (not boy scout camp leader approved).
I'd cook only the finest crack in this spoon
@@Don69420 that appears to me, to be exactly what a crackhead would say, sir
@@Don69420 you can cook about any chemical my man, it's for shooting up, it isn't drug specific.
LOL
@@Don69420 well as the son of a crack head I've seen my mom cook up , she's got a designated spoon for it . Puts coke, baking soda and a couple drops of water. Heat turns mixture to a "rock" . Chemicaly alters the coke making it smokeable. I'm 26 and will personally never touch the stuff
fed posts “worst bait ever” asked to leave federal bureau of investigation
So making 2000 iron daggers in skyrim is somewhat accurate...
👍 yeah
Omg it all makes sense now
Neat me to the daggers lol
Like making a thousand steel daggers to increase your blacksmithing in skyrim 😂
Exactly like this
Lmao, tbh if I got into blacksmithing I'd probably spend a lot of my time making knives 😂
@@Osama-Bon-Jovi-01Can confirm, s what I've been doing.
More so kitchen knives than daggers tho.
Looking at it now, probably wouldnt recommend knives if u wanna practice your forging, cuz with a knife youll probably only spend like 20% of the time it takes to finish one actually at the anvil, a lot of it goes into sharpening it instead. Still good practice of course, but different part of the process, mainly.
It’s actually kind of hilarious how accurate that is. Yes literally just repeat something enough times until you’re great at it and you’ll have plenty of experience
I love it when a game exploit unironically replicates real life
It looks amazing.
Ikr
They say that the pen is mightier than the sword but both the wielder of the pen and the sword would starve to death without a spoon.
or just eat with their hands 🤷
@@MyUnquenchableThirst Soup
Actually no I suppose hands can do that too just not well.
The person with the pen could take out the insides and use it as a straw
@@The_Bird_Bird_Harderthere is no soup, with no bowl. What is soup, without a container? A mess on the floor. Jokes aside, prehistoric humans ate raw meat off animals with no utensils. You’d survive without a spoon.
this has made me want to do metal work more than any knife.
That’s great to hear, I’ll be putting out longform blacksmithing videos that aren’t knives
@@nate_weiss_ you're always preaching about making your own tools. Maybe a few videos about that?
Right?
Ay yo can I have some blacksmithing skills?
"Only a spoonful."
It was iron daggers for me. I maxxed out smithing in like an hour
"Strike while the iron is hot"
Yeah... because otherwise it's cold forging which does terrible things tot he steel.
That's awesome... I absolutely hate pressed steel cutlery with their sharp edges that are so common these days. I have to use silverware because old cutlery is beyond superior (plus I have autism so my brain has these ridiculous needs 🤣) so it's really cool to see this craft isn't lost and others out there are making amazing things like this for themselves and others. 😁
Solingen makes a great variety of stainless steel forged cutlery. They are famous in a 1000~2000 mile radius specifically for their knife forging (which after the war transitioned more to cutlery than just knifes).
Fellow autistic blacksmith here, why not make your own!
I've always gotten a real kick out of being able to use stuff I made myself, and being able to brag about others using my work aint half bad either!
@@TheSpeep I'm soooo nearly doing it... But I know my typical ADHD trend to pick up new hobbies like they're gonna out of fashion so I'm trying to finish those I've started before I move on 🤣🤣
This will definitely eventually be happening though 🤣🤣🤣
Might want to stop using old silver ustensils. Silver poisoning is harsh as fuck
I don't like these flat designs too. I want a round grip, you have way more control over it since it extends to 3 dimensions instead of 2. (Of course its still 3 dimensions, you know exactly what I mean). On some modern eating knifes everything is sharp except the blade.
I see a ton of young guys always underestimating the value of doing the same thing over and over. It really let's you hone in on a bunch of skills, identify shortcomings and work on your gaps.
I’ve started carving recently and am starting with spoons
i loved it
If only I liked benchwork like you! Never regret it but always dread it.
Good job! Nice vid
I feel you bro. Started blacksmithing and wanted to make things that have a use
Forge a large deep spoon for soup portioning now that would take a really good blacksmith to make. Also would be one hell of a video!
It’s comin up!
Super slick man! I'm looking forward to some long form content, as I'm sure others are as well. Cheers from Victoria BC 🍁
The mighty spoon!
Making knives on an anvil would be fun. Especially if you did all the over the top Damascus for butter knives.
That's a really nice spoon, great job.
Love your philosophy of making usable projects :)
For me it's bottle openers, but spoons sound like a great idea
Can never have too many utensils too, let alone selling em.
Beautiful I love your spoon
I do enjoy a good spoon
A good rusty spoon is sure to increase your iron level.
Ye' has wisdom of the forge
Beautiful work 👏 👌
I liked the handle
Daaaang that’s a perfect basting spoon or soup spoon. 😮
I have never even thought about making a spoon, might have to give it a try 🤔
Great way to practice forging and sheet metal forming. Also nice being able to use what you make
@@nate_weiss_ yeah mate I've only been forging knives in winter for a cpl years, so I need something like this to practise cheers ✌️
"You have to make a lot of the same project"
Sounds like grinding in a videogame.
I've always wanted a set of iron utensils. One's that scream hand made. I think having the tool marks and each piece being slightly different is pretty cool.
Spoons are such a great project. Great for fairs, people buy them in bulge and they can be quite intricate to make.
Very nice work!
Great stuff!!
When this guy is out of spoons he just makes more. He's unstoppable.
Very cool man, been wanting to learn this for a while.
I love this.
I see you have played knifey spooney.
That is awesome! Maybe do a video on how to get started on blacksmithing?
I love the forge Mark's on the utensils.
I started with making spoons too! I always used to joke that spoons were my passions
I like the sipmle design on the handle, makes it look very classy
Awesome! I'm working towards retirement in my self built cabin and although I believe I'm skilled at woodworking I'd also like to be able to forge my own tools and nails etc and be one step closer to everything I own being self made. I need to start learning blacksmithing and welding asap haha
If i had this spoon, it would be the only one i use. It looks truly amazing.
I'd love to see this guys silverware drawer. It's probably filled with dozens of metal spoons of varying quality. The early ones are probably pretty rough, and you can almost line them all up and see his progression as a blacksmith and a craftsman.
ngl i didn't even know blacksmiths were still a thing.... its awesome to know though! (its a really cool profession in my eyes that im super interested in)
Spoooon man! Forging iron with his hands
i mean if u gave a person the spoon it would be the coolest spoon in the drawer
Make one with a wooden handle and neat floral designs on it
That’s a beautiful spoon
These minimalist spoon is too good
Spoon is the best utensil hands down.
Skyrim level resetting be wild 😂
That fucking spoon looks amazing
Nice spoon 👍
I like making spoons too, and agree that something useful is better than something decorative
When you make something useful decorative, it makes it all the more personal
I like the ornaments. That doesn't look like it can fit much liquid in it. You seem to be skilled with the anvil. My favorite metal spoon design is Kaj Franck's Scandia Dinner Spoon. It's cup is the most pleasurable for soups. I wonder what kind of embossings it could have if it was handmade.
Will also be one of the more interesting DIY Christmas gifts your family members have ever gotten
That is a very nice spoon, well done
A good spoon is an amazing thing to have
Sick bro!!
It’s so beautiful! Your work is very tasteful ✨
Wow that’s awesome!
great spoon!
My hungry ass could never be a blacksmith
Nice
Plus, making a matching set would probably further improve your skills
I like that, thats way cool. :D
That’s good looking metal.
ITS BEAUTIFUL
Spoons are amazing in general you are doing great
I've mostly been doing kitchen knives in the few years since I've started, for much the same reason: I like to make stuff I or others can use.
I must admit though, for the amount of other work that goes into it as well, a knife may not be the best project to specifically practice forging.
Youve kinda got me wanting to try a spoon now...
Make tongs. Tongs to fit every shape of steel. Bottle openers are fun too but you will be using the tongs you make to make new things.
Damn, that is a fine spoon.
We always joke that the cat must melt down our forks when there are none in the drawer but tons of spoons. You must be his spoon guy
Man, your telling me that making thousands of iron daggers in skyrim is really how you master blacksmithing
I really gravitated towards iron daggers at first however dwarven bows are way better
They make great presents
I’m shore we would all love them waiting u forge helps hone my hammer work
I love your channel
Also good for scooping hearts out.
The comically normal handcrafted spoon
that's a cool spoon , might be a little heavy but cool
"make me a sword!" Lol, have a spoon.
Okay that's awesome, if I was given a spoon that was hand forged I'd go to war I'd someone else used it.
How do you put the curve in the spoon? Also how do you go about making forks? Very interested
I'm guessing there's a sort of post that they slot into the holes of those anvils. The post definitely is rounded at the top.
Put the flat spoon on top of the rounded post and whack it until it takes shape.
You got it wrong right off the bat. I learned from a very talented, humble, and unknown blacksmith. I'd honestly call him a master. So, when I started out he told me to diversify and make as many different things as possible. Doing the same thing repeatedly isn't learning, that's homework or a warm-up. Making different things, you are constantly learning new things. I made Arrowheads, knives, spoons, tools, later on even some cross-guards for bigger projects, and by the time I got back around to making another of the first item I had ever created, the difference was noticeable. It was visible to such a degree that you would not guess that the older one was even made by me. That took about two weeks, and I improved an intense amount in that time because I was dedicated and enjoyed it.
I usually see the smiths around the online, public, and youtube sphere claiming that it took them ages to "get good." It doesn't have to take you that long, and really the thing these people are forgetting is to just wing it. Do what you think you need to based on those around you. Watch a master work, then replicate him. Plan it out roughly, cut the pieces to shape, scale it all, guess work the amount of metal you'll need based on weight, content, how much of a buffer you'll need, how thick you need certain parts to be. In no time, you'll be making spoons, and everything else, and skipping steps that you previously had to do but no longer have to.
Personally I was proud of how good I got at quenching. I was working with all different shapes and so it was much easier to learn the patterns of where warps will appear and in what metal under what conditions. I got amazing at quenching to the degree that I could (and probably still can if you put me back in front of a forge) quench anything perfectly.
Spoon-knife! Confuse your enemies!!!
I’d make forks, tool knives, the style or drill bit I’ve made by hand when I was homeless, s-hooks, c-hooks, oversized fishing hooks for a special non-fish purpose, some ladles, and probably a lot of German caltrops.
I can carve the spoons out of wood or use an ember from a fire between two bits of wood to let the fire carve it for me. That’s how I made my first spoon back in the Boy Scouts (not boy scout camp leader approved).
Best part is if you can make a spoon you can make an arrowhead.
I'd love to sit here and make myself a spoon
That’s very nice man
Are you selling a set of these spoons? Because I want some! Looks so good
Beautiful work
That’s awesome
Is a nice spoon
Nice spoon
Hey! I make wooden spoons for the same reason!
Almighty spoon forged on Thor's anvil that has blunted many swords on its conquest of the land of soup