View allAll Photos Tagged blacksmithing
Chestnut roasters, toasting forks and pokers - festive and functional gifts
from a small group of blacksmiths who braved a cold and windy day!
The blacksmith lapwing or blacksmith plover (Vanellus armatus), Rietvlei Nature Reserve, South Africa. Its name derives from its metallic 'tink, tink, tink' alarm call, which suggests a blacksmith's hammer striking an anvil.
One of the most common plovers was the Blacksmith Lapwing. It utters a distinctive tink-tink-tink that sounds like a lightweight hammer hitting a small anvil. This one was at Arusha National Park.
An autumnal woodfire aroma permeated the cozy rustic space of this living museum!
Wonderful fall day at Pinecrest Historical Village
Manitowoc Wisconsin
Lunch at The Blacksmiths (ham, egg and chips) gets my vote
More photos here: www.flickr.com/photos/davidambridge/tags/theblacksmithsarms/
Visit their website here: www.blacksmithstalkin.co.uk/
Beamish Hands on Heritage Skills 2015 . Blacksmith working in the 1900's Colliery Railway engine sheds.
Old metalsaw part of the blacksmith toolset.
This is from the early 1900's. The sawl is driven by a central driveshaft through flatbelds.
A blacksmith plies his trade in Tandrang, Gorkha district. Has was tempering some scythe blades in preparation for harvest, whilst we were there.
Part of a blacksmith demonstration. Taken at the Oregon Covered Bridge Festival in Stayton, Oregon, September 16, 2006.