[TheForge] How is something like this made?
Jeffrey Polaski
jeff.polaski at rgs.uci.edu
Thu Jun 15 20:32:58 EDT 2006
I can see some of this done on a lathe, even most of the center portion
of the brain-drill bit
(http://antiquescientifica.com/neurosurgery__trepanning_set__Lichtenberg
er_Strasbourg_out.jpg, http://tinyurl.com/fenb2). But how would the
"pumpkin" part be made?
Jeff Polaski
Research and Graduate Studies Webmaster
University of California, Irvine
http://www.rgs.uci.edu/
949.824.6363
-----Original Message-----
From: theforge-bounces at mailman.qth.net
[mailto:theforge-bounces at mailman.qth.net] On Behalf Of Bruce Freeman
Sent: Thursday, June 15, 2006 4:49 AM
To: theforge at mailman.qth.net
Subject: Re: [TheForge] How is something like this made?
The boss on the back of this saw may have been done at least in part on
a lathe. Lathes have been around a long time...
Bruce
NJ
>>> sos at alum.mit.edu 6/14/2006 6:17:46 PM >>>
Tom Latane made a hacksaw very like the one you reference. I can't find
a picture of it (it was on the cover of Anvil's Ring sometime ago), but
here's some of his other work:
http://www.metalsmith.org/gall/latane/index.htm
Beautiful stuff.
If I remember right from when he was at RMS in 1993 or 4, he forged the
body down from larger stock. The boss in the middle he did with dies
and
a sledge hammer. He was disappointed in how little detail he got that
way and finished the details with a file.
Steve
Jeffrey Polaski wrote:
> I was looking around some antique watch sites and came across a link
to
> this antique medical instrument site... I've been wondering how
> something this ornate gets made... especially the brace and saw.
>
> Would it be roughly forged and then the flat shapes filed? Or is it
a
> lot of swage work, with male & female dies to match?
>
> Has someone made something like this before?
>
> I've been really curious about how the more ornate and "fine" stuff
is
> made, for example, European tools with little sculptures in them.
It's
> amazing that people can do that at all. I can barely bash out a
little
> dragon head, let alone a full iron cherub! How do they do that? I
know
> some things are cast, but how do people make forged sculptures?
>
> Here's some examples:
>
> <http://antiquescientifica.com/saw_amputation_c_1750.jpg>
>
>
<http://antiquescientifica.com/neurosurgery__trepanning_set__Lichtenberg
> er_Strasbourg_out.jpg>
>
> I can't find a good example of the European tools I was thinking of,
but
> I think almost everyone has seen pictures of vices or anvils with
ornate
> scenes on the side.
>
>
> Jeff Polaski
> Research and Graduate Studies Webmaster
> University of California, Irvine
> http://www.rgs.uci.edu/
> 949.824.6363
>
>
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