I'm proud to say that ring is on my hand. My lovely wife surprised me with it, knowing I've been following Roy for a couple years on my own journey as a beginning smith. Thanks again Roy, great work and great video. -Chris Gross, Stackpole Forge.
Amazing work as always Roy. I made a wrought iron wedding band for myself a while back. I forge welded two pieces of 1/2 bar stock that were pickets off of some iron railings that come out of New Orleans. I drifted a hole a little smaller than my finger then done a 24 hour etch in copper sulfate. I then sanded it to take the rough edges off of the inside. Anyways, Keep up the good work and I look forward to your future videos.
Nice ring, ive been thinking about making one myself recently out of a nickel steel and a manganese to get a nice contrast on an etch, i was wondering what you would recommend to protect the ring as the manganese steel is quite liable to rust and discolouration i was thinking about coating it in a thin layer of epoxy, any better ideas?
Roy I made one like yours but I used the twist pattern from the first step as the accent and etched in ferric chloride it came out nice but I wish I could get a better gloss on it, I used renaissance wax on it and a buffing wheel but only got a very low gloss to the highs but still very interesting ring. I was wondering why you twisted it if you planned on stippling it seems like a waste of time? Great video though and keep up the great work and keep on inspiring me thank you
is that an old crockpot you put the blank and vineger into, and this is one way to do it but usually something is drawn out on a roller to make a ring and then the end welded at least that is how I saw jewelers make rings or they cast them from a wax mold.
Hello Roy I was trying to forge weld three pieces of steel today and I grinded all the rust and scale off and got it up to a bright yellow heat and flux but it didn't tack or anything any pointers on what I did wrong also great video always enjoy a great craftsmen at work
Heck yeah Roy thanks for the idea I have some 3/4” wrought iron from the 1880’s and I lost my wedding band last year, how long and how hot on the etch? And what did you make the final OD? Just wondering if I’m going to have to upset the iron like you did
I'm not sure, but I would guess it was done to strengthen the grain structure for the upsetting step later. Wrought iron has a grain structure similar to wood, almost always aligned lengthwise. It would have a tendency to split when struck on the end. What twisting does is give the piece a spiral grain, which tends to be much stronger. Am I close, Roy?
I am going to take a guess. It has something to do with changing the grain structure from longitudinal to radial, less chance of cracking. I know enough about Wrought Iron to make JUNK!!!
I was thinking something along the lines of grain structure but I’ve never worked with real wrought and know nothing of how it works... Wouldn’t twisting it out of welding heat cause more stress fractures/splits?
Billy It is so you don't split the grain when upsetting the wrought... Think about wrought iron like wood. good straight grain ash splits easy and curly maple doesn't . great question and thanks for asking
It could be made of modern mild or any steel/alloy.... but your missing the point Sir, blacksmiths reduce, reuse, recycle. That wrought was made by a blacksmith 114 years ago for some purpose that was needed. Who knows when it was smelted? Maybe a 114 years ago that smith took and reused another smiths 100 year old work??? That’s why it’s interesting Cheers sir!
Cool piece of work but would it have killed you to talk a little bit? A little explanation would have cleared up a lot of questions. I value what you have to say as much as I value what you have to show.
I'm proud to say that ring is on my hand. My lovely wife surprised me with it, knowing I've been following Roy for a couple years on my own journey as a beginning smith. Thanks again Roy, great work and great video. -Chris Gross, Stackpole Forge.
Cool!
From the skill all the way through to the ingenuity, beautiful work as always Roy
Thank you sir !
Beautiful work my friend, thanks for the video!
Nice job Roy.
Amazing work as always Roy. I made a wrought iron wedding band for myself a while back. I forge welded two pieces of 1/2 bar stock that were pickets off of some iron railings that come out of New Orleans. I drifted a hole a little smaller than my finger then done a 24 hour etch in copper sulfate. I then sanded it to take the rough edges off of the inside. Anyways, Keep up the good work and I look forward to your future videos.
Fantastic work, it came out beautifully.
You are an artist. Great work! Blessings to you and yours.
Beautiful ring! ❤
Awesome video man! You did a great job.
Looks great Roy good Job!!!!
Really nice job looks great
Cool Ring, I've made a few coin rings they are a lot of fun attempted one from silver once but had too much fatiguing in the metal and it cracked
Flawless, and of course the best thing is that no Fluxes were harmed during the making of this video!
hells yah ...... "HELLS YAH !"
Cool idea, i have some wrought iron too and iv been wondering what to do with it.
now this is how you really make a ring .
Will it rust?
Nice ring, ive been thinking about making one myself recently out of a nickel steel and a manganese to get a nice contrast on an etch, i was wondering what you would recommend to protect the ring as the manganese steel is quite liable to rust and discolouration i was thinking about coating it in a thin layer of epoxy, any better ideas?
Roy I made one like yours but I used the twist pattern from the first step as the accent and etched in ferric chloride it came out nice but I wish I could get a better gloss on it, I used renaissance wax on it and a buffing wheel but only got a very low gloss to the highs but still very interesting ring. I was wondering why you twisted it if you planned on stippling it seems like a waste of time? Great video though and keep up the great work and keep on inspiring me thank you
Hi, blacksmith here. Where did you get your ring mandrel, and do you have a specific brand that you suggest?
is that an old crockpot you put the blank and vineger into, and this is one way to do it but usually something is drawn out on a roller to make a ring and then the end welded at least that is how I saw jewelers make rings or they cast them from a wax mold.
What solution did you use for the last bath?
Hello Roy I was trying to forge weld three pieces of steel today and I grinded all the rust and scale off and got it up to a bright yellow heat and flux but it didn't tack or anything any pointers on what I did wrong also great video always enjoy a great craftsmen at work
If u put two pieces in the fire u can fell them get sticky when u touch them together then u know ur at welding heat hope this helps
Okay I'll try that and see first I have to go back and grind them off again we're I used flux
3:43 Brother when you're cutting the iron, why sparks ain't appearing???🤯
Heck yeah Roy thanks for the idea I have some 3/4” wrought iron from the 1880’s and I lost my wedding band last year, how long and how hot on the etch? And what did you make the final OD? Just wondering if I’m going to have to upset the iron like you did
How does someone interested in blacksmithing get started?
A beginner class is a good way to try it and see if you like it.
Didn't think you could twist wrought iron
Why couldn't you
I’m sorry but I don’t understand why you twisted it in the beginning?
I'm not sure, but I would guess it was done to strengthen the grain structure for the upsetting step later. Wrought iron has a grain structure similar to wood, almost always aligned lengthwise. It would have a tendency to split when struck on the end. What twisting does is give the piece a spiral grain, which tends to be much stronger.
Am I close, Roy?
I am going to take a guess. It has something to do with changing the grain structure from longitudinal to radial, less chance of cracking. I know enough about Wrought Iron to make JUNK!!!
I was thinking something along the lines of grain structure but I’ve never worked with real wrought and know nothing of how it works...
Wouldn’t twisting it out of welding heat cause more stress fractures/splits?
Hit the nail on the head! :-)
Billy It is so you don't split the grain when upsetting the wrought... Think about wrought iron like wood. good straight grain ash splits easy and curly maple doesn't . great question and thanks for asking
Interesting
What is the solution that darkened the metal?
Cleaning vinegar, you can also use ferric chloride or even orange juice to etch metal.
Bor Tgov cool; thank you!
You're already married, so, who's the ring for? And shouldn't it be a matching set?
A customer. She only requested the band for her husband.
I can just smell the vinegar vapor
My dumbass would grab it while its red hot to adjust it
Why even use wrought if you’re going to cover it in hammer marks? Might as well be mild steel.
Cole Aurichio Because a mild steel ring sounds kinda lame
It could be made of modern mild or any steel/alloy.... but your missing the point Sir, blacksmiths reduce, reuse, recycle. That wrought was made by a blacksmith 114 years ago for some purpose that was needed. Who knows when it was smelted? Maybe a 114 years ago that smith took and reused another smiths 100 year old work???
That’s why it’s interesting
Cheers sir!
Cool piece of work but would it have killed you to talk a little bit? A little explanation would have cleared up a lot of questions. I value what you have to say as much as I value what you have to show.
first