There's something inherently beautiful about the intimacy and romanticism that comes with a piece a craftsman used their hands and analog tech to create.
Sam, you have a gift. I'm not talking about your engraving (although, I could, as it also is a gift of yours) I am talking about your ability to captivate, teach, motivate/inspire, and you seem like you enjoy it. Great work, I appreciate you taking the time for this stuff. Oh....probably should have mentioned, this particular video was very useful. Thanks again
True craftsmanship! I’m just starting out at 56 , I can’t afford a GRS or Lindsay pneumatic engraver so it’s basics for my basic start in engraving , hope I win the lottery but I’m not a gambler
Thanks for the video Sam. I would like to see you make a video of recommended tools for starting on a low budget. Also off subject, I noticed the banjo in the background. I play a fretless Appalachian mountain banjo.
Sam I enjoyed your video greay. I engraved on mostly silver but the techniques are very similar. There is some finish techniques to add and some rolling techniques of chasing to be added to further mostly the nonferrious metals end of chasing and engraving that I used in a protype shop I worked in for a long time. Perhaps for another day. But this video shows your obvious talent and willingness to go oldschool when needed which is almost a lost art today... Every piece I did was old school but that's mostly because I'm old... LOL. Thanks much for stirring so many my old memories I hadn't thought of in decades..
Another awesome demonstration! I learned engraving with push gravers and some hammer and chisel. This makes me want to pick up my hammer. Thanks for making the video and sharing with us!!
I know you probably don't look at comments on these old videos, but I wondered if you could define what a "heel" is. That was such a small tool that it was not obvious what was being done during sharpening. I find your work truly fascinating! Lovely!
The heel is the small facet on each side of the bottom of the tool. It gives you a way to drive the tool forward without it diving into the metal. the angle of the heel is the angle you need to hold the graver as you tap on it. If you hold the graver at a higher angle than the heel the tool goes deeper into the metal, at a lower angle it comes out of the metal. 20 degrees is about what I use also, most of the time.
As a master bronze caster and cowboy I can see the potential of using your method to carve wax modeled into decorative spurs for everyday use. Once cast I would inlay with silver. Simon Australia.
I BOUGHT a square steel, hardened, right angle ( I ASSUME ) and no matter what I do, its digging into the metal. Angle is so damn flat I'm almost ending up on the underside of the piece -.- what is it? My hammer too heavy? Does it depends on material? I tried AlMg and AlPb, brass flatstock, sheet metal and steel.....all the same. Never consitent depth.
Can you imagine how much better that could have turned out if the microscope rotated whileyou walked around the work? Very good demonstration. Nice engraving.
Wonderful video Sam, I've started engraving using hammer and graver. So far practicing on aluminium, copper and brass and a home made rotating vice made out of an old drill press vice mounted on large nylon cutting block washers (about 6in diam.) with Teflon lubrication spray between. Your work in an inspiration. I can't seem to find a good blackening compound though. Black paint doesn't seem to work for me. I suspect you use some sort of graphite compound. What should I try? Thanks in anticipation. Stuart (Australia)
I have a question about your rotary vise; You are able to push it around so lightly with your hand, but then it doesn't seem to move around while your are engraving, does it have a foot brake or some other mechanism to lock it in place, or are you bracing it with your wrist while engraving?
Wow! That's a great technique. It looks easy but I know it requires a lot of practice and patience to get the perfection. Thank you for sharing this beautiful art👍👍.
Yeah, so that proves in 2020 engraving is NOT famous. Thank goodness, the internet is making us dumb humans aware of these basic facts. Hiding in the back room of some horrible little nobody shop, doesn’t make you rich OR famous.
@@sheevinopalpatino4782 would you agree engraving has been going on for a long time? If you agree to that, then you also know if something has been done for a long time, humans always get bored with the repetition and they begin to make jokes and after a while those jokes make people head in the opposite direction. A good thing turns into a bad thing over time. The tide goes in and then out. Instead of approaching people to get work and share the joy of decoration, engravers are hiding in exclusive shops. The tide is clearly going out on these types of people. You’re making sure they’re careers are over rapidly.
@@sheevinopalpatino4782 control your self. You haven’t reached the level of a conversation where you dismiss a person at the end. You judge people without even knowing anything about the person. I’m just commenting as a smoke alarm and YOU think it’s me, I’m talking from my own perspective. You’re wrong! You’re disrespectful and discriminating. The engraving industry has been around for such a long time humans must approach them as being sick in the head behaving like spiders not humans. They certainly aren’t SOCIAL People in 2020. Motorbike stores are far more sociable than jewellery shops. Where’s the BBQ after work on Thursday? GET OUT FROM BEHIND THE COUNTER AND ACTUALLY PARTICIPATE IN SOCIETY FOR ONCE IN YOUR LIFE! The customers AREN’T going to open the door anymore! You DO some WORK at being social from now on!
for this design, did you use only 1 chisel? Around @9:57 how did you get thinner finer lines do you just not press the chisel as hard? sorry for dumb question. I'm thinking of gettign into the art of hammer & chisel
If you don’t mind me answering your question, I believe most likely Sam is using the same chisel but for the finer lines there is less pressure to the chisel. Of course you can also use a different chisel to create different effects but usually it is the amount of pressure that will provide you with the desired look. A thinner chisel with more pressure will also sink deeper into the metal and still give a thicker look. Hope you’re doing well with any of your endeavours.🙏🏼
Congratulations for your explanations, which punch do you recommend to make this sign and where to buy in Europe? for black shades do you use black oil ink? thank you
I don’t have the equipment to do this. Is their an easier and cheeper way to hold the pice of metal in place and a more affordable equipment to magnify what I would be doing?I really love seeing you and others doing this and I would like to join the crew!
Wish you lived in California ,I could sure use some help starting up! If I lived near you I wouldn't miss a single minute of class haha metal engraving is such a beautiful art form ,and I can't wait to make something like you made here lol you make it seem effortless.keep up the beautiful work! Jonny
the engraving at 11:59 looked 10X better at 12:00, something was done to clean it up, smoothed it out. care to share. i mean it does look like the same engraving, but you can tell it looks different. did you just take a super sharp knife and just trace the lines? i noticed before the 12:00 mark, you could see very small bumps in some of the grooves, kinda like miniature bumps when the hammer was tapped. reminds me of chatter marks when you run a drill or end mill at the wrong speed or feed, but after 12:00 it looked perfect. before 12:00 there were a few blemishes, after 12:00 it looked like a machine finish....please explain
Thank you. I was looking to hide some marks that a previous owner left on a firearm. This seems to be a practical was to "disappear" the issue. I'll practice some before attempting anything, but this gives me somewhere to start. Cheers
Good afternoon, Sam Alfano! Your work is beautiful. I also want to learn this kind of work. but I do not have any tools or skills yet. Can that that will advise, with what to begin? What tool.? Many thanks .
He used the same graver. It’s just how much pressure you put on the graver from the hammer it’ll give you different liners some very thin and some thicker
Any hardwood handle should work. Many European engravers use steel handles. These will work quite well for you: www.grstools.com/chasing_hammers/044-220.html
Hello mr. Alfano my question is off topic but do you think I can engrave an annealed 5160 steel straight razor with a high speed steel graver or an 52100 steel(reforged ball bearing) one? Thanks in advance!
Great video, you can learn very much from it. I am an engraving student from germany and we really like your work! The big problem we have in germany, that we dont have much hardware supplier for engraving. So can anybody tell me what kind of vice he use? i mean how do you call that vise, because its not just a standart vise that you can buy in the hardware store.
Thanks for the old school videos. I despaired of finding anything but air-powered hand-piece videos. Those are fine but no way to get into it as a hobby.
Hi Sam, why is the hammer necessary? is it because the steel is hard? I see the 'hand push' engraving video, which does not require a hammer, is it because the metal was softer or the graver is sharper? I'm looking to start engraving but unwilling to yet make heavy investment in pneumatic system. Thanks for your insight.
Good evening, I am a beginner in hammer and chisel engraving I have been practicing a few weeks and am still have difficulty with the basics. My biggest problem is purchasing new engraver blanks, the length of the engraver is a problem so my question to you sir is how can a beginner judge how long or short the engraver has to be for best effect.
Hello Mr. Sam Alfano, if i may ask, what kind of vice is that you are using. I have a passion to learn new stuff everyday. an i have come across metal engraving an fell in love of the art work an would like to implement this unique art work in some of my other projects i do. ty for your time sir, an hope to hear from you soon.
wish the video had a audio track overlay explaining what was happening during each step. example, to get the line to go from thin to fat then thin again, who is this being achieved, is it changing the angle of the chisel or something else. How do you get the lines that have 1 side going straight into the material an the second side of the notice has a low angle out. These types of details would be amazing
That was exactly my thought. While it's satisfying to watch this sort of craftsmanship, it could become really valuable with the addition of a bit of explanation. On the other hand, I've never been a master of any craft, so I may not appreciate enough the difficulty there might be in deciding which of the 5000 things he's thinking about are worth mentioning to a neophyte.
Tnk for video! I'm from italy and i apology for my eng! Please tell me something: is possible engrave and iron temprate blabe only whit cesel and hammer? Tnk all
It seems like there is very little luster in the metal, is that a camera flaw? or perhaps a material choice that lacks luster? I ask because Ive seen the air graver's trail and it has no little tap marks, much smoother swarves or what have you. I have never actually engraved, just totally fascinated
I think you always get the tap marks when you use a hand chisel and chasing hammer. Look at it as "added charm", that proclaims loudly "this was done using the old traditional methods!" Didn't Sam say that some of the most beautiful engraving was still being done using the hand hammer and chisel method? Just much slower, and needs a lot of patience! ( A lot cheaper to get started too! :-\ )
There's something inherently beautiful about the intimacy and romanticism that comes with a piece a craftsman used their hands and analog tech to create.
Sam, you have a gift. I'm not talking about your engraving (although, I could, as it also is a gift of yours) I am talking about your ability to captivate, teach, motivate/inspire, and you seem like you enjoy it. Great work, I appreciate you taking the time for this stuff. Oh....probably should have mentioned, this particular video was very useful. Thanks again
Thanks for the video Sam!
Most inspiring watching the lines form so smooth with such control.
Such handwork should be treasured!
Pretty inspiring to see what you can do with such simple and inexpensive equipment! Thanks for the video!
So glad i found you again. Completing first semester of metalsmithing.
True craftsmanship! I’m just starting out at 56 , I can’t afford a GRS or Lindsay pneumatic engraver so it’s basics for my basic start in engraving , hope I win the lottery but I’m not a gambler
Thank you for your tutorial/video. I have a deep level of respect for what you create. Well done!
I'm taken back to when Paul Revere engraved like this. Engraving in its purest form.
Thanks for the video Sam. I would like to see you make a video of recommended tools for starting on a low budget.
Also off subject, I noticed the banjo in the background. I play a fretless Appalachian mountain banjo.
I would also love seeing a video of beginners tools and techniques
Yes get amazon links on it? I dont know the name of these tools.
Congrats from Brazil. Exactly. Tool names and tips about this great art. I'm wating for this.
Sam
I enjoyed your video greay. I engraved on mostly silver but the techniques are very similar. There is some finish techniques to add and some rolling techniques of chasing to be added to further mostly the nonferrious metals end of chasing and engraving that I used in a protype shop I worked in for a long time.
Perhaps for another day.
But this video shows your obvious talent and willingness to go oldschool when needed which is almost a lost art today...
Every piece I did was old school but that's mostly because I'm old... LOL.
Thanks much for stirring so many my old memories I hadn't thought of in decades..
Another awesome demonstration! I learned engraving with push gravers and some hammer and chisel. This makes me want to pick up my hammer. Thanks for making the video and sharing with us!!
Such lovely engraving,
what a gift you have!
I’m not sure how I got here but I’m glad I did. That sir was some beautiful artistry. Thank you for sharing.
Started so dirty cut then it goes better and better. Been a long time I believe ! Nice job Sam
I know you probably don't look at comments on these old videos, but I wondered if you could define what a "heel" is. That was such a small tool that it was not obvious what was being done during sharpening. I find your work truly fascinating! Lovely!
The heel is the small facet on each side of the bottom of the tool. It gives you a way to drive the tool forward without it diving into the metal. the angle of the heel is the angle you need to hold the graver as you tap on it. If you hold the graver at a higher angle than the heel the tool goes deeper into the metal, at a lower angle it comes out of the metal. 20 degrees is about what I use also, most of the time.
Such beautiful work. Thanks for posting.
As a master bronze caster and cowboy I can see the potential of using your method to carve wax modeled into decorative spurs for everyday use. Once cast I would inlay with silver. Simon Australia.
nice work
Thanks for taking the time to make the video and share it
Красиво, хорошая работа, требующая большого терпения и высокого уровня мастерства. Желаю успехов!
I BOUGHT a square steel, hardened, right angle ( I ASSUME ) and no matter what I do, its digging into the metal. Angle is so damn flat I'm almost ending up on the underside of the piece -.- what is it? My hammer too heavy? Does it depends on material? I tried AlMg and AlPb, brass flatstock, sheet metal and steel.....all the same. Never consitent depth.
Fascinating work.
Apropos of nothing other than enjoying spotting such things--that appears to be a 16610.
I am so impressed, what a great talent to be so gifted in.
The only gift is patience and wanting to learn. It's hard work to get that good
Awesome video, thank you. Where could I buy that kind of chisel and hammer? Thanks
Thx for sharing your knowledge! People like you are amazing huge respect! Cheers from Canada
Can you imagine how much better that could have turned out if the microscope rotated whileyou walked around the work? Very good demonstration. Nice engraving.
That turned out more than great! It's beautiful! Thanks for the awesome video!
Super Job,I have always wanted to see that done,thanks for your time.
Bravissimo Maestro,!
Wonderful video Sam,
I've started engraving using hammer and graver. So far practicing on aluminium, copper and brass and a home made rotating vice made out of an old drill press vice mounted on large nylon cutting block washers (about 6in diam.) with Teflon lubrication spray between. Your work in an inspiration.
I can't seem to find a good blackening compound though. Black paint doesn't seem to work for me. I suspect you use some sort of graphite compound. What should I try?
Thanks in anticipation.
Stuart (Australia)
Mesmerising too watch ,from an unskilled in any art guy, envy and admiration are all I can offer .fantastic 👍🇬🇧
Lucky is the man who is happy in his work.
I have a question about your rotary vise; You are able to push it around so lightly with your hand, but then it doesn't seem to move around while your are engraving, does it have a foot brake or some other mechanism to lock it in place, or are you bracing it with your wrist while engraving?
Looks great. Thank you very much and I hope all is well with you 🤙
Wow! That's a great technique. It looks easy but I know it requires a lot of practice and patience to get the perfection. Thank you for sharing this beautiful art👍👍.
Very nicely made demonstration. Thank you.
I see why you like the handpiece speed wise . How would this be undercut for inlay? When would it be done as well?
So therapeutic to watch. Beautiful.
Impressive !! I ve never seen that type of rotating vice before.
Yeah, so that proves in 2020 engraving is NOT famous.
Thank goodness, the internet is making us dumb humans aware of these basic facts.
Hiding in the back room of some horrible little nobody shop, doesn’t make you rich OR famous.
@@dreyn7780 Why are you so hostile about hand & chisel engraving? What's wrong with you?
@@sheevinopalpatino4782 would you agree engraving has been going on for a long time?
If you agree to that, then you also know if something has been done for a long time, humans always get bored with the repetition and they begin to make jokes and after a while those jokes make people head in the opposite direction.
A good thing turns into a bad thing over time.
The tide goes in and then out.
Instead of approaching people to get work and share the joy of decoration, engravers are hiding in exclusive shops.
The tide is clearly going out on these types of people. You’re making sure they’re careers are over rapidly.
@@dreyn7780 Very passionate about hating engraving, must have a nice life.
@@sheevinopalpatino4782 control your self.
You haven’t reached the level of a conversation where you dismiss a person at the end.
You judge people without even knowing anything about the person.
I’m just commenting as a smoke alarm and YOU think it’s me, I’m talking from my own perspective.
You’re wrong!
You’re disrespectful and discriminating.
The engraving industry has been around for such a long time humans must approach them as being sick in the head behaving like spiders not humans.
They certainly aren’t SOCIAL People in 2020.
Motorbike stores are far more sociable than jewellery shops.
Where’s the BBQ after work on Thursday?
GET OUT FROM BEHIND THE COUNTER AND ACTUALLY PARTICIPATE IN SOCIETY FOR ONCE IN YOUR LIFE!
The customers AREN’T going to open the door anymore!
You DO some WORK at being social from now on!
for this design, did you use only 1 chisel? Around @9:57 how did you get thinner finer lines do you just not press the chisel as hard? sorry for dumb question. I'm thinking of gettign into the art of hammer & chisel
If you don’t mind me answering your question, I believe most likely Sam is using the same chisel but for the finer lines there is less pressure to the chisel. Of course you can also use a different chisel to create different effects but usually it is the amount of pressure that will provide you with the desired look. A thinner chisel with more pressure will also sink deeper into the metal and still give a thicker look. Hope you’re doing well with any of your endeavours.🙏🏼
Ciao. Sei un artista. Saluti dall'Italia
hello I watch your videos carefully but I can not find the square scissors to burn ??? would you have a link please
Congratulations for your explanations, which punch do you recommend to make this sign and where to buy in Europe? for black shades do you use black oil ink? thank you
Hi Sam as a beginner could you show what we need for an pneumatic engraver
So nice to see that thanks to youtube craftsmanship like that are never going to die out.
I don’t have the equipment to do this. Is their an easier and cheeper way to hold the pice of metal in place and a more affordable equipment to magnify what I would be doing?I really love seeing you and others doing this and I would like to join the crew!
Thanks for the advises, impressive job !
Wish you lived in California ,I could sure use some help starting up! If I lived near you I wouldn't miss a single minute of class haha metal engraving is such a beautiful art form ,and I can't wait to make something like you made here lol you make it seem effortless.keep up the beautiful work!
Jonny
What a nice and precision work. You are Expert keep it up
Thanks Sam! I did enjoy it. Thanks for inspiration. I should turn a new handle for my graver and try this method. I'm total newbie in engraving.
the engraving at 11:59 looked 10X better at 12:00, something was done to clean it up, smoothed it out. care to share. i mean it does look like the same engraving, but you can tell it looks different. did you just take a super sharp knife and just trace the lines? i noticed before the 12:00 mark, you could see very small bumps in some of the grooves, kinda like miniature bumps when the hammer was tapped. reminds me of chatter marks when you run a drill or end mill at the wrong speed or feed, but after 12:00 it looked perfect. before 12:00 there were a few blemishes, after 12:00 it looked like a machine finish....please explain
probably just cleaned it up and wiped black paint of some sort in the low spots.
I like your bench vise! What is it? Where can One find such a tool?!... Thanks !!!!! AWESOME Video, and Skills!!!
Thank you. I was looking to hide some marks that a previous owner left on a firearm. This seems to be a practical was to "disappear" the issue. I'll practice some before attempting anything, but this gives me somewhere to start. Cheers
You, sir, are quite talented. Very nice.
Beautiful work! Are you left handed by any chance?
Tell me what’s the difference in using a flat head or a convex head on the chasing hammer .. is there a difference in hitting ?
This is all the motivation i need
I am going to try this. I will make myself some tools. Too bad I dont live near Kansas anymore.
I would like to know what type and brand of hammer and chisel you are Using…??
Wow, very cool. How critical are the angles at the tip? Can you do something similar with a wood chisel on softer metals like copper?
The geometry of the chisel is absolutely critical. I wouldn't use a wood chisel on metal, no.
It’s NOT cool.
@@dreyn7780 huh?
Good afternoon, Sam Alfano!
Your work is beautiful.
I also want to learn this kind of work. but I do not have any tools or skills yet. Can that that will advise, with what to begin? What tool.?
Many thanks .
Great video Sam. Thank you.
Thank you Sir I loved this I learned so much just from watching. I will definitely be trying this.
Did you use the same graver on the entire project? Some lines are deep an some are very small. Is that just technique?
He used the same graver. It’s just how much pressure you put on the graver from the hammer it’ll give you different liners some very thin and some thicker
FASCINATING. I will want to try it, but need to find out what the "handle" is for the graver - all mine are wooden and not for tapping on :)
Any hardwood handle should work. Many European engravers use steel handles. These will work quite well for you: www.grstools.com/chasing_hammers/044-220.html
Any pointers on how deep is too deep of a cut and what to do to prevent uneven cuts
Hello mr. Alfano my question is off topic but do you think I can engrave an annealed 5160 steel straight razor with a high speed steel graver or an 52100 steel(reforged ball bearing) one?
Thanks in advance!
You are the grand master.
Gracias, Maestro!
HI, may I ask what is the name of that vise holding the plate? It can turn. thank you
Great video, you can learn very much from it. I am an engraving student from germany and we really like your work! The big problem we have in germany, that we dont have much hardware supplier for engraving.
So can anybody tell me what kind of vice he use? i mean how do you call that vise, because its not just a standart vise that you can buy in the hardware store.
I'd like to know more about the vice too.
That looks like it's right up My Alley. Thank You.
Thanks for the old school videos. I despaired of finding anything but air-powered hand-piece videos. Those are fine but no way to get into it as a hobby.
Yeah, funny about that.
In the real world, acid etching superseded engraving decades ago!
In 2020 3D printing makes these vids ancient history.
@@dreyn7780 this is an art. Can't be lost to anything
@@dreyn7780 you are going to 3D print this kind of stuf on a gun? lol
@@olivernavarro6237 the businesses have all closed.
They were nasty to potential customers and so nobody cares they’ve all gone.
@@notTheDutchBoy they sell metal powder and glue that’s sets harder than metal as well.
Obviously they’re going to do it.
Hi Sam, why is the hammer necessary? is it because the steel is hard? I see the 'hand push' engraving video, which does not require a hammer, is it because the metal was softer or the graver is sharper? I'm looking to start engraving but unwilling to yet make heavy investment in pneumatic system. Thanks for your insight.
you best learn to know every cut before you put a fast impacting device behind it.
Wow, fantastic craftsmanship.
Where do I find a manly vise like yours.
hello, can I ask you, where to get the vise and what is the name of the vise
nice work.
if you please can you tell me what tools are using?
where are you buying?
Good evening, I am a beginner in hammer and chisel engraving I have been practicing a few weeks and am still have difficulty with the basics. My biggest problem is purchasing new engraver blanks, the length of the engraver is a problem so my question to you sir is how can a beginner judge how long or short the engraver has to be for best effect.
SOOO COOOOL i want to do the same thing to my self hand crafted gladius
Greate video! Would a carspring metal work as the chisel?
Beautiful video man!
How to buy chisels. I'm a beginner on stainless steel. In Vietnam there are no good enough alloys to engrave on stainless steel. Thank you!
I heard this handle is only for short Chisel? For long chisel u need another tool?
I am all in. Thank you
Sir, could you choose any technique for any work? or some works dictates hammer or hand engraving?.
Hello Mr. Sam Alfano, if i may ask, what kind of vice is that you are using. I have a passion to learn new stuff everyday. an i have come across metal engraving an fell in love of the art work an would like to implement this unique art work in some of my other projects i do. ty for your time sir, an hope to hear from you soon.
Seconded
What is the difference between a pneumatic graver and a 20 dollar Dremel Engraver? Thanks in advance!
Hermoso trabajo maestro,el que usted realiza ya me suscribi a su canal saludos desde la ciudad de México.
I could watch hours of this.
What Handle is that you used? I like it. Also my taste in color.
Your close home... nice work!
wish the video had a audio track overlay explaining what was happening during each step. example, to get the line to go from thin to fat then thin again, who is this being achieved, is it changing the angle of the chisel or something else. How do you get the lines that have 1 side going straight into the material an the second side of the notice has a low angle out. These types of details would be amazing
That was exactly my thought. While it's satisfying to watch this sort of craftsmanship, it could become really valuable with the addition of a bit of explanation. On the other hand, I've never been a master of any craft, so I may not appreciate enough the difficulty there might be in deciding which of the 5000 things he's thinking about are worth mentioning to a neophyte.
he has videos to purchase on his site which have very detailed descriptions
Tnk for video! I'm from italy and i apology for my eng! Please tell me something: is possible engrave and iron temprate blabe only whit cesel and hammer? Tnk all
can you make some more videos, like engraving guns, with like a blued type steel and gold inlays, I think those are really neat.
Guns are 3D printed in 2020. Computers do all the work now.
Very nice indeed! I have aspirations to try this.
It seems like there is very little luster in the metal, is that a camera flaw? or perhaps a material choice that lacks luster? I ask because Ive seen the air graver's trail and it has no little tap marks, much smoother swarves or what have you. I have never actually engraved, just totally fascinated
I think you always get the tap marks when you use a hand chisel and chasing hammer. Look at it as "added charm", that proclaims loudly "this was done using the old traditional methods!" Didn't Sam say that some of the most beautiful engraving was still being done using the hand hammer and chisel method? Just much slower, and needs a lot of patience! ( A lot cheaper to get started too! :-\ )
This is what id like to do. Time to start saving for a hammer and chisel
great job!! where can i find engraver with that shape? thanks
wonderful video helps a lot think I have to get me a rotating vice for sure
Is this chisel made of diamond or polyad and embossed on iron or aluminum