When you think of the cost for such a piece, consider not only the long-lasting quality, but that the money is put into the hands of those who earned it as directly as possible. They deserve good wages for their work and dedication. That is how we can serve local populations/economies and keep such skills alive and kicking. And copper is just wicked beautiful stuff.
It's great that you can still buy hand-made items made by craftsmen. This reminds me of Gerstner, a company that still makes fine wooden tool boxes the same way they did 100 years ago.
OH. MY. GOOOHHHHD! I've lived not 50 miles away, and never known.....HOW😡. And my kitchen is 100% copper. I have 7 copper sinks. Copper silverware. Copper flower pots. 2 HUGE 1800's apple butter kettles from my family farm (I bet you made them)........oh my gosh dang. Never knew. I'm comin down, to MOVE IN!😍❤️❣️ The atmosphere ❣️❤️😍. The beauty. I'm so happy I know now❣️❤️🥰
I stopped by there once on a slow day. They seemed genuinely surprised to have a visitor. Cool little place and you might want to eat at Old 30 BBQ - good beer and good bbq.
I've known about and visited the Old Indian Mill in Upper Sandusky since I first visited it on a school trip in the fifth grade. I once lived on State Rte 4 just before you turn left to go to Monnet. I am 75 years old now and it's a darned shame this is the first I have learned about the Kettle Works in Bucyrus. That's a darn shame because I would have much rather visit there, than the Old Indian Mill!
Fantastic. 👍 My family has been in the candy making business since 1921. There was 3 or 4 huge copper candy kettles and I often wondered how they were made. Now I'm wondering if the kettles were possibly made by this company. 😃
They put alot of hard work into them hours of work dont let the video fool you it takes them a few days to make them i go up to the little park next door and watch em make them.
ua-cam.com/video/B79UwKEX9Dc/v-deo.html Building timpani is a very detailed science and art. I ordered a bowl from Steve and it is fantastic. The bowls in this link are from the 50's and made in this shop.
And a hard hat, knee pads, shin pads, cast iron apron, visor , kevlar socks, t shirt, underwear and gloves, thick leather coat with cooling system and last but not least a silk parachute and a bunch of daisies !
i loved this story and it was well done but these types of documentaries often paint a picture of a dying bread. Its not true a lot of makers are looking back at hand tools and they worked great and could make finer details and not power bill. im mostly a wood worker and i was tired of dust flying in my face and when i went back to hand tools i was more happy and i worked more.
When you think of the cost for such a piece, consider not only the long-lasting quality, but that the money is put into the hands of those who earned it as directly as possible. They deserve good wages for their work and dedication. That is how we can serve local populations/economies and keep such skills alive and kicking. And copper is just wicked beautiful stuff.
It's great that you can still buy hand-made items made by craftsmen. This reminds me of Gerstner, a company that still makes fine wooden tool boxes the same way they did 100 years ago.
I am a silver smith in northern Kentucky , but I would love to study copper works at this shop!
As a silversmith I'm enormously impressed with your craftsmanship and continuing to honor this heritage.
I love to see small business last over so long and still survive!!!!!!
OH. MY. GOOOHHHHD! I've lived not 50 miles away, and never known.....HOW😡. And my kitchen is 100% copper. I have 7 copper sinks. Copper silverware. Copper flower pots. 2 HUGE 1800's apple butter kettles from my family farm (I bet you made them)........oh my gosh dang. Never knew. I'm comin down, to MOVE IN!😍❤️❣️ The atmosphere ❣️❤️😍. The beauty. I'm so happy I know now❣️❤️🥰
What an Honor it would be to work there!
This was great to watch - respect to these craftsmen.
We just picked up our 20 gallon apple butter kettle yesterday from here. Beautiful kettle, beautiful experience!
I stopped by there once on a slow day. They seemed genuinely surprised to have a visitor. Cool little place and you might want to eat at Old 30 BBQ - good beer and good bbq.
Such a pleasant, calm and quiet commentary by the experienced coppersmith.
Love your craftsmanship, keep it going
That's a fantastic company thank you for making these old carols
I've known about and visited the Old Indian Mill in Upper Sandusky since I first visited it on a school trip in the fifth grade. I once lived on State Rte 4 just before you turn left to go to Monnet. I am 75 years old now and it's a darned shame this is the first I have learned about the Kettle Works in Bucyrus. That's a darn shame because I would have much rather visit there, than the Old Indian Mill!
tradition in making.congratulations.
Keeping the history going. Well done, sir.
Beautiful!
Awesome work!!! Отличная работа!!! Есть чему поучиться.
Thank You for sharing.
Hey, they made our apple butter kettles!
neat trade skills, thanks for the vidja good crarftsmanship love it
Great Craftsmanship!
I would love to learn from these guys
Walk past here every tuesday and thursday.
I started looking for apple butter recipes now I'm wondering if I should make my own pot...
that would be quite an undertaking
Very good documentary video
Wish they made fry pans as well. I'd buy one.
We do!!
Fantastic. 👍 My family has been in the candy making business since 1921. There was 3 or 4 huge copper candy kettles and I often wondered how they were made. Now I'm wondering if the kettles were possibly made by this company. 😃
Hi I really Enjoyed your video, can you please tell me why you can eat candy from an unlined kettle? Thank you!
Me encanta la primera industria de delos primeros hombres genios
Do you do classes?
copper, copper, MY KINGDOM FOR GOOD COPPER, please tell me where?
Brilliant work and skill. But how does a kettle drum cost $40,000? though I’m sure it’s worth it!
They put alot of hard work into them hours of work dont let the video fool you it takes them a few days to make them i go up to the little park next door and watch em make them.
Materials isn't cheap either.
@@stilwelljoshwa They ship to Holland and a company there does the final work including a leather top.
Prolly i dont work there just lived here for 40 years.
ua-cam.com/video/B79UwKEX9Dc/v-deo.html Building timpani is a very detailed science and art. I ordered a bowl from Steve and it is fantastic. The bowls in this link are from the 50's and made in this shop.
Do they sell their copper items locally? I live about 2 hours from them.
Call and talk with them before you make a trip. When I went there, I was able to get some things but a LOT of things have to be ordered.
What, in your opinion is best way to clean an old kettle corn copper Kettle?
I have an old copper kettle too. I'd like to clean the inside and use it. Many health benefits to copper I hear.
Nice work, however safety glasses would be a good idea.
And a hard hat, knee pads, shin pads, cast iron apron, visor , kevlar socks, t shirt, underwear and gloves, thick leather coat with cooling system and last but not least a silk parachute and a bunch of daisies !
@@vankuipland You must be a desk jockey who has never worked in a shop or industrial environment.
what about copper pot stills? are those assembled by brazing or can soldering be strong enough to take the heat of a burner under them?
Soldered.
@@canadiangemstones7636 would have to be non lead and soldier that can take higher heat i suppose
В чём хорошо медная посуда?
why copper for applebutter kettle ??
distributes heat evenly, doesn't burn and doesn't stick.
👍💪👏
Nunca mostraron el producto terminado ...
Artwork on wall at 4:30 lol.
i loved this story and it was well done but these types of documentaries often paint a picture of a dying bread. Its not true a lot of makers are looking back at hand tools and they worked great and could make finer details and not power bill. im mostly a wood worker and i was tired of dust flying in my face and when i went back to hand tools i was more happy and i worked more.
1972
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