1572 - Rock to Point Riverbed Gravel Chert Flintknapping

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  • Опубліковано 26 лип 2023
  • Flintknapping. Knapping rocks. Making stone tools. Arrowhead. Lithic reduction.
    Explaining Platforms and Angles with Words
    Part 1
    • 477 - Flintknapping Lo...
    Part 2
    • 478 - Flintknapping Lo...
    Part 3
    • 479 - Flintknapping Lo...
    Aluminum sizes and source
    www.ebay.com/itm/333413861610
    www.ebay.com/itm/333393532365
    Large Rectangular Abrader:
    flintknappingsupplies.com/pro...
    I have two other channels and a Patreon Account
    Allergic Hobbit: / @allergichobbit3494
    PAB Philosophy: / @pabphilosophy
    Patreon:
    www.patreon.com/jackcrafty?fa...
    Front View of My Knapping Style:
    • 589 - Flintknapping An...
    Abo Technique (Natural Materials Only) My Horizontal Punch Style of Knapping:
    • 407 - Abo Flintknappin...
    Swiping or Scraping with hard Hammer:
    • Flintknapping Hardhamm...
    WHAT IS HIGH GRADE STONE?
    Anything you can run a 1/2" or more flake with a pressure flaker.
    HEAT TREATING:
    Heat treat a few FLAKES of everything you got except HIGH GRADE Raw Stone, Obsidian, Dacite, Basalt, Hornstone, Sonora, Fort Payne, or Rhyolite. Start with flakes and spalls less than 1" thick for 200°F for 24 hours to dry it out. Then raise the temp to 275°F and hold for 4 hours. Let cool down for 12 hours. Chip and compare. If no difference, put back I at 200°F for 1/2 hour, then raise to 275 for 1/2 hour, then raise to 325 for 4 hours.
    Let cool down for 12 hours. Chip and compare. If no difference, put back in at 200°F for 1/2 hour, then raise to 275 for 1/2 hour, then raise to 325 for 1/2 hour, the raise to 375 for 4 hours.
    Repeat with temp going up 50°F until you reach 600°F or nice chippable stone. Whichever comes first. If no good result, or things blow up, let us know.
  • Навчання та стиль

КОМЕНТАРІ • 105

  • @jannecas5281
    @jannecas5281 11 місяців тому +15

    lets be honest, we all like rock to point videos with mid grade stones 😃

    • @kensanity178
      @kensanity178 11 місяців тому

      Yeah, we all wish we could do it. But at least we can watch Jack do it.

    • @jannecas5281
      @jannecas5281 11 місяців тому

      @@kensanity178 i can do too but with high grade stones like obsidian or europian flint nodules. Thats why i like when jack work with mid low grade or crack stuff

    • @rogerfountain4995
      @rogerfountain4995 5 місяців тому

      I'm just starting to knap its a lot of dedication and tedious work. THANK YOU FOR YOUR VIDEOS.

  • @roybrauski9409
    @roybrauski9409 21 день тому +2

    This is my new favorite channel

    • @expatatat
      @expatatat 3 дні тому

      It’s so good, he could just put this stuff to a podcast even without the wonderful knapping.

  • @ronaldcarbonneau77
    @ronaldcarbonneau77 11 місяців тому +7

    Well , finished the video,over some coffee, love the point. I actually like that style and it shows the way out of a situation that can always occur. Great job.

  • @d.l.huntministries8131
    @d.l.huntministries8131 7 місяців тому +4

    What a fun video to watch!! I'm just a beginner and enjoying it. THANK YOU.

  • @kennethhart3904
    @kennethhart3904 2 місяці тому +1

    Well you made a nice perdernales from a accident well done crafty!!!

  • @gregshelton9927
    @gregshelton9927 9 місяців тому +3

    My late father respected you. I enjoy watching and possibly will try to your trade soon.

  • @RedEyedPatriot
    @RedEyedPatriot 11 місяців тому +4

    I crashed out early last night. Watching now. 😎🏹

    • @KnapperJackCrafty
      @KnapperJackCrafty  11 місяців тому +1

      I was wondering...

    • @RedEyedPatriot
      @RedEyedPatriot 11 місяців тому

      @@KnapperJackCrafty def missed some Crafty vids this week. Expect a return package soon as I can. Few things I wanna send you.

    • @smokes1973
      @smokes1973 11 місяців тому

      It usually takes me 3 days to finish a video! Between work and wife....😂😂😂

  • @austinlong7700
    @austinlong7700 10 місяців тому +5

    Love your sense of humor! Very entertaining and you taught me some things! I’m new to your channel and want to thank you for what you do!!
    As for the artifacts they were not doing it for art or for anything else other than an important everyday survival tool. I’m sure they knapped them down until they though it would perform the duty they had in mind for that piece and that’s all. We have life so easy now days we can do it as a hobby and be very judgmental about pieces.

  • @genegorringe7395
    @genegorringe7395 11 місяців тому +2

    Very nice. I definitely enjoyed the video thanks Gene Gorringe Mi 👍 ✌️ 🇺🇲

  • @ronaldcarbonneau77
    @ronaldcarbonneau77 11 місяців тому +3

    Nice tough stuff. Don't look so tough when you get with it. It does look like some quartzite though. Thanks for the video. Ever onward. 👍

  • @user-zb7ow5cq6b
    @user-zb7ow5cq6b 11 місяців тому +3

    Thank you sir always helpful for us newbies.

  • @Jason1975ism
    @Jason1975ism 11 місяців тому +5

    The word is reciprocity and no, that wasn't the status quo. People have always been wasteful and the victors have always gotten the spoils. Mr Patrick is correct.

  • @robsefton4952
    @robsefton4952 6 місяців тому +1

    This is one of my favorite videos you've done. I love your sense of humor. Yes to reverse. I've been getting alot of that same rock from a guy in texas. I broke my ring finger on that stuff and kept going. I like that it's so tough because the tools I make with it are way more durable. I didn't get many good sized blades from 28 pounds of it but have gotten alot of smaller ones. Under 3 inches. Perfect for craft making knives and skinning knives. And you're sure right about over baking it. They definately become snap in halfs even more. I like how you were able to change the stem style. And I really love the "crude" look over the cnc machined look. You are truely the knap master.

  • @frankburkett4627
    @frankburkett4627 6 місяців тому +1

    The more I watch the more I learn👍👍😳

  • @samgibson684
    @samgibson684 6 місяців тому +1

    Really? Yeah! Now you know 😆
    The banter is fun

  • @donaldrobbins1131
    @donaldrobbins1131 11 місяців тому +1

    Patience, knowledge and skill produces a nice thin point. you have it my friend. Great job.

  • @bagel5085
    @bagel5085 11 місяців тому +4

    What I most love about learning a new skill is that moment when something clicks. Two weeks ago i picked up a piece of really crappy Onondaga and a hammer stone at the local creek while fishing and figured why not. It was an awful experience. last week i found some glassy/waxy tile in my garage the kind that is homogeneous the whole way through. I decided to try to pressure flake it. After two days i had 3 blisters and two sore wrists and one 1 inch rudimentary point. Pretty chunky but it was semi-usable. Yesterday i went to Lowes and picked up a aluminum rod and tried indirect percussion. I picked up another piece and ruined it within 10 hits. I thought about it for a bit and tried to apply some of the things i learned while experimenting with pressure and i came out with a two inch point semi-thinned (4 to1ish) and with no original surface. Nothing like the points that i see here but I'm pretty sure I am hooked now.

    • @Jason1975ism
      @Jason1975ism 11 місяців тому +3

      Refinement comes with practice.

    • @briantaulbee6452
      @briantaulbee6452 11 місяців тому +3

      Sounds like you are on the right track. It's certainly not the easiest thing I ever tried to learn but if you feel hooked on it, wait til that becomes obsession haha. If you have the desire, you will do this

    • @KnapperJackCrafty
      @KnapperJackCrafty  11 місяців тому +4

      Hooked and about to be reeled in. Wait 'til you try some good stone.

    • @j.shorter4716
      @j.shorter4716 11 місяців тому

      Try some obsidian. It can and will break on you but it flakes very easily. When I was starting out it was easier for me to get a feel for the basics on obsidian. I could make a decent and thin point with obsidian before I could with Chert. Once you get a better feel for the right platforms you’ll realize that you barely have to hit obsidian to get nice flakes. Also if you can find some thick glass that is nice too.

    • @Jason1975ism
      @Jason1975ism 11 місяців тому

      @@j.shorter4716 obsidian is not beginner material. In my opinion, obsidian is a material to specialize in. I work exclusively obsidian and have for 13 years. It's not starter rock.

  • @raptorjesus2572
    @raptorjesus2572 7 місяців тому +1

    Every time you pull out the box cutter knife to get out those fingernail step fractures my anxiety goes through the roof, they are very sharp, be careful!

  • @travisfischer2607
    @travisfischer2607 6 місяців тому +1

    Great information!

  • @dirtcrawler1
    @dirtcrawler1 7 місяців тому +1

    I just watch for the commentary anyways, lol

  • @kensanity178
    @kensanity178 5 місяців тому +1

    Im out there in corner of my garage. I got my rock Im pounding on, another future turtle backy looking wonky biface. Every time i whack it, i say "What would Jack do?"

  • @RockyMountainBear
    @RockyMountainBear 5 місяців тому +1

    "Reverse overshot" sounds like a technical foul in the bedroom.

  • @mrdovie47
    @mrdovie47 10 місяців тому +2

    As a kid, Dad would take us to the Cumberland River where there was a camp site. The water was slow and shallow & I would float in an inner tube with my arms dangling in the water. There was slate everywhere and I would feel the stones & found many arrow heads that were defective in some way. I think the Native Americans would mess them up, get mad and throw them in the river.

    • @mrdovie47
      @mrdovie47 10 місяців тому +2

      Another place was Camp Theodosa, I think in Missouri.

    • @KnapperJackCrafty
      @KnapperJackCrafty  10 місяців тому +3

      They might have been shooting at fish or other river creatures.

  • @timhurd6855
    @timhurd6855 Місяць тому +1

    Need to cook some of the same stuff

  • @captainflint89
    @captainflint89 11 місяців тому +4

    this stuff is very pretty with the banding , i would really like to see it heat treated and see if there is any difference in the pattern or texture

    • @KnapperJackCrafty
      @KnapperJackCrafty  11 місяців тому +5

      I'll cook up the flakes and post a follow up video in a couple days.

    • @captainflint89
      @captainflint89 11 місяців тому +1

      @@KnapperJackCrafty sounds good ! i will watch out for the video

    • @KnapperJackCrafty
      @KnapperJackCrafty  10 місяців тому +1

      Looks like it's been a month, and I didn't cook up a batch of this. Oh, well. Probably lost the debitage flakes by now. You never know how well it will heat treat anyway. That's my excuse... 😁

  • @davidhakes3884
    @davidhakes3884 11 місяців тому +3

    Thank You Jack for all these video's and Please remember folks to hit the THUMBS UP FOR JACK !! Jack have you a source for Green flint?

    • @KnapperJackCrafty
      @KnapperJackCrafty  11 місяців тому

      No, I don't have a source for green flint other than the occasional "greenish" hornstone or similar material.

    • @RedEyedPatriot
      @RedEyedPatriot 11 місяців тому +2

      I found a nice green kirk corner Notch last month in a creek I hunt. Like to have some of that myself. Also been looking for some Teal glass for a project. A lady friend of mine who has female cancer asked to make her a necklace and matching earrings. The Teal ribbon represents her particular cancer. So I'm on the search for some. Prolly end up at an antique shop looking thru the colored glass section.

    • @quikdraw5203
      @quikdraw5203 11 місяців тому +1

      Man Jack, you are great at some indirect percussion!! You really knock the crap outta that bar!

    • @KnapperJackCrafty
      @KnapperJackCrafty  11 місяців тому

      @@quikdraw5203 😁

    • @davidhakes3884
      @davidhakes3884 11 місяців тому +1

      @@KnapperJackCrafty Thank you . If you ever run short of obsidian I live close to a Long time source of the black and Mahogany material.

  • @timhurd6855
    @timhurd6855 Місяць тому +1

    Thing about river cobble you never know what you got till ya peel it

  • @smokes1973
    @smokes1973 11 місяців тому +1

    I am trying to get better at making a sharp edge that is not wonky, and not un-semetritized! Got over the "turtle-back" of thining, now just need to keep it semtritized!!😂

  • @kenwintin3014
    @kenwintin3014 11 місяців тому +2

    Yes to reverse overshot.

  • @kennethhart3904
    @kennethhart3904 2 місяці тому +1

    I found a nice one in San Antonio

  • @user-mi2ye1lh2s
    @user-mi2ye1lh2s 7 днів тому +1

    Do some stones have a directional grain that you can use to help guide a flake?

    • @KnapperJackCrafty
      @KnapperJackCrafty  6 днів тому

      Yes, but the grain will only help drive a very small percentage of flakes. Mosy flakes will not follow rhe grain no matter how hard you try.

  • @KevinCoop1
    @KevinCoop1 5 місяців тому +1

    Im not a knapper, but I liked the audio as much as the video! Is this a job or hobby for you?

  • @mohawksniper79
    @mohawksniper79 5 місяців тому +1

    🙀👍🏼🤠

  • @tylergrunert
    @tylergrunert 10 місяців тому +1

    River bed material has been beat up from getting rolled around in floods. I don't have lots of quarries so i search the numerous local riverbeds. I find lots of flawed cracked pieces.

  • @warriorworkstraining
    @warriorworkstraining 10 місяців тому +1

    This stone might be "poor quality" by our standards but tough-to-knap rock (HARD) was also tough on the hunt (didn't break as easy).

  • @marycomeau9364
    @marycomeau9364 11 місяців тому +3

    1:17:25 ☕️

  • @FnFwhoHurtYou
    @FnFwhoHurtYou 22 дні тому +1

    Anyone know the stone he’s using to braise the edges to get thinner flakes?

    • @KnapperJackCrafty
      @KnapperJackCrafty  22 дні тому

      It's not a stone. It's a piece of a large industrial grinding wheel. You can find small ones at the hardware store. The large ones are very expensive.
      www.grainger.com/product/NORTON-Straight-Grinding-Wheel-Type-26ZV80

  • @salvadorperales1979
    @salvadorperales1979 11 місяців тому +2

    Great stuff brother! Stay cool it’s hot!! Very damn hot 🥵 Lol

  • @artichoke890
    @artichoke890 11 місяців тому +3

    You have a ton of videos that's awsome. Do you have a video where you knap an untreated and a heat treated piece from the same rock in the same video to show the difference. Thanks. 👍🏼

    • @KnapperJackCrafty
      @KnapperJackCrafty  11 місяців тому +4

      I can't remember, so I'll do one of those coming up.

    • @marycomeau9364
      @marycomeau9364 11 місяців тому +1

      ​@@KnapperJackCraftyI don't remember ever seeing one and not AH either.

  • @James_Houston
    @James_Houston 11 місяців тому +2

    How do you get your flakes to travel so far? I generally use abo tools.

    • @KnapperJackCrafty
      @KnapperJackCrafty  11 місяців тому +2

      Hit very, very hard

    • @j.shorter4716
      @j.shorter4716 11 місяців тому +1

      I also find myself hitting harder with abo tools but I can also barely make a point using abo so I don’t know much about it

  • @denisestarr2314
    @denisestarr2314 3 місяці тому +1

    When you say raw . You mean not heat treated ?

  • @Wilders53
    @Wilders53 2 місяці тому +1

    Could you please send me a link of a good trusted flint supplier? I'm looking for bigger hunks at the cheapest prices if possible?? Thanks in advance and love watching you knapp

    • @KnapperJackCrafty
      @KnapperJackCrafty  2 місяці тому +1

      Jeff Head
      Georgia Chert and Jasper
      facebook.com/profile.php?id=100077372270590&mibextid=ZbWKwL
      Brad Moore
      Horse Creek, Hornstone, Buffalo River
      facebook.com/outpostaxidermy?mibextid=ZbWKwL
      Curtis Smith
      Texas chert, Various stone
      m.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100005984145744&groupid=294140764699326&eav=Afa5QGrjr_s_cRNXqNd49zqjAf33X2QPyVvZrcUtU4bEY4wyjqyPqEWbPCrUhldU9YM&ref=m_notif¬if_t=group_activity&paipv=0
      Brian (Rock Wash)
      Texas chert
      www.etsy.com/shop/RockWash
      www.ebay.com/usr/centralt0

    • @Wilders53
      @Wilders53 2 місяці тому +1

      @@KnapperJackCrafty thank you so much!!!

  • @keen9629
    @keen9629 11 місяців тому +1

    Does quartz need to be heat treated.

    • @KnapperJackCrafty
      @KnapperJackCrafty  11 місяців тому

      Yes, sometimes. The finer the grain, the better it responds to heat.

    • @keen9629
      @keen9629 11 місяців тому

      Thanks
      @@KnapperJackCrafty

  • @terryflack447
    @terryflack447 11 місяців тому +1

    Don't u have to get it wet first, then freeze it. Yeah, do it.

  • @bigdonniebrasco
    @bigdonniebrasco Місяць тому +1

    1:44:22 "Put it in the freezer" ?

    • @KnapperJackCrafty
      @KnapperJackCrafty  Місяць тому

      Yeah. There's a rumor going around in the flintknapping circle that you can soak an arrowhead in water for a while then put it in the freezer to "pop out" all those little step fractures (because water expands when it freezes). I've never tried it.

  • @roybrauski9409
    @roybrauski9409 21 день тому +1

    This is my new favorite channel