View allAll Photos Tagged blacksmithing
GSM has its own blacksmith setup down by their encampment. On this day, I overheard one of the men saying they were making a spoon and a knife (not a sharp one, just a butter knife type of thing).
Blacksmith demonstration at the annual Apple and Pork festival in Clinton, IL.
Taken with Polaroid w/ Fuji 100B film
Old blacksmith's or farrier's workshop connected to the stables at Calke Abbey, Derbyshire, England.
A diorama featuring a blacksmith with tools for fitting horse shoes. This diorama can be seen in the Landmarques section of the Coventry Transport Museum.
The blacksmith shop makes everything metal: from swords, to large cannons, to radios, and oil rig drill-bits.
I made this blacksmith shop about a year ago.
A new volunteer event happening every other Saturday morning this summer at the MLF Village. A small team of learning blacksmiths (both volunteers and homeless friends) trying our hands at metal beautifications for the Village and then joining in the Genesis Garden program's amazing Cowboy Brunch after! It's a beautiful thing!
Best viewed large.
Shots taken at the Molfsee open-air museum for cultural history and folklore of the rural country.
I've always wanted to take Ragnarok Online themed photos of Addie ever since my Mom made her a blacksmith costume about...what...2 years ago. Hahaha.
It may not be as accurate as the game sprite 'cause I lost the red neckerchief/scarf (?) thing and I can't seem to remember if blacksmiths can hold god items (that's a Mjolnir...sorta. It has Thor's name on it. Gotta write to the GMs for a god item transfer. XD).
Anyway, I made do with what I had. XD Hahaha.
A Blacksmith Lapwing near the Okaukuejo waterhole in Etosha. These were abundant around the park, several at each waterhole. This guy had a bad leg, but he didn't seem to thin, and he was foraging successfully. Okaukuejo is actually pronounced "Oak-ah-coo-yo".
Blacksmith Bracelet
From time to time a friend asks me to make a gift. I’m not much on making small things, but that doesn’t mean I can’t. Enjoy the beauty of copper and stainless steel with hint of leather.
Contact me if interested,
Briron Raley ~ Blacksmith
South Luangwa | Zambia
I'm still struggling to get a good shot of this lapwing species with this effort being the best to date. It's okay, unless you enlarge and then it looks noisy - I think there must have been some heat-haze coming off the ground despite it being before 8am in the morning!
This is the year 1864. The man in the picture is Ben Dunlap, he is an Irish immigrant from New York and lives as a civilian in Delaware City. He's a blacksmith by profession and works at the Fort Delaware where they keep prisoners of the civil war.
The model is Jay Hoffman who is a historical interpreter at the fort Delaware. He's an artist/sculptor/blacksmith by training and makes various kinds of tools etc as Ben Dunlap at the fort. His specialty is blades.
Found on a facade of an old house in Maribor, Melje.
The metal industry was very good developed in Maribor, but new system made all worse: on short - the firms went broke (for one or another reasons, but mostly because of bad management).
Metchosin, BC
An older photo that I posted before but I was never happy with the processing. Too much detail was lost in the original.
He was displaying his skills on Wenceslaus square in Prague when I spotted him. Next to his workshop he had a small stand where he sold the ironware he made. But what caught my eyes was a small metal basket with a sign. Written on cardboard is says, as you can see:'For beer'. This sign made me stop and take a few pictures of him. Of course I did give him some crowns that would buy him 2 or 3 beers.
Hij liet z'n kunsten zien op het Wenceslaus plein in Praag toen ik hem zag.
Naast zijn werkplaats had hij een kraampje waar hij zijn gemaakte spullen verkocht. Maar wat mijn oog trof was een klein metalen bakje met een bordje erbij, waarop stond:'Voor bier'. Door dat bordje bleef ik even staan en heb ik een paar foto's van hem genomen. Natuurlijk gaf ik hem wat kronen. Genoeg om daar 2 of 3 biertjes van te kunnen kopen.