How to Make Hand Forged Viking Style Ring
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- Опубликовано: 11 окт 2020
- Viking, Handmade, Sterling Silver, Hand Forged, How To, Ring
This video is a how to video for my technique of making Viking style Hand Forged Rings. This process could be used to make Rings, Cuffs, Arm Bands, or Torque Neck Rings. If you have any questions please drop a comment.
Your talent and artistry is amazing! Plus your attention to detail is astonishing. Skàl!
Very impressive work !! Thanks for sharing .
Thank you for sharing your talent and skills. Just found your channel. Awesome work! :)
Об футболку вытереть - это святое ;) сам такой))) И зубная щётка тоже в деле )))
... всё хочу купить не большую но хорошую ультразвуковую ванну - пока в поиске таковой.
Love it..want more about ring
What more would you like to see? I’ll see what I can do.
Dude I absolutely love your name
cool
Thank you, great video! Is there a reason you forge a bowtie shape shank instead of cutting the shape out of the sheet? Is this to honour tradition? Or just your preferred way? I found it very interesting to see, turned out so beautiful 😍
It’s kind of a mix between the look I was aiming for and traditional forging techniques. Thank you very much
How does one measure out the initial blank for sizing on the final product?
Couldn’t see the finished product detail?
Rats! Nice looking rings!
Where do you get the punches/liners you call them that you use ? Thanks for the video
I bought some soft tool steel rod and filed them to shape then hardened the tips and sanded to clean up.
@@ZinkSterling would love to see a video on making your own punches, then hardening them 🙏😁
Chubby Unicorns!
Why did you hammer it into a bow tie shape rather than cutting that shape out with your saw?
You could do that, but then it wouldn’t be considered forged.
Wouldn't that work better with some heat or would that affect the chemical of the metal metallurgy
Silver is Brought to a dull red with a torch then quenched in water after every few hammering cycles to soften it.
@@ZinkSterling so is silver kind of the opposite to steel in that regard? I'm a blacksmith myself, so I don't know much about annealing other metals. Most silver jewelry I've seen made is with lost wax casting, so I was interested in seeing if anyone used forging techniques in jewelry making. A friend of mine asked if I could make him a couple rings and cuffs made from copper. Is it similar to annealing silver? Or maybe it doesn't work harden as much? Asking as a noob here, and appreciate any help you can give. Thanks brother and God bless
@@SantisValiant I have done a little bit of blacksmithing, and yes silver is basically the exact opposite. You hear and quench to soften it and you work it cold instead of hot. I have never worked copper, but from what I understand it is similar to silver. Sterling work hardens fairly quickly and if it is over stressed you will start seeing cracks. I recommend no more than 1/4 of total thickness compression between Anealing.
Thanks Tim! Where did you go to school?
Здравствуйте Мастер! Скажи в чём черните - наносите патину? Что отпускаете в жидкость и какую жидкость!?
Я использую печень серы в кипятке для черной патины. благодарю вас.
@@ZinkSterling Благодарю за ответ! А серную печень сами делаете или готовую берёте?
@@anpervik www.ebay.com/itm/JSP-Liver-Of-Sulfur-4-Oz-Jar-pm400-/173699168991?_trksid=p2349624.m46890.l49292
@@ZinkSterling понял. Благодарю.
Great video!
Shorten it. IE Don’t need to see 5 minutes of hand washing. Had to FF a lot.
Show finished product detail up close.
Thank you.
Subscribed and appreciate your skills!
can not see the advantage in all that hammering just cut the shape out with a saw quicker very easy less noise
I really love custom s*** but this guy's gone too far he should just had a design cut the ring pattern out then decided together instead he's beating the s*** out of it with a hammer
I agree that it could be done that way, but it was not my intent. A lot more than just hitting a bar with a hammer goes into forging techniques and putting metal where you want it while keeping a uniform shape. Learning different techniques is always helpful for the long term. Thank you.
Its not a viking stile.