I've watched a few of your videos and thoroughly enjoyed them. This one got me, though. I cheesed hard from start to finish and couldn't make myself stop. I love the "wizardry" involved in metalwork, especially blacksmithing. It has a way of coming full circle. A brief summary "The furnace that is a star forges elements together to get things like iron, sharing it with the universe. We then use the same elements forged within that solar furnace that helped mold something beautiful and brilliant (like Earth and blacksmiths) to also heat (sometimes with solar power) and mold that same element into something also beautiful and brilliant. That we then share with the universe. And, it eventually will too return to a star, just as we will." That was as short as I could get it to make it pretty much make sense. Thank you for the love of song you have, the beautiful sounds you make, the brilliant work you do and the soul you've become.
I know you probably won't read or see this but congrats you did very well! Also wow so deep and real about the things today made just to be thrown away and not lasting long. I love steel work and anything I need I can make as well as all mistakes and leftovers aren't waste, they become something else. Think about a wicker or plastic, even aluminum outside chair. How long do they last through seasons and storms? Steel is forever. Flower pot holders, fences and even some art for decoration. Very cool you experienced it. My goodness I'm so sorry and no disrespect meant but you are so beautiful and seem like a wonderful person to know.
While I have SO much respect for Blacksmiths, I think the real wizardry is preformed by the Smelters. There is just something almost alchemical about putting a bunch of rock, powder and charcoal into a furnace and then, you break open your crucible and there's this shiny metal in there.
Perhaps not your cup of tea, but I have been addicted to "Forged in Fire" on the Discovery Channel for years. These guys make knives and swords out of many different kinds of steel using several different forging processes. I absolutely love it.
This is a fabulous side project. As an electrician, I have a ton of respect for manual crafts and trades. Plus smithing and metalworking is just awesome. My mother recently got into artistic welding a couple of years ago.
Thanks for the memories Beth. As a kid, I spent many hours helping my father in his forge building wrought iron fences ballaustrades & columns etc. He was a metal magician. It seemed that it would just do what ever he told it to. I even helped him install them on the weekends at the houses of the people who commissioned them. Great times as a 15yo kid. God bless you for doing all these amazing things on this channel my dear. Cheers.
It's always good to have a tradesman's skill to fall back on. I was glad to see that your new mentor was safety conscious enough to have you use proper safety gear. Nice work !
@@RoarRawr Very well deserved. This new channel is something VERY different from the vocal coach stuff. And so far nice content and good quality. I have been playing music for 30 plus years and been teaching guitar and bass for 10 plus, but I also enjoy trips outside of music content. Cheers from Sweden!
This is so cool, Beth! That induction heater is an amazing piece of gear... especially since it lets you say you bent steel using the power of the sun! 👍
I loved, what Shona said about the blacksmith family: about sharing the knowledge. From my experience, it's similar with motorcycle mechanics and chefs (just my own experience). I had pro motorcycle mechanics asking me (an amateur) questions. And gave it my best. And got that in return, before and after. Same with cooking: this never ending learning is just fascinating me. And most people I know in the cooking world do that. This is not a given thing: working in the metal industry, some "specialists" never handed their knowledge over. Not even when they retired. I've seen it happening. Made me sad. Not my way. Best of luck with forging metal! An, in fact, very surprising twist in what is fascinating you. Greetings from the far north of Germany!
Awesome! I wish I had a friend who was a Blacksmith so I could go hang out and make some kewl things out of steel every so often. I had a Metal Shop class in school and made some interesting things (including a wall based candle holder) that I really enjoyed making, and we had them for years (until they got ruined in a basement flooding where they rusted badly.) Thanx for sharing! Loch Sloy! ~Be Blessed
I know, a late comment. Growing up in the oil fields, I was around welding and metal work all the time. I loved doing it, especially in high school. We had shop classes and I took every one I could take. It's so great to see you expanding your experiences.
I love these videos. You can see Beth was having just such a wonderful time. I can't help but wonder how she would get on with my hobby, high power amateur rocketry. She'll be running NASA in no time.
It's really amazing how you challenge yourself in different jobs and different situations. I always watched you in your first channel and I'll always watch you in this second one. Much love and support from Italy 🇮🇹 ❤
Enjoyed this a lot. I am a machinist and make medical surgical tools and implants. Hips, knees, finger joints, bone screws and such. Working with all kinds of metal is my life. I cut it within ten thousands of an inch so others can be healed. Very fulfilling. Great video! Thanks!
As an amateur smith this really resonates for me with the reasons why I took up the hobby to begin with. My Grandfather was a metalworker who learned his trade during the Great Depression. After he died, I decided to give it a try myself in an attempt to keep that part of his memory with me. I found a real understanding of why he continued to work on new projects long after he had quit making his living at it. Every piece is indeed one of a kind. They also contain all of the previous lessons learned on earlier pieces, and so they become the tangible history of refining one's craft. For some reason the more time is spent focused on the task, the more one also learns about themself.
My first experience with blacksmithing was making a small hatchet from the rectangular block of steel. 12 hours of work (with help, of course) and no power hammer, just the hands. On the next day, I couldn't even make a fist because of edema. It was expected because your hands receive a lot of vibrations that traumatize your skin tissues and the result was so satisfying! Wielding an axe made with your own hands when you chop wood for a bonfire is quite a rewarding feeling. It's not just a tool, it's the tool you made by yourself and you remember how it was every time you use it.
"Power of the gas" example was coal, but I am really intrigued by induction powered by solar. I would love to hear more about that. I love my induction stove but as a 30 year blacksmith had no idea that any amount of solar might power induction blacksmithing. Lovely video and like your idea for this channel. Got to you thanks to the armonica.
I love the concept for this new channel. We all have things we kinda always wanted to do or try, but never did for whatever reason. Fear, inertia, fear of being judged, laziness, tomorrow syndrome, whatever. Skydiving, forging, getting knuckle tattoos, hiking around Lake Superior, whatever. Literally whatever. Love the concept. Love it. Speaking of knuckle tattoos - after decades of never finding the right two words that I liked and could always stand behind, I finally figured it out a week ago. go do It fits the vibe of this channel nicely. Good synchronicity.
Holy.... I have no idea how I ended up here. The RUclips algorithm works in mysterious ways, but what an absolutely stunning and charming girl she is! I immediately subscribed, hoping for more content going forward! :)
Been listening to by Beth Roars but this is really really good keep it up as a lifelong motorcyclist and restoration of all motor vehicles it’s really nice do you talk like this Michael
Really awesome :) It is special to have something that you made or was made for you. Not quite as labor intensive as making candlesticks, but I am planning on making some Christmas ornaments like my mom did when I was young.
As a coal miner the blowtorch was our best friend on some jobs. We called it the blue wrench. I have seen people do thing with a torch that seemed like magic. Example cut a gear off of a shaft without ruining the shaft. A number of times I have seen folks try to do this with bad results. I am so glad you tried this Beth. Do this for a full work day and watch what happens to your arms, At a girl!!!!!
You are amazing... I just built an off grid tiny house setup, its been challenging, gotta do everything myself, because i live in an entitled country, some people call the land of the free, but no one will do anything, unless its a $100,000 job, so youtube has taught me many trades...
The cinematography is absolutely incredible. You need to show your skills off a LOT more. Keep it up!!! Beth not only Roars, but also SLAYS at camera skills!
@@RoarRawr Tom rules. Those opening shots of her hammering and the flames, slow motion, etc… They look incredibly professional. You’ve got a great team, lots of talent coming together and I’m excited to have front row tickets to the show!
That's sooooo satifying and inspirational to watch ! Awesome video, awesome new channel ! I'll have to watch this with my daughters for sure. Funny thing, I kept hearing "forge the BASS" instead of "forge the base" (prolly coz' I'm not english native) ... but I wouldn't be surprised if bass guitars were being forged :D
Awesome. Always wanted to do some smitting, unfortunately the person I knew passed away and I moved from the country. Although I used the blowtorch for soldering, it's not nice to get burns from it. Congrats Beth.
I've studied some design and a common refrain is to 'create experiences, not things'. Interpret that as you will, but sentimental aspects in products have really been put into focus, even if at least recently.
That's really cool! Glad you got that experience. And yeah, it's not easy. I did a brief stint in a blacksmith shop too, but it was a historic site so it was just charcoal, fire, and manual bellows for us. I didn't get beyond doornails in the brief time I was there. And "storytelling in metal" makes me think Nightwish, haha.
I love your new channel. I took metal shop and wood shop in school and was a great experience. Will you be learning to do some wood work? That would be awesome to learn to do. Don't you think? Have a nice day. Thank you.
It looks so beautiful terrifying haha - Alos love her story. I've been watching "Forged in fire" in History channel for a couple of months and now I'm wondering how to create a mini forge in my little house hahah. That's what a I call "relatable content" . Thanks Beth
Congrats on taking that mental leap towards being a maker. I'd recommend Walter Sorrels' channel for a few different videos on how to build a home forge. I put my own spin on it, but I basically took one of his designs and modified it to be the shape I wanted, given the space I'm working with in my shop. Best of luck.
Actually it’s all been to space mate. Over a billion years ago the iron in our planet spewed forth across space out of the heart of a star in its final majestic death throws, becoming part of a new solar system being born and eventually accreting into the world we call home. It’s truely a majestic story.
That is the cleanest metal shop I have ever seen. Starting out with survival and metal working sets the bar a little high but I respect the dive in and get the monkey approach. You could do welding but it's very dirty and quite dull. Rebuilding an engine might be interesting. Woodworking would give you a lot of options. I know people offer classes on timber framing houses or building with joinery. You might be able to find a luthier who will teach you how to make a guitar. With your ear you would probably be really good at voicing a guitar top.
Almost the energy you consume comes from the sun at some point, with the exception of nuclear (mass defect), tidal (momentum left over from the formation of the solar system), and geothermal (heat left over from the formation of the solar system). All fossil and biofuels come from the sun: the energy used to grow the organisms that make coal, oil, gas, etc, derive from photosynthesis. Wind, wave and hydroelectric all come from the energy the sun puts into our atmosphere. So whether your forging steel or cooking dinner, you’re effectively using the sun. I think that’s pretty cool too.
Ok next challenge. Go to space with your candlestick:):):):) I hope you have the phonenumber of Mr. Musk!!:):) Yeah you really showed that piece metal who was boss. Lovely piece of craftmanship or should we say craftwomanship?:):):):):)
I would think so, dependant on the time and what you are working on. www.minuendo.com are releasing an earplug for industrial workers that alerts you when the sound is becoming dangerous. Very cool!
Beth, I would have liked you to make a sword, so I could tell you "Your Weapon Lady... It Will Kill" ( I don't know how to say it in English, I saw the program in Spanish, sorry:>)
ref: 1:49 All metal on earth has been in space at some time. :-) Also the are a lot that point to that all iron has come down to earth as meteorites since the iron that was there at the formation sank down to the core when everything was melted.
Comments, likes and new subscribers help the channel greatly. Thanks!
I've watched a few of your videos and thoroughly enjoyed them. This one got me, though. I cheesed hard from start to finish and couldn't make myself stop. I love the "wizardry" involved in metalwork, especially blacksmithing.
It has a way of coming full circle. A brief summary "The furnace that is a star forges elements together to get things like iron, sharing it with the universe. We then use the same elements forged within that solar furnace that helped mold something beautiful and brilliant (like Earth and blacksmiths) to also heat (sometimes with solar power) and mold that same element into something also beautiful and brilliant. That we then share with the universe. And, it eventually will too return to a star, just as we will."
That was as short as I could get it to make it pretty much make sense.
Thank you for the love of song you have, the beautiful sounds you make, the brilliant work you do and the soul you've become.
I know you probably won't read or see this but congrats you did very well! Also wow so deep and real about the things today made just to be thrown away and not lasting long. I love steel work and anything I need I can make as well as all mistakes and leftovers aren't waste, they become something else. Think about a wicker or plastic, even aluminum outside chair. How long do they last through seasons and storms? Steel is forever. Flower pot holders, fences and even some art for decoration. Very cool you experienced it. My goodness I'm so sorry and no disrespect meant but you are so beautiful and seem like a wonderful person to know.
You can REALLY see how much she loves what she is doing and even teaching others!
While I have SO much respect for Blacksmiths, I think the real wizardry is preformed by the Smelters. There is just something almost alchemical about putting a bunch of rock, powder and charcoal into a furnace and then, you break open your crucible and there's this shiny metal in there.
Looking forward to the new line of merch, Beth Swords
Lovely lady, super nice info 👍
Thank you kindly
Perhaps not your cup of tea, but I have been addicted to "Forged in Fire" on the Discovery Channel for years. These guys make knives and swords out of many different kinds of steel using several different forging processes. I absolutely love it.
Well done You!! You are such a brave girl Beth! All your fans are proud of you. ❤ PJ
This is a fabulous side project. As an electrician, I have a ton of respect for manual crafts and trades. Plus smithing and metalworking is just awesome. My mother recently got into artistic welding a couple of years ago.
The blacksmith woman is a hell of an artist... I kept listening to Manowar on the back of my head... Now we are brothers of metal. Awesome experience.
Great video production!
Thanks John!
As a hobby blacksmith myself, I really enjoyed this video. It's always great to see people taking an interest in an ancient craft. :)
Thanks for the memories Beth.
As a kid, I spent many hours helping my father in his forge building wrought iron fences ballaustrades & columns etc. He was a metal magician. It seemed that it would just do what ever he told it to. I even helped him install them on the weekends at the houses of the people who commissioned them. Great times as a 15yo kid.
God bless you for doing all these amazing things on this channel my dear. Cheers.
I love this. Love anyone learning new skills and having their curiosity better understood. Kudos, Beth.
Thank you Beth. It was a interesting video.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Wonderful experience! You are amazing, good job.
Thank you so much!
Beth's power 💪💪💪💪, it's nice to see you with this activities! I'm desperate to watch the next !
I feel like there is a special magic in making things! No matter what or how good it is the action of making is itself magic!
It's always good to have a tradesman's skill to fall back on. I was glad to see that your new mentor was safety conscious enough to have you use proper safety gear. Nice work !
Great stuff from Beth. RESPECT! Keep it up. Beth ROCKS!
Thanks so much!
@@RoarRawr Very well deserved. This new channel is something VERY different from the vocal coach stuff. And so far nice content and good quality. I have been playing music for 30 plus years and been teaching guitar and bass for 10 plus, but I also enjoy trips outside of music content. Cheers from Sweden!
This is so cool, Beth! That induction heater is an amazing piece of gear... especially since it lets you say you bent steel using the power of the sun! 👍
I loved, what Shona said about the blacksmith family: about sharing the knowledge.
From my experience, it's similar with motorcycle mechanics and chefs (just my own experience).
I had pro motorcycle mechanics asking me (an amateur) questions. And gave it my best. And got that in return, before and after.
Same with cooking: this never ending learning is just fascinating me. And most people I know in the cooking world do that.
This is not a given thing: working in the metal industry, some "specialists" never handed their knowledge over. Not even when they retired. I've seen it happening. Made me sad. Not my way.
Best of luck with forging metal!
An, in fact, very surprising twist in what is fascinating you.
Greetings from the far north of Germany!
A good attitude is the most important ingredient. You got that covered. Good job with making the video concise too.
Awesome! I wish I had a friend who was a Blacksmith so I could go hang out and make some kewl things out of steel every so often. I had a Metal Shop class in school and made some interesting things (including a wall based candle holder) that I really enjoyed making, and we had them for years (until they got ruined in a basement flooding where they rusted badly.) Thanx for sharing! Loch Sloy! ~Be Blessed
You had such enthusiasm for something new I haven’t seen in a long time it’s refreshing. Keep it up.
Thank you!
You're an artist Beth so this makes so much sense. Great video!
Nice work 🙂
Thanks 😁
My grandfather was a blacksmith . For real. Your amazing, love it.
I know, a late comment. Growing up in the oil fields, I was around welding and metal work all the time. I loved doing it, especially in high school. We had shop classes and I took every one I could take. It's so great to see you expanding your experiences.
I love these videos. You can see Beth was having just such a wonderful time. I can't help but wonder how she would get on with my hobby, high power amateur rocketry. She'll be running NASA in no time.
I'm very excited for this new format! can't wait to see where it goes.
It's really amazing how you challenge yourself in different jobs and different situations. I always watched you in your first channel and I'll always watch you in this second one. Much love and support from Italy 🇮🇹 ❤
Enjoyed this a lot. I am a machinist and make medical surgical tools and implants. Hips, knees, finger joints, bone screws and such. Working with all kinds of metal is my life. I cut it within ten thousands of an inch so others can be healed. Very fulfilling. Great video! Thanks!
So glad there are people like you capable of such precision
As an amateur smith this really resonates for me with the reasons why I took up the hobby to begin with. My Grandfather was a metalworker who learned his trade during the Great Depression. After he died, I decided to give it a try myself in an attempt to keep that part of his memory with me. I found a real understanding of why he continued to work on new projects long after he had quit making his living at it. Every piece is indeed one of a kind. They also contain all of the previous lessons learned on earlier pieces, and so they become the tangible history of refining one's craft. For some reason the more time is spent focused on the task, the more one also learns about themself.
Very cool. It is so much fun I built my own blacksmith shop years ago. Glad you got to play with a power hammer. 👍 Hammer on!!
My first experience with blacksmithing was making a small hatchet from the rectangular block of steel. 12 hours of work (with help, of course) and no power hammer, just the hands. On the next day, I couldn't even make a fist because of edema. It was expected because your hands receive a lot of vibrations that traumatize your skin tissues and the result was so satisfying! Wielding an axe made with your own hands when you chop wood for a bonfire is quite a rewarding feeling. It's not just a tool, it's the tool you made by yourself and you remember how it was every time you use it.
"Power of the gas" example was coal, but I am really intrigued by induction powered by solar. I would love to hear more about that. I love my induction stove but as a 30 year blacksmith had no idea that any amount of solar might power induction blacksmithing. Lovely video and like your idea for this channel. Got to you thanks to the armonica.
You rock, Beth! Love from Ohio 💜
I love the concept for this new channel. We all have things we kinda always wanted to do or try, but never did for whatever reason. Fear, inertia, fear of being judged, laziness, tomorrow syndrome, whatever.
Skydiving, forging, getting knuckle tattoos, hiking around Lake Superior, whatever. Literally whatever.
Love the concept. Love it.
Speaking of knuckle tattoos - after decades of never finding the right two words that I liked and could always stand behind, I finally figured it out a week ago.
go do
It fits the vibe of this channel nicely. Good synchronicity.
Really cool, Beth. You have redefined "being a metal fan"!🤪
I can't believe I missed putting in a metal joke in this video....doh!
@@RoarRawr Or you could've simply renamed the video to "British Steel" as a nice homage to Judas Priest.
@@RoarRawr Exactly! So I did for you! 🤪
The production on these is really good. Thanks, Beth. 👍🙂
Thank you!
I absolutely love this. Usually watch your music reaction videos. So glad you got this experience and shared it with us.
Thank you so much!!
LoL on the "Beth with a Blowtorch" smile
What a wonderful clip that I really enjoyed - and your summary too. I would like to make candlesticks the same way!
Holy.... I have no idea how I ended up here. The RUclips algorithm works in mysterious ways, but what an absolutely stunning and charming girl she is! I immediately subscribed, hoping for more content going forward! :)
Welcome aboard!
Beth. Such a cool thing to do. Love this channel as well.
Been listening to by Beth Roars but this is really really good keep it up as a lifelong motorcyclist and restoration of all motor vehicles it’s really nice do you talk like this Michael
Really awesome :)
It is special to have something that you made or was made for you. Not quite as labor intensive as making candlesticks, but I am planning on making some Christmas ornaments like my mom did when I was young.
Thats really cute! I'm sure your mum will love it!
Awesome video ! I've been building stuff for years its a lot of fun you looked like you were having a blast nice work!
We all need to appreciate the things that are made by hand whether in wood or metal
As a coal miner the blowtorch was our best friend on some jobs. We called it the blue wrench. I have seen people do thing with a torch that seemed like magic. Example cut a gear off of a shaft without ruining the shaft. A number of times I have seen folks try to do this with bad results. I am so glad you tried this Beth. Do this for a full work day and watch what happens to your arms, At a girl!!!!!
Hi Beth watching you do these videos is so much fun, always knew you could forge steel haha
Thanks Jason!
Wow! How cool is it to have your own candle sticks?
You are amazing... I just built an off grid tiny house setup, its been challenging, gotta do everything myself, because i live in an entitled country, some people call the land of the free, but no one will do anything, unless its a $100,000 job, so youtube has taught me many trades...
You did a fantastic job you should be proud
Thanks Tom
This will be cool. Reminder set!
Great piece! Thank you for sharing!
Thanks for listening
This is HEAVY METAL!😎
I would LOVE to see a colab between yourself and Mike Boyd!!!
I think Beth is off to a great start with this channel.
Thanks Oskar!
The cinematography is absolutely incredible. You need to show your skills off a LOT more. Keep it up!!! Beth not only Roars, but also SLAYS at camera skills!
Thank you! We are working on improving that at the moment but most of the great camera work is down to my partner Tom :)
@@RoarRawr Tom rules. Those opening shots of her hammering and the flames, slow motion, etc… They look incredibly professional. You’ve got a great team, lots of talent coming together and I’m excited to have front row tickets to the show!
Lucky you! I have wanted to try my hand at this
This are lovely. We'll done.
Thanks Bob!
Amazing. How many people do you know who have candlesticks they've forged themselves? That's going to have pride of place for quite a long time :)
That's sooooo satifying and inspirational to watch ! Awesome video, awesome new channel ! I'll have to watch this with my daughters for sure.
Funny thing, I kept hearing "forge the BASS" instead of "forge the base" (prolly coz' I'm not english native) ... but I wouldn't be surprised if bass guitars were being forged :D
Micheal Scott would have a heart attack trying to keep up with the endless, “That’s what she said,” opportunities in this video!!! X(
Awesome. Always wanted to do some smitting, unfortunately the person I knew passed away and I moved from the country. Although I used the blowtorch for soldering, it's not nice to get burns from it. Congrats Beth.
Rename the video title to "British Steel", please! I'm a huge Judas Priest fan.
You are a talented story-teller, Beth.
Thanks Jim!
Really enjoyed this! The sentiment value of things are mostly overlooked nowadays and i think you have talent for noticing ^_^
Glad you enjoyed it!
I've studied some design and a common refrain is to 'create experiences, not things'. Interpret that as you will, but sentimental aspects in products have really been put into focus, even if at least recently.
That's really cool! Glad you got that experience. And yeah, it's not easy. I did a brief stint in a blacksmith shop too, but it was a historic site so it was just charcoal, fire, and manual bellows for us. I didn't get beyond doornails in the brief time I was there.
And "storytelling in metal" makes me think Nightwish, haha.
You see!! I was right about a sword coming!!
The sword of William Wallace or King Arthur?
@@adamkeane2622 let's say King Arthur, so Beth can be The Lady of the Lake...
@@whiteeulogianraven7995 I'd go for William Wallace btw! 😅
I love your new channel. I took metal shop and wood shop in school and was a great experience. Will you be learning to do some wood work? That would be awesome to learn to do. Don't you think? Have a nice day. Thank you.
Metal and wood working can both be good trades to get into ... wood chips smell better.
Just like Superman, our Beth can bend steel with her bare hands! :-)
Rawr!
I'd be interested if you could try learning glass blowing. Another great job, Beth.
I’ve been trying to book that! The place I want to go has an 8 month waiting list though! I’ll be doing it as soon as I can! x
@@RoarRawr that's cool that the process is in motion already. Great minds think alike (lol in my case).
Idea: Beth learns how to dance tango music🖤❤️💃🏻
It looks so beautiful terrifying haha - Alos love her story. I've been watching "Forged in fire" in History channel for a couple of months and now I'm wondering how to create a mini forge in my little house hahah. That's what a I call "relatable content" . Thanks Beth
Congrats on taking that mental leap towards being a maker. I'd recommend Walter Sorrels' channel for a few different videos on how to build a home forge. I put my own spin on it, but I basically took one of his designs and modified it to be the shape I wanted, given the space I'm working with in my shop. Best of luck.
Good job.
Just found out about this new channel. I’m excited to see all you can accomplish throughout these videos!
Thanks Shane!
Wow Beth! You're a good storyteller. I like your new channel. Feels like you should transition to short films then movie making.
I'll look forward to seeing see 'toss the caber' at the Highland Games next July...
My brother forges steel for proper swords to sell... first off, holy shit Beth that's amazing; second off, you'd love my brother. 😉
I’d say something like this would be great on tv!
Thanks Tim!
@@RoarRawr no problem! Always been a big fan of yours!
Actually it’s all been to space mate.
Over a billion years ago the iron in our planet spewed forth across space out of the heart of a star in its final majestic death throws, becoming part of a new solar system being born and eventually accreting into the world we call home.
It’s truely a majestic story.
good video... Buen video Saludos desde México.
I really love this new series of your!
When will you start alligator wrestling?
🙈
MCU Mjolnir also forged by the energy of a sun. Metal!
That is the cleanest metal shop I have ever seen. Starting out with survival and metal working sets the bar a little high but I respect the dive in and get the monkey approach. You could do welding but it's very dirty and quite dull. Rebuilding an engine might be interesting. Woodworking would give you a lot of options. I know people offer classes on timber framing houses or building with joinery. You might be able to find a luthier who will teach you how to make a guitar. With your ear you would probably be really good at voicing a guitar top.
Yep, Definitely wizards. I think pyromancy maybe involved, and blunt implements.
That's handy, I could use a sgian-dubh :)
HIT IT!
Almost the energy you consume comes from the sun at some point, with the exception of nuclear (mass defect), tidal (momentum left over from the formation of the solar system), and geothermal (heat left over from the formation of the solar system). All fossil and biofuels come from the sun: the energy used to grow the organisms that make coal, oil, gas, etc, derive from photosynthesis. Wind, wave and hydroelectric all come from the energy the sun puts into our atmosphere. So whether your forging steel or cooking dinner, you’re effectively using the sun. I think that’s pretty cool too.
Beth go visit Clark at windy hill foundry Learn how to sand cast patterns and pour cast iron.
Ok next challenge. Go to space with your candlestick:):):):) I hope you have the phonenumber of Mr. Musk!!:):)
Yeah you really showed that piece metal who was boss. Lovely piece of craftmanship or should we say craftwomanship?:):):):):)
nice!
Thanks for the visit
Very nice vid! Btw should a blacksmith wear ear protectors?
I would think so, dependant on the time and what you are working on. www.minuendo.com are releasing an earplug for industrial workers that alerts you when the sound is becoming dangerous. Very cool!
@@RoarRawr Thx a lot!
Beth, I would have liked you to make a sword, so I could tell you "Your Weapon Lady... It Will Kill" ( I don't know how to say it in English, I saw the program in Spanish, sorry:>)
ref: 1:49
All metal on earth has been in space at some time. :-)
Also the are a lot that point to that all iron has come down to earth as meteorites since the iron that was there at the formation sank down to the core when everything was melted.
I've got a new video idea for ya, laddie: bagpipes. Learn to play bagpipes in the future, please.
That is one I would love to do. I think it will be more of a long term one so I'll probably put a side some time next year :)
@@RoarRawr That late? Damn!
@@RoarRawr Maybe a video on how bagpipes are made, for now.
It's also a good workout.