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Demonstration by the blacksmith how they shape something special from only round bars.
This machine build in chemnitz in 1927 still working today.
I captured this blacksmith on the medieval festival in Feldkirch this weekend. As if it was not hot enough to work directly at the fire, then the sun helped out with this matter too ;-)
But they had enough beer, so I guess it was ok with them :-)
This image will also be my submission for the DPS assignment "A Portrait in Black and White"
(Our Daily Challenge - CONSTRUCTION)
(112 in 2012 - #77 - SHOP OR STORE)
A shot from my trip to the Folsom Powerhouse this weekend. This was the first time I've ever been there when the building were actually open, so it was kind of cool to see inside. This was the scene inside the Blacksmith Shop. I liked the light coming in through the window and how it lit up that ancient piece of machinery with the belt. Not quite sure what it is, but it an amazing piece of engineering that I'm guessing was pretty technologically innovative at the time.
A Blacksmith works in a french encampment during a French and Indian War re-enactment in Lake George
This photo has been identified as the Booth-Kelly blacksmith shop at Wendling, Oregon in March 1901.
Early mills and logging camps of any size had blacksmith. Tools were often hand forged and repaired here.
In 1901, two men were known to have been blacksmiths at Wendling, James Waddell and Milton Bally. Milton in 1903 was transferred to being the blacksmith at the Springfield Booth-Kelly mill and just a few years later was half-owner of the Fischer-Bally company.
The date of the photo is derived from the calendar on the wall.
If you can name any of the men in this picture or positively identify Milton Bally or James Waddell in this image, please comment.
Blacksmith Lapwing - Vanellus armatus - Чибис-кузнец
Lake Nakuru National Park, Nakuru County, Kenya, 07/24/2017
52 Beers: #33
Half Guinness, half Smithwick's, a combination I had not heard of before tonight. I'd been drinking a Guinness for this project (oh, how I suffer for my "art") and when I hesitated in ordering the second, the bartender asked if I'd like a Blacksmith instead. I was like "ummmm... huh?" It's a little lighter than standard Guinness, and you get the Guinness+something lighter separation that is SO cool, no matter how many times I see it. So Guinness, you'll have to wait until another week, because the new fancy beer combination had to be the one for the project. And I think I'll definitely have this again.
Here he is making the opening to the bottle opener. The metal was so hot he had to keep moving it so it wouldn't stick to the anvil.
Cambria Iron Works Complex, the Blacksmith Shop is the most historically significant of the structures. Originally owned by the Cambria Iron Company, the Blacksmith Shop produced a wide range of metal products throughout the 19 th and 20 the centuries. With the decline of the steel industry and the closing of Bethlehem Steel Corporation in 1992, the Blacksmith Shop has since been vacant.
The Blacksmith Shop is a large brick structure that was constructed in at least five stages. The original building is octagonal shaped with an octagonal cupola, containing heavy timbered roof trusses with iron tension rods, common-bond red brick walls and pilasters. In the 1870s, a rectangular wing was added to the west elevation and in 1885 another wing was added on the east elevation. It retains a full complement of original turn-of-the-century forging and smiting tools and a variety of steam-powered hammers, including a ten-ton steam hammer owned by the Smithsonian Institute and leased to the Redevelopment Authority .