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New England Hammer-In

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Steve Culver
Posts: 827
Prominent Member Master Bladesmith/ABS Instructor
 

Acorn whistles and nest building????

Does it take you two hours to forge a Keychain Of Death???

 
Posted : 14/07/2010 6:29 pm
Posts: 0
New Member Guest
 

Hey Mace,

I don't know what kind of stuff they're looking for, or what you're comfortable with, or the average skill-set levels of the attendants and what the skill-set of your intended target audience is....so I'm just shooting off the cuff here with a few ideas (not in any particular order).

  1. Edge geometry: flat, convex, hollow, etc. (why and how)
  2. Sharpening: the basics with water and oil stones, various sharpening systems, belts, paper wheels, strops, etc
  3. Heating and cooling steels: forging temps, normalizing, annealing, spheroidizing, quenching, tempering, etc (specific temperature thresholds, ramps and soaks for various alloys, etc)
  4. From apprentice to Journeyman: the beginning; the performance knife and test; the presentation knives and the submission and judging process; life after certification; etc

    I'm sure whatever you do will be good!

    All the best, Phil

     
Posted : 14/07/2010 7:41 pm
BrionTomberlin
Posts: 1675
Member
 

Sounds like a lot of fun, I wish I could be there but no such luck. Phil I wish you the best on your performance test, fingers crossed. You all have a good time.

Brion

Brion Tomberlin

Anvil Top Custom Knives

ABS Mastersmith

 
Posted : 14/07/2010 9:15 pm
Bill Wiggins
Posts: 42
Eminent Member Journeyman Bladesmith (5yr)
 

|quoted:

Bill, Waffle house shwag is always a good thing! I do have a 50 year anniversary mug from WH. I only like to break it out on special occasions...like Ashokan. It's nice to have a special mug while eating your bowl of bacon!

As long as you bring yourself we will be happy!....well...maybe a slice of Mitzie's Praleen pie...<img src=' http://www.americanbladesmiths.com/ipboard/public/style_emoticons//smile.gi f' class='bbc_emoticon' alt=':)' />

On a side note....Dr. Jim has asked me to do a classroom talk.....This will be new for me...anyone have some ideas on what I could talk about. I told him if he put me in front of a forge I would have no problem doing a two hour demo....but he needs something for the classroom. Any ideas would be great!

Thanks guys.

Looking foward to seeing y'all.

Mace

Mace, you might touch on design. Its not something that gets talked about alot, but something that is always good, IMO.

A 50 yr anniversary mug from WH.....i am impressed!!!

 
Posted : 15/07/2010 11:27 am
Posts: 0
New Member Guest
 

|quoted:
Phil I wish you the best on your performance test, fingers crossed.

Thanks Brion, although I'm not going to get it done for this time. Maybe next summer's trip. All the best, Phil

 
Posted : 17/07/2010 6:55 pm
Admin_DJC305
Posts: 1999
Member
Topic starter
 

Pre-Registration for the New England Hammer-In online has now closed but you will be able to pay the $55.00 registration fee at the registration table at the event in Auburn, Maine. Cindy Sheely will be handling the registration table.

Our registrations are ahead of last year and everyone I talk to is excited about this year's event. I hope that everyone has a safe trip to Auburn, Maine and a great Hammer-In.

P.S. We may need a volunteer to help Bill Wiggins, JS (Canton,North Carolina) with his lobster.

Dan Cassidy
Journeyman Smith
Send an email to Dan

 
Posted : 19/07/2010 12:29 pm
Bill Wiggins
Posts: 42
Eminent Member Journeyman Bladesmith (5yr)
 

|quoted:

Pre-Registration for the New England Hammer-In online has now closed but you will be able to pay the $55.00 registration fee at the registration table at the event in Auburn, Maine. Cindy Sheely will be handling the registration table.

Our registrations are ahead of last year and everyone I talk to is excited about this year's event. I hope that everyone has a safe trip to Auburn, Maine and a great Hammer-In.

P.S. We may need a volunteer to help Bill Wiggins, JS (Canton,North Carolina) with his lobster.

Dan, just for the record, I have never met a crawdad that I couldn't handle!! <img src=' http://www.americanbladesmiths.com/ipboard/public/style_emoticons//biggrin.gi f' class='bbc_emoticon' alt=':D' />

 
Posted : 20/07/2010 8:47 am
Posts: 17
Active Member Journeyman Bladesmith
 

Bill,

If you need any help with that mud bug...you just let me know!

 
Posted : 20/07/2010 10:43 am
Bill Wiggins
Posts: 42
Eminent Member Journeyman Bladesmith (5yr)
 

BREAKING NEWS!! There will be one Waffle House coffee mug available at the auction. I am pretty sure we will be able to accept phone bids with advance notice.

 
Posted : 20/07/2010 11:37 am
Bill Wiggins
Posts: 42
Eminent Member Journeyman Bladesmith (5yr)
 

|quoted:

Bill,

If you need any help with that mud bug...you just let me know!

I knew I could count on my friends!!

 
Posted : 20/07/2010 11:38 am
Posts: 0
New Member Guest
 

Hi Folks,

I just got back from the 2nd summer ABS hammer-in at the New England School of Metalwork in Auburn Maine. Had a great time! Friendly folks, fine food (including lobster!), fair weather, fabulous venue, fierce competitions, fantastic presenters and informative demonstrations! Got to hobnob with four very funny and talented jokers, I mean ABS Journeyman Smiths: tomahawk making Butch Sheely; firecracker wielding Mace Vitale; Bill Wiggins of Waffle House fame (I didn't get it either); and king competition cutter Dave Sylvester. Mastersmiths ABS President Greg Neely; damascus dinamo Jason Knight; mild mannered Rob Hudson; and the inimitable Dr. Jim Batson lit us all up with their luminous presentations. It would be impossible to give too many accolades to our dedicated host Derick Glaser and his warmhearted hardworking assistant, Hunter. THANKS guys!!!

This is only my second official hammer-in, the first being the predecessor last year. I haven't seen the other schools or met many other smiths and ABS shakers and bakers, so I don't have a broad experience base to report from. Never-the-less, I can say with a completely clear conscience, ALL these fine folks, the school and venue are top notch!!! Heck, that even includes the NJ Steel Baron, Aldo Bruno. Thanks for the fine steel donations for the open forge and the auction!

Ha, that auction was hoot...or horror show depending on your point of view I guess. We had slooooow smoooooth talking southern cracker Bill Wiggins, sashay prancing Mace Vitale and the ever candid Jason Knight peddling wares to a dedicated crowd of enthusiasts and supporters. Heck, even a Waffle House coffee mug of questionable repute sold. I've seen a fair number of nonprofit auctions of this ilk. I know their intent is to raise funds to offset the costs of delivering educational and community services that just about always cost more to deliver than fees can cover. But for me, the value of seeing the generosity of donors (there were numerous woods, steels, tools, knives, hawks, etc), buyers and volunteers (THANKS hawkers and Cindy!) is of value that goes far beyond a corporations bottom line. The heart warmth generated by a dedicated community committed to a common cause at fund raising events like this is PRICELESS!

My thanks to everyone for a wonder filled weekend. I am a better person to have been a part of it...and hopefully will be a better bladesmith too.

All the best, Phil

 
Posted : 26/07/2010 10:03 am
Bill Wiggins
Posts: 42
Eminent Member Journeyman Bladesmith (5yr)
 

|quoted:

Hi Folks,

I just got back from the 2nd summer ABS hammer-in at the New England School of Metalwork in Auburn Maine. Had a great time! Friendly folks, fine food (including lobster!), fair weather, fabulous venue, fierce competitions, fantastic presenters and informative demonstrations! Got to hobnob with four very funny and talented clowns, I mean ABS Journeyman Smiths: tomahawk making Butch Sheely; firecracker wielding Mace Vitale; Bill Higgins of Waffle House fame (I didn't get it either); and king competition cutter Dave Sylvester. Mastersmiths ABS President Greg Neely; damascus dinamo Jason Knight; mild mannered Rob Hudson; and the inimitable Dr. Jim Batson lit us all up with their luminous presentations. It would be impossible to give too many accolades to our dedicated host Derick Glaser and his warmhearted hardworking assistant Hunter. THANKS guys!!!

This is only my second official hammer-in, the first being the predecessor last year. I haven't seen the other schools or met many other smiths and ABS shakers and bakers, so I don't have a broad experience base to report from. Never-the-less, I can say with a completely clear conscience, ALL these fine folks, the school and venue are top notch!!! Heck, that even includes the NJ Steel Baron, Aldo Bruno. Thanks for the fine steel donations for the open forge and the auction!

Ha, that auction was hoot...or horror show depending on your point of view I guess. We had slooooow smoooooth talking southern cracker Billy Higgins, sashay prancing Mace Vitale and the ever candid Jason Knight peddling wares to a dedicated crowd of enthusiasts and supporters. Heck, even a Waffle House coffee mug of questionable repute sold. I've seen a fair number of nonprofit auctions of this ilk. I know their intent is to raise funds to offset the costs of delivering educational and community services that just about always cost more to deliver than fees can cover. But for me, the value of seeing the generosity of donors (there were numerous woods, steels, tools, knives, hawks, etc), buyers and volunteers (THANKS hawkers and Cindy!) is of value that goes far beyond a corporations bottom line. The heart warmth generated by a dedicated community committed to a common cause at fund raising events like this is PRICELESS!

My thanks to everyone for a wonder filled weekend. I am a better person to have been a part of it...and hopefully will be a better bladesmith too.

All the best, Phil

Thanks, Phil, for the report. Everyone there had a great time!! Just for the record, Jim Treacy made good on his offer of taking me for out for lobster. It was a battle that I won handily!! I did have Greg Neely in my corner, offering advice. Jim Batson made pretty short work of one also. Also, while there was not a bill of sale with the coffee mug, it was obtained through legal means. Promise. Mace and Aldo were saddened to learn we had phone bidders on the mug. <img src=' http://www.americanbladesmiths.com/ipboard/public/style_emoticons//biggrin.gi f' class='bbc_emoticon' alt=':D' /> <img src=' http://www.americanbladesmiths.com/ipboard/public/style_emoticons//biggrin.gi f' class='bbc_emoticon' alt=':D' />

Also, its Wiggins, not Higgins. Had a great time!! Bill Wiggins

 
Posted : 27/07/2010 9:18 am
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