I was watching this on my phone and said out loud "That man has a hardy hole in his stump!". My wife screamed "What???". She asked what the hell I meant and whether it was something dirty. I told her that hardy holes can be very dirty but it depends on how much soot is involved.
Hello, I am attempting to outfit my studio with the proper equipment for raising bowels but I can't seem to find any companies that sell raising stakes, can anyone point me in the right direction. Much thanks! P.S. I have seen many small 6" and smaller raising stakes for jewelry making, these are much too small for my needs. Thanks again!
I just watched another video where the person used a small hand torch to anneal the copper, making it softer and more malleable. Have you tried that technique to make it easier to shape the copper?
Coppersmith this person has no clue raising is not a term forming copper is termed blocking or drawing you initially use a mallet and finish with a planishing Hamer total amateur
Thanks for the reminder.I wasn't sure about shaping the base.Nice vid.Cheers
Hi Michael! Good to see you're still teaching at the Art League.
Beautiful demonstration, thank you. I have a renewed appreciation for hammered work.
I was watching this on my phone and said out loud "That man has a hardy hole in his stump!". My wife screamed "What???". She asked what the hell I meant and whether it was something dirty. I told her that hardy holes can be very dirty but it depends on how much soot is involved.
very cool, great vid. thanks
Very good master! Nice work! Thank you for video!!
What brand and kind of raising hammer are you using?
What kind of hammer and anvil are you using in the video? Thanks
Where did you get that anvil? Hand made? It's awesome!!!
Hail from Vermont.
Damn, he makes it looks so easy O_O
Thanks 🙏
great technique!
i would take that class
Hello, I am attempting to outfit my studio with the proper equipment for raising bowels but I can't seem to find any companies that sell raising stakes, can anyone point me in the right direction. Much thanks! P.S. I have seen many small 6" and smaller raising stakes for jewelry making, these are much too small for my needs. Thanks again!
Any luck? It's been a year but have you tried searching local blacksmiths to see if one can be forged for you?
how thick is that copper? 1mm?
What gauge copper are you using?
I'm curious about this too.
@@crystalborealisstudiosame here... 😅
I just watched another video where the person used a small hand torch to anneal the copper, making it softer and more malleable. Have you tried that technique to make it easier to shape the copper?
Likely the metal was annealed, either from the source or there in the studio.
where are yall
Is this technique proper to make a functional sounding small (splash) cymbal?
No, you have to use lead for heavy metal cymbals 😜
I'm also doing that kind of copper works. I'm an artist
Amazing
why not use the horn of an anvil?
Freakin awesome!
mkay
симпатичные коленки у слесаря в сторонке
Michael will you let your students know I have 200 or more copper discs 4 and 5 inches. cut ..
do you sell them?
yeah sets of 10 - 13 ga 4 inch discs for 140.00 plus 6.10 shipping.
140 DOLLARS!?
Coppersmith this person has no clue raising is not a term forming copper is termed blocking or drawing you initially use a mallet and finish with a planishing Hamer total amateur