Hand Forging a Nail for the First Time: Beginner Blacksmithing

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  • Опубликовано: 22 май 2024
  • Hand forging a nail for building the medieval door to the saxon house. The first 1000 people to click the link will get a free trial of Skillshare's Premium Membership: skl.sh/taoutdoors10201
    Join me on my quest into blacksmithing as I learn how to forge a nail using a coal forge and hammer. I travel to Alex Pole's blacksmith shop in Somerset, aptly named "The Forge" where he teaches me beginner blacksmithing tips like how to use a coal forge, how to use a hammer and anvil and most importantly, how to forge a nail by hand! I learnt so much on this adventure, and it truly made me appreciate the skill and craft of our ancestors. Stay tuned for more videos with Alex down the road...
    Alex's Forge: www.alexpoleironwork.com/
    Alex's RUclips Channel: / @alexpoleblacksmith
    Alex's Instagram: alexpoleiro...
    Alex's Forged Kitchenware: www.alexpoleironwork.com/coll...
    TA OUTDOORS BUSHCRAFT & CAMPING GEAR SHOP: www.taoutdoors.com/shop/
    TA OUTDOORS MERCHANDISE: taofficial.com
    Our other RUclips Channel: Dad's Channel: / tafishing
    My Bushcraft, Survival and Filming Gear (Amazon): www.amazon.com/shop/taoutdoors
    These are amazon affiliate links
    INSTAGRAM: / taoutdoorofficial
    FACEBOOK: / totallyawesomeoutdoors
    TWITTER: / outdoorsta
    #blacksmithing #forge #forging #nail #taoutdoors
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Комментарии • 147

  • @user-jb8wk1vp9c
    @user-jb8wk1vp9c 3 года назад +36

    it felt like I was watching a Louis Theroux documentary, because of the voice over! great video!

  • @tonyfletcher2541
    @tonyfletcher2541 3 года назад +44

    Amazing the skills we have lost due to automation. Glad to see these skills being kept alive by people like you and Alex. Enjoy your channel!

    • @m2hmghb
      @m2hmghb 3 года назад +2

      There are a couple places in the US that have villages/towns that operate like they were still in the 17 or 1800s. It's interesting as hell to visit, a lot of work when something like a hurricane comes through and you need to make new cedar shakes by hand and then have the blacksmith forge the nails to put the cedar shakes up.

    • @tonyfletcher2541
      @tonyfletcher2541 3 года назад +1

      @@m2hmghb I grew up down the road from the last working blacksmith in NW Arkansas. As a kid I would ride over on my bike to watch him make things in his forge. Watching the sparks fly as he struck the iron with his hammer and shaped horse shoes, plow blades and the like. Still makes me smile to watch this in young people like Alex.

  • @gabeslife1966
    @gabeslife1966 3 года назад

    I watch many blacksmith channels so this is cool that it crosses both bushcraft and blacksmithing. Also, the pics with a phone is cool. I hadn't really thought about learning how to take better pics with my phone.

  • @ironmaiden5658
    @ironmaiden5658 3 года назад +1

    My brothers house that he just sold was 120 years old. It was built with handmade nails. We used to crawl under the house and look at the nails that were used to nail the floor boards down but missed the girders.

  • @Raven_Leblanc
    @Raven_Leblanc 3 года назад +9

    I'm a hobbyist bladesmith using a charcoal forge, and my friend just gave me a brand new anvil made from a piece of railroad track with high carbon steel welded onto it. Honestly, the first thing that I made was an axe (hatchet) that came out really nice. But one thing i'm certain of is that I have a lot left to learn... I'm happy I can already make my own stuff, but it's nowhere near as good as what you can get made by professional bladesmiths. But in time, I might get good enough.

    • @newbiegaming6090
      @newbiegaming6090 3 года назад

      That's the spirit! Keep your forge lit and hammer at hand.

  • @danmalone7819
    @danmalone7819 3 года назад +1

    Great video. Love the blacksmithing.

  • @Bushy-73
    @Bushy-73 3 года назад +1

    We have all been told to self isolate today so your TA Outdoors videos will keep the cabin fever away by watching your playlists

  • @evelynsantana2455
    @evelynsantana2455 3 года назад

    I 💕 your channel and your Dad is amazing

  • @user-el8ey6rp2n
    @user-el8ey6rp2n 3 года назад +4

    I loved the intro speech.

  • @98Kentuckian
    @98Kentuckian 3 года назад +1

    Always heard my uncle tell about stories he had heard of American pioneers who would burn their cabins down if they were moving just so they could sift the ashes and get the nails back out of it. Makes you realize how valuable of a resource they were back then

  • @richardpalmer6196
    @richardpalmer6196 3 года назад +2

    Awesome information . Imagine the old time blacksmith making nails for each horse he was shoeing , and for each building going up in his growing town .

  • @jthreeb
    @jthreeb 3 года назад +1

    I metal detect, I love finding old hand forged nails. I love the history and the work behind them!

  • @1986mattymatty
    @1986mattymatty 3 года назад +4

    cant believe I forgot about this channel, I was fantasizing building a cabin in the woods and then I remembered. Guess ill hit that bell as youtube wont put this channel in my feed

  • @flouncy.
    @flouncy. 3 года назад +1

    never thought you would make a nail, but it was oddly satisfying

  • @RumMonkeyable
    @RumMonkeyable 3 года назад +17

    For those of us who have been long-time subscribers, we remember, a couple of years ago, when you forged a hatchet with Alec Steele in Norfolk UK (before he moved here to the USA in Montana).

    • @TAOutdoors
      @TAOutdoors  3 года назад +6

      Still got the Hatchet! (And the knife)

    • @NismoXero
      @NismoXero 3 года назад +7

      @@TAOutdoors That vid is how I found Alec Steele and got into blacksmithing. Built my own wood/charcoal forge and made my own anvil. Learned a lot from you and Alec.

    • @suprspi
      @suprspi 3 года назад +9

      I went the other way and found Mike via Alec's channel. I still sub to both and have learned tons from both of them.

    • @Gawonii1Austencao
      @Gawonii1Austencao 3 года назад

      @@suprspi Yea, thats how I found TA, from watching Alec's channel and remember watching the whole build of both hatchet and knife, its been 2, almost 3 years ago

  • @Dave_0993_I
    @Dave_0993_I 3 года назад +4

    Incredible historic discovery! Stand by for more background info, just to scratch the surface of the incredible world of Blacksmithing!

  • @bigguygaming7993
    @bigguygaming7993 3 года назад +1

    I’m super excited to watch you do stuff like this. It’s great to see you willing to learn all this stuff to be able to do your projects as Authentic as possible.

  • @1964DAVODAVO
    @1964DAVODAVO 3 года назад +1

    Love the Video ,It amazes me the time and effort it took to make every day items back in the day

  • @BraveLifestyle
    @BraveLifestyle 3 года назад

    Amazing the skills. All videos are perfect. Enjoy your channel!

  • @HenrikLaurell
    @HenrikLaurell 3 года назад +6

    Great new type of content from TA Outdoors! I would gladly see more of this and other similar old methods of doing things. /Henrik

  • @JakobKaiserCreative
    @JakobKaiserCreative 3 года назад +3

    That mans pace is insane. Very impressive precision at that godspeed. Mad respect. I've been at a smith in Britanny the other year and, while highly depending on the size of the nail, the dude said a good smith could make a nail in one heat. Which he proved a minute after. His nails were about half to two thirds the size of the ones you made here and he used a nail header hardy tool, so it's a faster process anyway.
    Great video, Mike.

  • @jmpriester
    @jmpriester 3 года назад +2

    I've seen many a nail forged at colonial settlements here in Virginia USA. Jamestown, Yorktown, the Lost Colony etc. It's really incredible how much time and effort it takes to make a single nail. They always give one to my kids so we have a handful now. Very cool video!

  • @No-body369
    @No-body369 3 года назад

    I found your page a couple days ago and have been beinge watching since lol. I've learned alot. Thanks for posting! 👍

  • @SkilasSkilasGaming
    @SkilasSkilasGaming 3 года назад +58

    If I need nails I just gotta look in my tires, people around my town don't know how to pick nails up.

    • @MYEVILTWIIN
      @MYEVILTWIIN 3 года назад +3

      Must be a lot of council joiners round your way then, cause the ones I work with don’t know how to bend down to pick any up that they drop, us painters call them knee killers ... over the past few years I’ve started picking them up and putting them in my pouch then every other day emptying it when I get home , I’ve now filled 8 Large Stanley fatmax pro screw boxes plus 3 smaller ones

    • @markembling
      @markembling 3 года назад

      I know that feeling. I always get (at least) one nail incident per car that I own.

    • @SkilasSkilasGaming
      @SkilasSkilasGaming 3 года назад +1

      @@MYEVILTWIIN Damn! That's a lot of nails

    • @SkilasSkilasGaming
      @SkilasSkilasGaming 3 года назад

      @@markembling Yeah, it's tragic lol

    • @SkilasSkilasGaming
      @SkilasSkilasGaming 3 года назад

      @@markembling It'll make you want to make whoever dropped them eat the damn nails lol

  • @mistervacation23
    @mistervacation23 3 года назад +1

    J.D. Leftwich had the misfortune recently to tear the flesh of one of his fingers on a rusty
    nail. The wound apparently healed, but last week blood poison symptoms were apparent and the services of Dr. Hamilton were required. At this writing the hand is much improved.

  • @tonyjedioftheforest1364
    @tonyjedioftheforest1364 3 года назад +1

    One of these would make a great ferro rod striker. 40 odd years ago back at school the quicker lads like myself used to make nails in metal work to kill time while the slower lads caught us up. This brings back memories. We used to oil quench ours to give them a rust proof coating. I don’t know if it would make the metal brittle but added another stage to take up more time in the process. We never found out who used the nails if anyone but we made hundreds. Those were the days.

  • @katiea.584
    @katiea.584 3 года назад +3

    Collective Unconscious..neat
    Was just thinking about how nails used to be made and a few daze later...Good Morning to a not wasted day.
    Thank You for sharing all you do.
    Harmony,Happiness and Health
    from my home to yours
    🖖☮❣🌱🌱🌱🇨🇦

  • @villain1409
    @villain1409 3 года назад

    You nailed this video.

  • @gabrielgomescunha
    @gabrielgomescunha 3 года назад

    Looks like you nailed it...
    Yes I did it.

  • @mikebennett6713aceadventures
    @mikebennett6713aceadventures 3 года назад

    That was awesome Mike

  • @maxinedurling3425
    @maxinedurling3425 3 года назад

    thanks for the link there is something smoothing watching a blacksmith at work

  • @hotrod4126
    @hotrod4126 2 года назад

    Just watch his video on this!! He’s great!

  • @FamilyForge
    @FamilyForge Год назад

    I really appreciate this video because I just made my first nail too! I’m learning blacksmithing from my dad and forging nails was the first project. Took 20 heats but didn’t turn out too bad! I’m documenting the learning process on my channel. Now off to forge lot’s more nails and get better!

  • @RatdogDRB
    @RatdogDRB 3 года назад

    Good skills. Go Alex!!

  • @BraxxJuventa
    @BraxxJuventa 3 года назад

    Great video! Thanks Mike. 👍😁

  • @steve230870
    @steve230870 3 года назад

    The forged nails are works of art.

  • @thebreadpeddler6879
    @thebreadpeddler6879 3 года назад

    Fun fact: I began my journey of becoming a blacksmith because of your channel. I once saw a video of yours where you were using a drawknife and I figured I’d try to make one. I’m a blacksmith going on 2 years now. Probably would have been cheaper to buy a drawknife! But I really enjoy it and there is so much more than just knives and swords like one would think.

  • @Just_Sara
    @Just_Sara 3 года назад

    Watching this made me feel a lot better about my wobbly wrist in my blacksmithing class I took - thank you, whew, it's not just me.

  • @KaylynnStrain
    @KaylynnStrain 3 года назад

    Nicely done !!!!!

  • @petetarrant1790
    @petetarrant1790 3 года назад

    I did a couple of courses with Alex and his assistants last year. 2 great days. They have a vast amount of knowledge and show you what to do with simple explanation. Would strongly recommend going for a basics course even if you're not looking to get into smithing. Good honest day with lunch included.

  • @jasongordon9811
    @jasongordon9811 3 года назад

    You are a man after my own heart I just got a small anvil just for nail making.

  • @andykjohnsonjohnson7622
    @andykjohnsonjohnson7622 3 года назад

    Nice video Mike 👍, very interesting and educational. As I work in construction, building homes , in B.C 🇨🇦 .

  • @ArielleViking
    @ArielleViking 3 года назад

    Really interesting to see the work involved in making nails in the past. 👍

  • @charleshoward448
    @charleshoward448 3 года назад

    Thanks for this video, I'm definitely subscribing to Alex's channel! I got into blacksmithing as a hobby a few years ago. Knives are fun, and I'm working on an axe; but the coolest thing about blacksmithing to me is that you can make so many other things. I've done coat hooks, fire pokers, table legs, jewelry, decorative pieces for leather work, brackets for woodworking projects... I even saw a RUclips video where the guy's blacksmith tongs broke, so he forged new tongs. I'm definitely going to try a few nails for fun :)

  • @SimoInfinity
    @SimoInfinity 3 года назад +1

    TOP!!!

  • @lucas_8658
    @lucas_8658 3 года назад

    Hello🇨🇵
    It's a very very good concept.

  • @GoranMagdic
    @GoranMagdic 3 года назад

    Very informative video. I love it. Great job. :)

  • @paulhyde1580
    @paulhyde1580 3 года назад

    Great video mate, well done 👏

  • @legionclips8910
    @legionclips8910 3 года назад +1

    Bertram would be proud

  • @markdeer1581
    @markdeer1581 3 года назад +2

    Interesting video thanks for sharing it Mike it would be interesting to see him making a scotcheye auger at some point try making a video on making and using a viking pole lathe turning cups and bowls the traditional way

  • @thunderjoy7250
    @thunderjoy7250 3 года назад +9

    Very interesting..
    You will have an arm like popeye at the end of each shift🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @bgmedia4199
    @bgmedia4199 3 года назад

    What an awesome video thanks mick for sharing this always love watching you and your dad's video's

  • @rickywhite7578
    @rickywhite7578 3 года назад

    Very good video and informative

  • @jaymeswheeler
    @jaymeswheeler 3 года назад

    Great show. You nailed it.

  • @fishyfinthing8854
    @fishyfinthing8854 Год назад

    That was some interesting fact. No wonder why in many medieval game, the nail are thicker and more square than round.

  • @viqq183
    @viqq183 3 года назад

    Thanks for the free trial, will check it out.

  • @hernerweisenberg7052
    @hernerweisenberg7052 2 года назад

    The amazing thing is that many of todays modern nails are still produced on the very same machines they used in the 1800's that were originally steampowered. At some point the steam power was replaced by an electric motor, but the rest is still the same.

  • @Out_GalliVANtin
    @Out_GalliVANtin 3 года назад

    This was absolutely fascinating!!!

  • @sergeykoshelev4566
    @sergeykoshelev4566 3 года назад

    I knew, that getting short leg with Alec is contagious...

  • @loupiscanis9449
    @loupiscanis9449 3 года назад

    Thank you , Mike .

  • @masteroflemon1301
    @masteroflemon1301 3 года назад

    Oh wow he is really tall and well done with the job

  • @charlieknibbs6203
    @charlieknibbs6203 3 года назад

    Another amazing video! It’s always amazing to see a fellow Brit working outdoors. How’s the bunker coming along? When’s the next update?

  • @haroldsteward8708
    @haroldsteward8708 3 года назад

    I would love to know where you buy your tools from. They are always sleek and very practical.

  • @gargoyled_drake
    @gargoyled_drake 3 года назад

    those hands! this is the kinda guy that hits the "F" button by a mistake when trying to hit a number on the numpad.
    Nice video, was thinking about this myself not long ago, how would i make my own nails, nice seeing it in practice

  • @s.penafiel2806
    @s.penafiel2806 2 года назад +1

    You can tell by Alex physique that his family has been doing this for generations

  • @backcountryme
    @backcountryme 3 года назад

    During the western expansion of the US, it wasn’t uncommon for people to burn their house down before moving. This made finding and gathering the nails for reuse. They were very expensive back then.

  • @diygen
    @diygen 3 года назад +2

    I usually use coarse thread screws when I’m building my self-build house. I hope they are as strong as the nails...

  • @MartinAhlman
    @MartinAhlman 3 года назад

    Fredrik Thelin? Turns out the world is a very small place :-D He's great!

  • @fxpestoperator5527
    @fxpestoperator5527 2 года назад

    Great stuff!!!! Maybe I missed it, but do you have to quench or heat treat the nails? Thanks!

  • @FanceeName
    @FanceeName 3 года назад

    Back in the pioneer days, when pioneers would pick up and leave to move they would burn down their homes so they could retrieve the nails. In addition to taking the males with them they would also take windows.

  • @horseradish0911
    @horseradish0911 3 года назад

    I was learning blacksmithing as a practical part of my engineering studies.... I also used to cook (burn) a lunch in a forge but It was always raw inside ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

  • @sng2225
    @sng2225 3 года назад

    The forging process looks interesting though I have wondered about how early iron age people would have smelted iron ore. I understand it is a complex process to get rid of impurities. Would they have had bars? And I guess the quality of the raw materials early on at least would be variable. Meteors were also used but I imagine they would have not be available to ordinary folk. Was they evidence of bronze nails? They would be more accessible.

  • @MrMarkusmarc
    @MrMarkusmarc 3 года назад

    Great video “MICHAEL”?

  • @gregtheredneck1715
    @gregtheredneck1715 3 года назад

    Nails where such a valued commodity on the American frontier that older buildings that were no longer of use would be burned down so the nails could be collected from the ashes.

  • @CousinTito
    @CousinTito 3 года назад

    Time to forge the TA Sword :-) Or realistically maybe design the ultimate Bushcraft Knife/Tool and market it. Hmmmm...

  • @mrsmd4616
    @mrsmd4616 3 года назад

    Who's land do you get to build these on. Very envious. Cool channel

  • @cleoharper1842
    @cleoharper1842 3 года назад +1

    So did I miss how many nails Mike and Alex were able to make in an hour?

  • @Lukas.Chludzinski
    @Lukas.Chludzinski 3 года назад

    Can we talk about snoqualmie falls in the skill share sponsor part, that waterfall is 45 minutes from my house on Seattle Washington USA.

  • @troywalker8078
    @troywalker8078 3 года назад

    Speaking of forging and Steele, do you still have that knife?

  • @3daziya924
    @3daziya924 3 года назад

    3D paint fantasy of drywall

  • @eggsiclefishstick5569
    @eggsiclefishstick5569 3 года назад

    are you going to continue blacksmithing?

  • @DaNiKzz
    @DaNiKzz 3 года назад

    Now i know why there are holes in old anvils (at the end in the middle) for nail making....

  • @tingcraft3920
    @tingcraft3920 3 года назад

    People used to burn down their house and scavenge for the nails when they moved, in some places it’s actually illegal to do so to this day

  • @bbragante
    @bbragante 3 года назад

    wich camera do you use?

  • @marz.6102
    @marz.6102 3 года назад

    👍

  • @farmerboy916
    @farmerboy916 3 года назад

    Using a vice isn't too efficient tbh, nail headers are simple and easy to use as long as you don't let the back of the nail get bent in use (though historically they may have been built into dedicated small anvils). You could also do minor work like this with a stump anvil and a decently hot wood fire out in your woods if you learn to manage it right. Presumably you'd be wanting clinch nails for your door, so keep the length you want in mind.
    And I dunno if he told you, but you were holding your stock wrong; common mistake for new people to continuously pull their stock up. You can see how you held it at too high an angle at a lot of points; if you imagine your taper you want to split the difference between the faces.

  • @Mohloku
    @Mohloku 3 года назад

    🇧🇷🇧🇷

  • @Oxy_Cotton
    @Oxy_Cotton 3 года назад

    And look at the end of your fingers, you have nails there too !

  • @janczesnik359
    @janczesnik359 3 года назад +1

    Hi

  • @sandmangti7040
    @sandmangti7040 3 года назад

    Nail? Spike!

  • @MedeniFilm
    @MedeniFilm 3 года назад +1

    Lepo... Lep video...

  • @fredfleming261
    @fredfleming261 3 года назад

    👍🔨🔨🔨🔨🔨🔨🔨🔨🔨

  • @kndsayagtbitsyaht8659
    @kndsayagtbitsyaht8659 3 года назад

    Azerbaijan ♥️

  • @Shaden0040
    @Shaden0040 3 года назад

    Many of my ancestors were blacksmiths, specifically farriers.

  • @harmiasmr6835
    @harmiasmr6835 3 года назад

    ما شاء الله يعطيك الف الف عافيه بتوفيق من سوري

  • @MrStevenjman
    @MrStevenjman 3 года назад

    make a knife TA!

  • @cleoharper1842
    @cleoharper1842 3 года назад

    Woah, Mike! Slow this party down.
    I'm 12 seconds in and as I listen to you describe all kinds of nails, all I can think of is Benjamin Buford Blue (Bubba) listing all the kinds of shrimp you can make. Quarantine getting to you, man?
    I'm just teasing, I love your channel and I can't wait to watch you hand forge ANYTHING. It was just a funny intro.

  • @ironcladranchandforge7292
    @ironcladranchandforge7292 3 года назад

    Oh God, I guess one of these day's I'll have to make a video on how to properly forge a nail because this is not the way. Also, the nail should be made in ONE heat. During the 18th and 19th centuries, English nail makers were required to produce 2 nails per minute!! I've made thousands of nails for the National Park Service here in the US.

    • @ebel-janschepers3709
      @ebel-janschepers3709 3 года назад +1

      Just subscribed to your chanal. So in 2 weeks i'm expecting that video ;-)

    • @ironcladranchandforge7292
      @ironcladranchandforge7292 3 года назад +1

      @@ebel-janschepers3709 -- We shall see, I'm quite busy at the moment qetting the ranch ready for winter. I hope to make a few videos in the near future. I promised somebody a video on the proper use of a grindstone as well..... Please stay tuned. Thanks!!

    • @Nermander
      @Nermander 3 года назад

      There are a few videos out there on One Heat Nails. I think it is important to realise that back when all nails were hand forged, they did not care about the look of the nail. It was function before form, so they did definitely not overwork the nails. For simple nails the head can be more or less just a bend (I think that is actually used even on modern nails, when they are designed for a nail gun?). A symmetric heat is really not that important for function.

    • @ironcladranchandforge7292
      @ironcladranchandforge7292 3 года назад +1

      @@Nermander -- I've had the privilege of examining archeological records and actual finds from 18th and 19th century historic sites in my study of hand forged nails. Most of these nails were of the rose head variety. All had forged heads. The state of preservation was excellent. However, you are correct about function over perfection as the historic nails were not perfect. Many had heads that were off center. I've noticed in my nail production activities that off center heads are common if time was not taken to prevent this from happening. But, producing 2 nails per minute in one heat each, who has the time for perfection.

  • @impariamoeripariamofaidate
    @impariamoeripariamofaidate 3 года назад

    Bravo un saluto dal canale fai da te impariamo e ripariamo il canale che insegna vieni a dare un'occhiata ti aspetto 😉👍

  • @GTA-qv8pk
    @GTA-qv8pk 2 года назад

    I doubt our ancestors had round stock steel.