Forging a Traditional Swedish Hewing Axe: Recreating the 1700's Craft

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  • Опубликовано: 27 май 2023
  • In this video, me and my friend Nicholas Erb forged a traditional 1700's Swedish Timber Bila or Hewing axe as it is usually called in English.
    It was a lot of fun even though we were on a tight time crunch :)
    Enjoy
    /Nils
    Check out Nicholas channels:
    / swedishaxes
    Find me on instagram:
    / nilsogren
    My Website:
    www.nilsogren.com/
    Email List:
    www.nilsogren.com/contact
    LINK TO NORDFORGE:
    www.nordforge.com/
    / nordforge
    #handforged #traditional #blacksmith

Комментарии • 75

  • @forjanatalense
    @forjanatalense Год назад +14

    man that axe looks gorgeous!

  • @branbeggrify
    @branbeggrify Год назад +5

    there is so much collar to spare on this beauty that even if the handle broke in the field you could handily wield the head by itself for roughing out a new handle. thank you for the video, beautiful work!

  • @SwedishAxes
    @SwedishAxes Год назад +2

    Great video. It was a pleasure working with you!

  • @caveofskarzs1544
    @caveofskarzs1544 9 месяцев назад +2

    Absolutely wonderful job. Beautiful tool.

  • @blackhammerartisan
    @blackhammerartisan Год назад +5

    wow I love it

  • @magnusbergroth5319
    @magnusbergroth5319 Год назад +7

    Ja det var verkligen häftigt att se ert arbete med att smida en sådan bjässe till timmerbila! Bra jobbat och trevligt samarbete. 👍👌💪

  • @OldHickoryForge
    @OldHickoryForge Год назад +4

    Amazing work man! That's some next level forge welding 💪🏻💪🏻

    •  Год назад +1

      Thanks man!

  • @paulregner5335
    @paulregner5335 Год назад +2

    Another excellent video! Thank you!

  • @SchysCraftCo.
    @SchysCraftCo. Год назад +1

    Beautiful design. Keep up the great craftsmanship and hard work my friends. Forge On. Fab On. Weld On. Keep Making. God Bless.

  • @donaldmatthies6026
    @donaldmatthies6026 Год назад +2

    Very impressive build, amazing quality. Thank you for taking time to build, film, edit and post this video.

  • @jkruegs9568
    @jkruegs9568 Год назад +2

    Crazy cool axe. I need to find videos of that style being used now to see it in action.

  • @theprussian4616
    @theprussian4616 3 месяца назад

    I just found this channel not too long ago, but I love these videos. Forging and wood word look like they are two of the most essential skills to have after farming or hunting.
    This makes me want to get into it.

  • @mountainwolf1
    @mountainwolf1 Год назад +1

    Decent that thing is brutal you guys did a beautiful job. And the amount of forge welding is mind blowing thanks for sharing.

  • @Dcgarcia10
    @Dcgarcia10 11 месяцев назад +1

    Mr. Olgren, Outstanding job and craftsmam ship on this bearded axe! I myself have tried to do this a handfull of times with very little success...to say the least. However, owing an axe such as this would inspire me to keep trying and NEVER give up! Once again - outstanding job...greetings from South Texas!

  • @kwmoore3464
    @kwmoore3464 Год назад

    I find forge welding very interesting to watch. I could watch for hours.

  • @vallagardssmed
    @vallagardssmed 10 месяцев назад

    Nice to see that you used the traditional construction techniques.

  • @beans1557
    @beans1557 7 месяцев назад

    Absolutely gorgeous work and such interesting lore to it’s design!! Thanks yall!

  • @gbirm5957
    @gbirm5957 11 месяцев назад

    Beautiful! This is the 3rd of your videos I've watched tonight and the 2nd one was actually your older video of you making a the same kind of hewing axe. Its awesome to see your craft develop from then (arguably still an impressive piece) to this masterpiece

  • @e.grieves2905
    @e.grieves2905 Год назад

    Fantastic guys 👍

  • @davefarnsworth3020
    @davefarnsworth3020 Год назад

    Very nice 👍. I have long wondered how these were constructed. Thank you.😊

  • @kirbyshumay3577
    @kirbyshumay3577 Год назад

    just wnanted to say I just came across your videos and I absolutley love it.Just because of the pic behind you of arnold....I"LL BE BACK!!!!!!

  • @erniemathews5085
    @erniemathews5085 7 месяцев назад

    That must be ferocious metal moving to make you use a power hammer. I'd love to work with that ax.

  • @ieatcaribou7852
    @ieatcaribou7852 11 месяцев назад

    Wow, that turned out amazing!

  • @pjamestx
    @pjamestx Год назад

    That looked like a ton of work, but the result was worth it, great job!!!

    •  Год назад

      It sure was! Thanks

  • @lennartschneider2725
    @lennartschneider2725 Год назад

    Very cool!

  • @inorthwoods1330
    @inorthwoods1330 Год назад

    Thanks

  • @smamuel7663
    @smamuel7663 Год назад +1

    Beautiful work! ❤
    I have four original axes in that model at home, but have not yet tried them out!

  • @White_devil1980
    @White_devil1980 Год назад

    Amazing work 😎🥰 forge welding is a great skill 👌

  • @magnusdanielsson2749
    @magnusdanielsson2749 Год назад

    Very nice. Its such an effective tool also. Its very interesting these tools that were specially made for the tasks.
    The felling axe the made for the project with Södra Råda Kyrka is another interesting piece specially made to purpose.

  • @Chris_Schafer
    @Chris_Schafer Год назад

    Great Axe! I was surprised by the one sided lap weld for the bit.

  • @outbackladas
    @outbackladas Год назад +2

    Top video, enjoyed watching all the pieces being made then brought together for the final welding, great stuff 👍. The handle fitting was very nicely done as well. Regards from Down Under.

  • @Alfeco-dm7uk
    @Alfeco-dm7uk Год назад +3

    What about an 750 axe???
    Like trully badass vikings axe???

  • @artmetalscience66
    @artmetalscience66 Год назад +1

    The axe looks awesome, great job!

    •  Год назад

      Thank you!

  • @hughcupples1279
    @hughcupples1279 Год назад +2

    This axe will be my Everest.. 🍻🍻

  • @ulrichmachtle4864
    @ulrichmachtle4864 Год назад +1

    veeeeery nice

  • @joefergerson5243
    @joefergerson5243 Год назад +1

    Beautiful 👍👍👍👍👍

  • @liam_culb
    @liam_culb Год назад

    Awesome axe, awesome video my man

  • @MASI_forging
    @MASI_forging Год назад

    Great work dude. I appreciate your talent.👏👏

    •  Год назад

      Thank you!

  • @White_devil1980
    @White_devil1980 Год назад

    I have made a fullering tool out of ship anchor chain and I have made a cupping tool out of mild solid square stock 😊

  • @minhphamvan4259
    @minhphamvan4259 8 месяцев назад

    Thích xem a. Khi a làm xong dụng cụ thì nên tes công dụng của nó sẽ hấp dẫn hơn

  • @king82382
    @king82382 Год назад +1

    Do double edge like that but one handed wield

  • @Nikita_Mordor
    @Nikita_Mordor Год назад

    Потрясающая работа 👍

  • @jannetyni7338
    @jannetyni7338 Год назад +1

    Wow whery god woork 😊

  • @oleg_konovalov
    @oleg_konovalov Год назад

    Nästan en Järnbjörn! 👍👍👍🪓

  • @swblacksmith.7445
    @swblacksmith.7445 Год назад

    Top show old man. The axe looks bonza.

  • @jasonhaymanonthedrawingboard
    @jasonhaymanonthedrawingboard Год назад

    Love this! I got something similar? Found it at an antique shop? Nice to know how it might of been made? It has the strike plate on the back of the axe. Which can be used as a field anvil if needed? Love the axe!

  • @frankheger5185
    @frankheger5185 Год назад

    👍👍👍

  • @josesoberanocaoilejr4347
    @josesoberanocaoilejr4347 11 месяцев назад

    I liked your big ax viking.

  • @thesixfootsixblacksmith4772
    @thesixfootsixblacksmith4772 Год назад

    A difficult build. Good job!

    •  Год назад

      Thanks!

  • @andreiminecraft8697
    @andreiminecraft8697 Год назад

    Hello I apriciate your efforts your a very handy man can you tell me how you started blacksmiting

  • @refinersforge1781
    @refinersforge1781 Год назад +1

    Great video, thanks for sharing! I definitely want to try that in the near future. One question is it single bevel or double bevel?

    • @SwedishAxes
      @SwedishAxes Год назад +1

      Double. Single bevel hewing axes are not very common in Sweden.

  • @Darkartsjef
    @Darkartsjef 6 месяцев назад

    Most excellent. What is the name of the book you mention that was studied before making the axe?

  • @hoapham-jx1rc
    @hoapham-jx1rc Год назад

    I wish that ax was mine

  • @MWright95186
    @MWright95186 Год назад

    very interesting... good stuff, show us more please... your enlish is very good too!!! just sayin'.
    ;'0/
    M

  • @minmsnpost
    @minmsnpost 10 месяцев назад

    Looks like the Executinors axe

  • @user-vb1yp4qf9z
    @user-vb1yp4qf9z 7 месяцев назад

    Give us the name of that book Nick!

  • @ClenioBuilder
    @ClenioBuilder 7 месяцев назад

    👏👏👏👏🤜🤛

  • @k9six185
    @k9six185 Год назад

    Harbor freight anvil!……..how do you like it?

  • @hectorcastro6942
    @hectorcastro6942 11 месяцев назад

    Le pongo un asta más larga y es una hacha danesa.

  • @blacklisted4885
    @blacklisted4885 9 месяцев назад

    I've never understood why welding takes light hammering at first rather than as hard as possible hammering. And why welding 2 different steels is the easier than 2 of same.

    • @coopercummings8370
      @coopercummings8370 4 месяца назад +1

      The light hammering is to set the weld so the pieces won't move around. If you hit loose pieces that haven't started to weld hard they will shift and things won't line up properly. Also it isn't really that two different steels are easier to weld than two of the same, it is that some steels accept welds easier than others. Mild steel is cheap and available in a wide variety of shapes and sizes, and absorbs shock quite well, so it was often used historically for the body of axes (it is still cheaper today, but the price difference between higher carbon steel suitable for an edge and mild steel has come down enough that the labor savings of making an axe in one piece is worth the extra material cost and bit of shock resistance for mass production), but mild steel doesn't weld easily. Higher carbon steels useful for edge steel will weld more easily, so inserting a sliver between the two sides of a folded axe with a mild steel body will make that weld easier than mild steel on mild steel, but if you make a folded axe entirely out of high carbon steel (or at least the simple ones that weld easy) there is no benefit to putting the shim of a different steel in between the sides of the folded piece as far as welding difficulty is concerned (you also don't need a separate piece of edge steel, because it is all suitable for an edge).

    • @blacklisted4885
      @blacklisted4885 4 месяца назад

      @@coopercummings8370 wow, excellent explanation thankyou. It all makes sense now.

  • @Toolsofthepast
    @Toolsofthepast 5 месяцев назад

    Do you sell your axes somewhere?

  • @thor-leiflundberg9809
    @thor-leiflundberg9809 9 месяцев назад

    Hej! Jag bilar timmer. Har en 6-7 bilor. Den ni gjorde i denna video ser exakt ut som den jag vill ha. Möjligtvis ännu mera båge på skäret. Kan skriva mycket om det men vill bara fråga. Kan ni göra en sån till mig? Betalar det som det kostar. Likadan men med lite mera sväng i skäret.
    Vill ni kolla min favoritbilder så kolla följande länk:
    Hewing yet another log
    ruclips.net/video/kryKHGwPFw4/видео.html

  • @Sobieski_IV_Emperor_Gods_mercy
    @Sobieski_IV_Emperor_Gods_mercy 11 месяцев назад

    ,,Eine Frage, bitte; warum habt ihr den schwulen Bodybuilder an der Wand?"
    ,,Warum?"

  • @digitalranger4259
    @digitalranger4259 9 месяцев назад

    Feel free to inform me otherwise, but that seems like the weakest way of joining the blade to the rest of the axe.

    • @beans1557
      @beans1557 7 месяцев назад

      If you mean the wedging the edge of the blade into a cut into the body of the blade connected to the head it was actually extremely common albeit usually utilizing thinner broader joining surfaces for the best weld

    • @coopercummings8370
      @coopercummings8370 4 месяца назад

      In most cases you would want to split one piece or the other with a hot cut to form a V shaped groove and forge the other one into a taper that slots into it to double the surface area of the weld, but that wouldn't really work for this particular type of specialized axe. A hewing axe is a specialized type of axe used for squaring up logs so that they can be stacked more easily and with smaller gaps, in order to do that as effectively as possible hewing axes usually have an offset eye so that the edge can closely hug the flat surface you leave behind where you are working. Hewing axes in general also often have a single bevel (like most wood chisels, rather than a double bevel like you would see on most knives and axes) for the same reason, although this particular style of hewing axe typically doesn't.@@beans1557

  • @Veritequiparles
    @Veritequiparles 11 месяцев назад

    How much would I like to use that axe? 🤤