I have said that before on a couple of projects but we don’t see things the same way this artist does. One man’s junk is another man’s treasure. This is closer to treasure if nothing else because of the age. I call this perseverance and skill.
For rust, try an engraving tool that taps the metal. If it's true that it's for a museum, I think it would be a good idea to make a new one and give them a restored and new one, for comparison.
Эта вещь из космического железа? Наверное ключ от летающей тарелки. Осталось найти сам корабль😂 Было очень интересно и занимательно наблюдать за вашей работой. Получила эстетическое наслаждение, благодарю😊
You could have saved yourself a lot of time and effort if you had used electrolysis rust removal. And it would not remove any of the surviving iron under the rust.
Agree completely. I restore and sold old tools, and electrolysis is always my go-to solution for rust. Why waste brushes and chemicals and other consumables when electrolysis does such a good job, and without the risk of damaging the piece by removing rust by mechanical means. All I can think of is that there was so much rust he was concerned the piece might literally come apart with a 100% rust removal. The NaOh (lye, which is a base, not an acid) seemed to not work at all. I've never heard of lye being used for rust removal. Puzzled...
Good point. I'm sure he meant Fahrenheit. To heat water to 200 degrees C, it would have to be in a highly pressurized vessel, since water boils at 100C (at standard temperature and pressure).
Эта штука, не стоит затраченного времени и средств. Можно элементарно, металлической щёткой на электродвигателе. (Станок). У нас, в таких случаях говорят: выкрасить и выбросить...
It can be said that in the film it is a type of mace, called a piernacz by the Ruthenians - a characteristic iron workmanship for lower officer ranks. There are a lot of such things and it is not true that they come from what is now Ukraine. Ukraine was a land (Polish word = KRAINA) on the edge of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. This type of thing was most popular in Turkey. They come from the countries of the Middle East and Asia. They are already encountered during the Crusades. They were not popular for long in Western Europe, but there too they became a sign of military rank. On some signs of military ranks (especially generals and above) you can still see crossed maces - see, for example, the rank of field marshal in Great Britain, there are two batons derived from the mace. Many products of this type were imported in the past; popular, richly decorated designs were made by Armenians but also by local craftsmen not only in the former Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. The pear-shaped iron piernacz (feathered cuts) could have belonged to, for example, a cavalry or infantry lieutenant.There should be about 15 metal plates, or so-called feathers, in this exhibit, so it's a lower-ranking officer. Six feathers were popular among senior Cossack officers. Indeed, sometimes such a Piernacz served as a letter of safe conduct between Cossacks, many of whom were illiterate, and it was a military symbol visible to everyone from afar. Is it just me or is the letter S visible at the top of the head?
@@ReXtorer Back then it was Ruthenia under the rule of Lithuanian princes. Besides, the Ruthenians ruled there for several centuries. Even Jerema Wiśniowiecki, hated by Ukrainians, was a Ruthenian magnate. His Ruthenian father did not know Polish at all. To make it even funnier, Chmielnicki is a Polish nobleman who fled to Ukraine and pursued personal revenge for having his wife taken away. He became Cossack hetman and led to a civil war. Domowa, because the population living in Ukraine consisted of different nationalities. There were Tatars there, many runaway Polish peasants who had their grudges for Polish nobility and especially the magnates, and there were a lot of Ruthenians there. Cossacks is a new organization of people in a military form. This is not a new nation. But in the vicinity of Crimea and Odessa there were also Greeks and other interesting nationalities. What was the reason for the war? Restriction of Polish money by the Polish Parliament for military spending. The Polish nobility was afraid of granting too many privileges to Cossacks in the service of the republic. The Polish King, who had so far paid the Cossacks generously, included them in the registers, paid them salaries, granted them property, and many received the rights of citizens of the republic, including the right to vote at regional assemblies. But Ukrainians wanted more. And later the Tsar promised them more, but he did not keep his word. It is necessary to distinguish Ruthenians from Muscovites. These are different nationalities. Moscow later colonized parts of Rus'. The current history of Russia is false, manipulated and plays a political role rather than teaching objective facts from history.
@@ReXtorer I am in no way belittling Ukraine - it is a young country. Completely different from previously existing political organizations. A completely different ethnic composition as a result of many historical processes and migrations of peoples. An important period for the development of Ruthenia. The Mongol invasion depopulated these areas. The period of Lithuanian statehood, the period of Polish statehood. The period of Russian statehood, which was the most destructive for culture, displacement of indigenous nations, great famine - a deliberate plan, murder of other nationalities during the Stalinist period. Settlement of Russians mainly to those who served in the military. Autochthonous people from native culture pushed into the countryside.
I meant that the name Ukraine dates back to the Commonwealth. The Slavic word "Ukraine" is mentioned for the first time in the Kyiv annals according to the Ipatiev list under the year 1187. It outlined the territory of the Pereyaslav principality, which was part of the historical core of Rus, next to the Kyiv and Chernihiv principalities. This word is also found in Rus chronicles under the years 1189, 1213, 1280 and 1282, denoting Halychyna, Western Volhynia, Kholmshchyna, and Podlasie. In Lithuanian and Polish chronicles and official documents of the 14th-17th centuries, the Rus lands of Halychyna, Volhynia, Kyiv region, Podillia, and Bratslav region were called "Ukraine" in a broad sense, and the territory of the Middle Dnieper region in a narrow sense.
Nations in Europe in the modern sense were formed in the 19th century. For example, the first use of the Polish flag was recorded in 1831, and the Ukrainian flag in Lviv in 1848. The very formation of nations and symbols of nations is not so ancient.
It would be interesting if you could weigh the object you are restoring before and after restoration that we can see how much corrosion you had to get rid of.
No expert with plastics, but with glass I had to carefully polish the cut edges to remove any imperfections, as it would develop stress fractures at them from the vacuum cycles. Similar, maybe. The thickness should be enough, but maybe 12mm?
Це що робили таке з ним, що третина зникла, до того ж так акуратно, ніби хтось зрізав. Видно дбайливе консервування 😊 ніяких зварювальних робіт, додавання новостворених недостатніх пластин, нарощування руків‘я. А ще, цікаво що за метал, бо так й не зрозумів
Буквально вчора дивився відео як чоловік знайшов цей пернач. А сьогодні знайшов відео з реставрацією. Дякую за вашу працю. Ось те відео до речі: ruclips.net/video/Yo197yifMmQ/видео.html
A czemu to nie zostało do porządku wypiaskowany i kolejne pióra odrysowane od metalu i przyspawane żeby było okrągłe tylko po byle jakiemu Czemu to nie jest fachowo zrobione Przecież to ma być berło królewskie ponoć a nie jakieś ten zabytkowe takie rzeczy trzeba odrestaurowywać i później do muzeum a nie tak zrobić jak jest tu zrobione Pozdrawiam serdecznie. 🤔
Berło to zupełnie inny przedmiot, podobnie, jak buława. Można powiedzieć, że to na filmie rodzaj buzdyganu, przez Rusinów nazywany piernaczem - charakterystyczny żelazne wykonanie dla niższego stopnia oficerskiego. Takich rzeczy spotyka się masę i nie jest prawdą, że wywodzą się z terenów obecnej Ukrainy. Ukraina, to była kraina na skraju Rzeczypospolitej. Najbardziej popularne tego typu rzeczy były w Turcji. Wywodzą się z krajów Środkowego Wschodu i Azji. Spotyka się je już podczas krucjat. W Europie zachodniej nie były długo popularne, ale i tam stały się oznaką stopnia wojskowego. Na niektórych oznakach stopni wojskowych (zwłaszcza generałów i wyżej) do dziś dnia możesz zobaczyć skrzyżowane buławy - zobacz przykładowo stopień feldmarszałka w wielkiej Brytanii tam są dwie pałki, wywodzące się właśnie z buzdyganu. Wiele tego typu wyrobów było w dawnych wiekach importem, popularne wzory bogato zdobione robili Ormianie ale także lokalni rzemieślnicy nie tylko na terenach byłej Rzeczypospolitej. Żelazny piernacz (pierzaste nacięcia) w kształcie gruszki mógł należeć na przykład do jakiegoś porucznika jazdy lub piechoty.
I have said that before on a couple of projects but we don’t see things the same way this artist does. One man’s junk is another man’s treasure. This is closer to treasure if nothing else because of the age. I call this perseverance and skill.
That is SO cool! I've seen these in old paintings before, but I never expected to see one for real, great job!
For rust, try an engraving tool that taps the metal. If it's true that it's for a museum, I think it would be a good idea to make a new one and give them a restored and new one, for comparison.
Thank you! I plan to create a copy in the future.
Cool mace.
Шикарно! Наконец то действительно старое железо, а не измазаное грязью! Лайк!
Эта вещь из космического железа? Наверное ключ от летающей тарелки. Осталось найти сам корабль😂 Было очень интересно и занимательно наблюдать за вашей работой. Получила эстетическое наслаждение, благодарю😊
手袋の繊維と錆が絡まる音、結構好き😊
good job
Five weeks in acid!!!! Wow! Glad you found this and preserved it as best you can!
😮beatiful 👍👍👍😉🇧🇪
All you did was use chemicals that didn't work and clean of rust. Not a restoration it's a rust cleaning video
This is incredible! I have great respect for what you do. You are an artist! (Also, bright and smooth finishes in Knife restorations are my favorite.)
I can sit and watch this for hours
Good thing you provided historical context because I was about to say that tiny little thing was probably just a piece of a curtain rod.
I am not of religion,But this was a beautiful restoration.❤
Still new in the game keep on progressing!👍
Beautifully preserved. Excellent museum piece.
Thank you!
Looks more like a door knob. Great ASMR.
Preserved and not compromised.
нарешті! :D чудова реставрація, чекав на неї з моменту відео знахідки ✨ достойна річ для музею 👏🇺🇦
Aí sim, boooa
Att: Weliton Marks - Canal Desbravatube
Вітаю! Дякую за цікаве відео!
In Poland it was called a mace (buława) and was an attribute of power granted to high military officers in the 16th and 17th centuries.
❤але ти крутий . Такий кропіткий процес відновлення. Шикардос.🎉
You could have saved yourself a lot of time and effort if you had used electrolysis rust removal. And it would not remove any of the surviving iron under the rust.
He dose but this one he didn't
Agree completely. I restore and sold old tools, and electrolysis is always my go-to solution for rust. Why waste brushes and chemicals and other consumables when electrolysis does such a good job, and without the risk of damaging the piece by removing rust by mechanical means. All I can think of is that there was so much rust he was concerned the piece might literally come apart with a 100% rust removal. The NaOh (lye, which is a base, not an acid) seemed to not work at all. I've never heard of lye being used for rust removal. Puzzled...
Such patient, focussed & meticulous work. Well done!
Добра робота. Пернач 16-17 століття.
Дякую!
wonderfull. this month of restoration sure was worth it! Great work!
Thank you! While I was waiting for the mace in the NaOH solution, I was doing other restoration projects)
You should have used Evaporust. It removes rust without damaging the underlying metal.
Good job mister beautifully restored well done
Good work.
It is conservation, not restoration.
Amazing Restoration 👍🏻👍🏽👍🇬🇧🇬🇧
My great-grand father used go say boy..."Opinions are like assholes, everyone has one and most of them stink"
In the museum of Târgu-Mureş, you can find a similar one!
WOW 😍
Gran bel lavoro 👏👏👏
Un saluto da Roma 🇺🇦❤🇮🇪
You mean 🇮🇹?
Öncesi ve sonrası aynı. Hiçbir şey değişmedi.
200°C in boiling Water? Amazing!
Это процесс называется обессоливание
Good point. I'm sure he meant Fahrenheit. To heat water to 200 degrees C, it would have to be in a highly pressurized vessel, since water boils at 100C (at standard temperature and pressure).
@@billdouglas1721 This is called the desalination process
@@billdouglas1721 more precisely, to remove salt deposits from the inside of the find 😉Because she was lying in aggressive soil
It may not be pristine, but it has been preserved.
Эта штука, не стоит затраченного времени и средств.
Можно элементарно, металлической щёткой на электродвигателе. (Станок).
У нас, в таких случаях говорят: выкрасить и выбросить...
Electrolysis is your friend. Soaking it for a month to come out just as it went in doesn't makes sense
It can be said that in the film it is a type of mace, called a piernacz by the Ruthenians - a characteristic iron workmanship for lower officer ranks. There are a lot of such things and it is not true that they come from what is now Ukraine. Ukraine was a land (Polish word = KRAINA) on the edge of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. This type of thing was most popular in Turkey. They come from the countries of the Middle East and Asia. They are already encountered during the Crusades. They were not popular for long in Western Europe, but there too they became a sign of military rank. On some signs of military ranks (especially generals and above) you can still see crossed maces - see, for example, the rank of field marshal in Great Britain, there are two batons derived from the mace. Many products of this type were imported in the past; popular, richly decorated designs were made by Armenians but also by local craftsmen not only in the former Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. The pear-shaped iron piernacz (feathered cuts) could have belonged to, for example, a cavalry or infantry lieutenant.There should be about 15 metal plates, or so-called feathers, in this exhibit, so it's a lower-ranking officer. Six feathers were popular among senior Cossack officers. Indeed, sometimes such a Piernacz served as a letter of safe conduct between Cossacks, many of whom were illiterate, and it was a military symbol visible to everyone from afar. Is it just me or is the letter S visible at the top of the head?
Ukraine - 12th century, the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth - 16th century.
@@ReXtorer
Back then it was Ruthenia under the rule of Lithuanian princes.
Besides, the Ruthenians ruled there for several centuries. Even Jerema Wiśniowiecki, hated by Ukrainians, was a Ruthenian magnate. His Ruthenian father did not know Polish at all. To make it even funnier, Chmielnicki is a Polish nobleman who fled to Ukraine and pursued personal revenge for having his wife taken away. He became Cossack hetman and led to a civil war. Domowa, because the population living in Ukraine consisted of different nationalities. There were Tatars there, many runaway Polish peasants who had their grudges for Polish nobility and especially the magnates, and there were a lot of Ruthenians there. Cossacks is a new organization of people in a military form. This is not a new nation. But in the vicinity of Crimea and Odessa there were also Greeks and other interesting nationalities. What was the reason for the war? Restriction of Polish money by the Polish Parliament for military spending. The Polish nobility was afraid of granting too many privileges to Cossacks in the service of the republic. The Polish King, who had so far paid the Cossacks generously, included them in the registers, paid them salaries, granted them property, and many received the rights of citizens of the republic, including the right to vote at regional assemblies. But Ukrainians wanted more. And later the Tsar promised them more, but he did not keep his word. It is necessary to distinguish Ruthenians from Muscovites. These are different nationalities. Moscow later colonized parts of Rus'. The current history of Russia is false, manipulated and plays a political role rather than teaching objective facts from history.
@@ReXtorer
I am in no way belittling Ukraine - it is a young country. Completely different from previously existing political organizations. A completely different ethnic composition as a result of many historical processes and migrations of peoples. An important period for the development of Ruthenia. The Mongol invasion depopulated these areas. The period of Lithuanian statehood, the period of Polish statehood. The period of Russian statehood, which was the most destructive for culture, displacement of indigenous nations, great famine - a deliberate plan, murder of other nationalities during the Stalinist period. Settlement of Russians mainly to those who served in the military. Autochthonous people from native culture pushed into the countryside.
I meant that the name Ukraine dates back to the Commonwealth. The Slavic word "Ukraine" is mentioned for the first time in the Kyiv annals according to the Ipatiev list under the year 1187. It outlined the territory of the Pereyaslav principality, which was part of the historical core of Rus, next to the Kyiv and Chernihiv principalities. This word is also found in Rus chronicles under the years 1189, 1213, 1280 and 1282, denoting Halychyna, Western Volhynia, Kholmshchyna, and Podlasie. In Lithuanian and Polish chronicles and official documents of the 14th-17th centuries, the Rus lands of Halychyna, Volhynia, Kyiv region, Podillia, and Bratslav region were called "Ukraine" in a broad sense, and the territory of the Middle Dnieper region in a narrow sense.
Nations in Europe in the modern sense were formed in the 19th century. For example, the first use of the Polish flag was recorded in 1831, and the Ukrainian flag in Lviv in 1848. The very formation of nations and symbols of nations is not so ancient.
I though you would remplace the Missing parts and refill the holes of the handle by welding It. Anyway great job.
Q?is it missing pieces or was it supposed to look like this back in the day?
Yes it was like a walking cane it showed richness
Whom ever responded. Part of the handle looked like it was missing.... It doesn't look like a full handle
Quanto mais ferrugem melhor de assistir. Parabéns. Poste mais pra gente🇧🇷
Brasil sil sil 🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷
It would be interesting if you could weigh the object you are restoring before and after restoration that we can see how much corrosion you had to get rid of.
I use that - head screwdriver when I am trying to fix my mistakes with Legos
Great job on one month of restoration ! Rare rusty mace restoration rextorer 🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰
Jurko zasadził Rzędzianowi kopa piernaczem.
Так!😅
Чекала на це відео,гарна реставрація,вітаю!
How thick is your Plexiglas? My 10mm 0.393" cracked.
also 10 mm. I will be more attentive
No expert with plastics, but with glass I had to carefully polish the cut edges to remove any imperfections, as it would develop stress fractures at them from the vacuum cycles. Similar, maybe. The thickness should be enough, but maybe 12mm?
not a mace it is off the top of a gate or iron fence, it is a finial
A pernach is a type of flanged mace upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/d6/Lviv_-_Arsenal_-_13.jpg
@@ReXtorer I know and that doesn't look like one, it looks far more like a finial
@@andyc750 It is already in the museum. This mace was described as an early 17th century pernach.
@@ReXtorer fair enough, I am evidently wrong then
A mace? More like curtain pole decorative boss.
A pernach is a type of flanged mace
My Gods I envy you so much. The most I find are Native American Arrowheads and I can't even keep them.
Why would you not keep them? When we were kids, quite a few had collections of them. Have the rules changed?
Why can't you keep them? I keep mine.
👍🏻
I enjoyed the little history lesson at the start.
❤
Це що робили таке з ним, що третина зникла, до того ж так акуратно, ніби хтось зрізав.
Видно дбайливе консервування 😊 ніяких зварювальних робіт, додавання новостворених недостатніх пластин, нарощування руків‘я.
А ще, цікаво що за метал, бо так й не зрозумів
Залізо, паялось бронзою, тому на поверхні багато бронзи
❤❤❤
💙💛
👍👍👍
Mace? That looks like the broken off end of a curtain rod.
4:24 more time for this!
Пескоструй? Не, не слышали!
Acho que vc restaurou uma peça antiga de desentupir canos.
👍💪
That's no mace, that's a lump of rust pretending to be a mace
)
Restoration for what?
rhetorical question
will it help if I epoxy two 8mm boards together?
гарна робота
сподіваюсь ця булава знайде своє місце на полиці музею
Well this was 25 minutes of my life ill never get back
16
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
Я думав, що іще руків'я дерев'яне йому зробиш. Чудова робота!
Там залізне руківʼя було)
👍👏👍👏👍👏👍👏👍👏👍👏👍🥃🥃🥃
ضيعتلي وقتي في باطل
Як він збирався цікаво, знизу наче пелюстки фіксувались кільцем, а зверху? Мабуть також шось подібне. Типу як діжка деревʼяна.
Так, там два кільця, але ще до того пайка латунню
Буквально вчора дивився відео як чоловік знайшов цей пернач. А сьогодні знайшов відео з реставрацією. Дякую за вашу працю.
Ось те відео до речі: ruclips.net/video/Yo197yifMmQ/видео.html
Так це ж один і той же автор
Крутяк ✌️
Цікаво, яка вага пірнача?
A czemu to nie zostało do porządku wypiaskowany i kolejne pióra odrysowane od metalu i przyspawane żeby było okrągłe tylko po byle jakiemu Czemu to nie jest fachowo zrobione Przecież to ma być berło królewskie ponoć a nie jakieś ten zabytkowe takie rzeczy trzeba odrestaurowywać i później do muzeum a nie tak zrobić jak jest tu zrobione Pozdrawiam serdecznie. 🤔
Berło to zupełnie inny przedmiot, podobnie, jak buława. Można powiedzieć, że to na filmie rodzaj buzdyganu, przez Rusinów nazywany piernaczem - charakterystyczny żelazne wykonanie dla niższego stopnia oficerskiego. Takich rzeczy spotyka się masę i nie jest prawdą, że wywodzą się z terenów obecnej Ukrainy. Ukraina, to była kraina na skraju Rzeczypospolitej. Najbardziej popularne tego typu rzeczy były w Turcji. Wywodzą się z krajów Środkowego Wschodu i Azji. Spotyka się je już podczas krucjat. W Europie zachodniej nie były długo popularne, ale i tam stały się oznaką stopnia wojskowego. Na niektórych oznakach stopni wojskowych (zwłaszcza generałów i wyżej) do dziś dnia możesz zobaczyć skrzyżowane buławy - zobacz przykładowo stopień feldmarszałka w wielkiej Brytanii tam są dwie pałki, wywodzące się właśnie z buzdyganu. Wiele tego typu wyrobów było w dawnych wiekach importem, popularne wzory bogato zdobione robili Ormianie ale także lokalni rzemieślnicy nie tylko na terenach byłej Rzeczypospolitej. Żelazny piernacz (pierzaste nacięcia) w kształcie gruszki mógł należeć na przykład do jakiegoś porucznika jazdy lub piechoty.
I don't want to disrespect your time and effort, but this is the worst restoration ever. I am sorry to say it
What a waste of time
Video makes the dude money, and the process is probably fun. So I wouldn't call it a waste.
,, que es eso
Like the shakespeare play..much ado about nothing.
If you don’t like it don’t watch it it’s as simple as that also it would behoove us to keep your opinions to yourself
@@Choujifangirl Aw did you get your precious feelings hurt ?
😂
Why? Why that very slow, labour intensive method for rust removal?
not to damage the metal and remove salts from the metal
This hardly can be called a restoration, you've barely removed the rust.
um... youve ruined it.
BORING 😴
LOL - you just happen to "find" ANOTHER amazing piece to restore?? Right.
Other than that, great restoration.
I'm searching with a metal detector. I have another channel about finding artifacts www.youtube.com/@ArtifactDigger
Great restoration 😊
OMG what a boring clip i had to watch it with Max speed and still didn't found the purpose of it Sorry no like for you
👍💪