Looks like you need the Trow and Holdin stone buster hammer heads. I haven't seen much chiseling that strikes my interest. There's no formal technique to your hammering or chiseling, and I've been watching a number of your videos. I'm not being mean... maybe... it's intentionable. Maybe you do that deliberately... or something. It does make an aesthetic... not one I tend to go for. But there's a consumer base to that. Nice. I can match that type of work. Like... you can have an angle grinder. You score one line, all around the stone, in the path of your bisecting line. Then you put that stone on a nice cutting operation, where you can control the shockwave within the stone, after each blow with a chisel. You trace your chisel, in the path of your scored, bisecting line, all the way around the stone. Flipping it each time you run out of space. If you have an angle iron, you can place it's narrow end, on one side of the bisecting line, as you chisel. This forces the vibratione of the stone between the contact points of the angle iron, in relationship with your chisel strikes. Which can be powerful. Within... about the same time it takes for you to monkey bash these stones into shape... you can have a much nicer and thought out product. Trow and Holden... they have a They have a thin stone vineer hartie, which, would go great with your content. You seem fond of Mr. hammer. And having it interact with something on the bottom of the stone, can be quite a powerful experience. Effective. Even your work, that's not vineer... but what I suppose is being called "walling masonry," or has always been called that.... dunno... anyhow. I'd like to see how much tighter your joints can be, with better thought out chiseling work. I like your work and content. The walling stuff was tighter work than the original stuff I saw. Did you just harvest local stone, for all these jobs? No rockyard or anything? You just find whatever's in the soil nearby? Is that what you're using?
Found it 💪 pitcher for backing off
Great skills 👍
Can you please do a video with this chisel on granite to show us. Thanks and cheers
Looks like you need the Trow and Holdin stone buster hammer heads.
I haven't seen much chiseling that strikes my interest. There's no formal technique to your hammering or chiseling, and I've been watching a number of your videos.
I'm not being mean... maybe... it's intentionable. Maybe you do that deliberately... or something. It does make an aesthetic... not one I tend to go for. But there's a consumer base to that. Nice. I can match that type of work.
Like... you can have an angle grinder. You score one line, all around the stone, in the path of your bisecting line. Then you put that stone on a nice cutting operation, where you can control the shockwave within the stone, after each blow with a chisel. You trace your chisel, in the path of your scored, bisecting line, all the way around the stone. Flipping it each time you run out of space.
If you have an angle iron, you can place it's narrow end, on one side of the bisecting line, as you chisel. This forces the vibratione of the stone between the contact points of the angle iron, in relationship with your chisel strikes. Which can be powerful.
Within... about the same time it takes for you to monkey bash these stones into shape... you can have a much nicer and thought out product.
Trow and Holden... they have a They have a thin stone vineer hartie, which, would go great with your content. You seem fond of Mr. hammer. And having it interact with something on the bottom of the stone, can be quite a powerful experience. Effective.
Even your work, that's not vineer... but what I suppose is being called "walling masonry," or has always been called that.... dunno... anyhow. I'd like to see how much tighter your joints can be, with better thought out chiseling work.
I like your work and content. The walling stuff was tighter work than the original stuff I saw.
Did you just harvest local stone, for all these jobs? No rockyard or anything? You just find whatever's in the soil nearby?
Is that what you're using?