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Owen Bush
Industry Professional
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Posted: Fri 08 Nov, 2013 9:38 am Post subject: Axe'n Sax-in demo blade... |
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I have had a great year for demonstrating this year, a lecture and Demo at the farriers AGM in september and I have been to America twice , once for Arctic fire and this latest time for The Oakland Axe'n Sax-in run by Jim Austin and Jeff Pringle.
I gave a talk on broken back seax and my relationship with them , concentrating on one particular blede in the museum of london...
My demo was welding up and forging a seax blade based upon one I had recently measured in the Museum of london.
Its a very fine and trixy little seax blade, with a nice set of toothy patternwelding.
I am not allowed to show any of the documentation pictures of the blade because I signed that rite away on viewing the blade . however this is a picture of the same blade I took some time ago.....
It has a wonderful and fine set of nashers looking a little like a wrack from a wrack and pinion.
both sides show different twists so its a complex blade to try and pay homage to.
Anyhow I did my best, when I finished my demo the blade was not quite the rite shape so I re forged it upon getting home to something closer to the origional. my blade is a little bigger than the original and has fewer teeth, it is however not a bad attempt as a demo piece and I am happy with it as a stand alone blade. If it were to be an actual replica then I would probably need another couple of tries to get the pattern dimensions spot on.
here is a first photo , I'll get a better one over the next few days.
Demonstrating a complicated patternwelded piece constructed from 8 bars and 22 individually placed teeth was a little stressy but with the help of Jim's most wonderful Nazel power hammer all went well . I didn't really want to do a demo to the gathered crowd (including Hank Knickmayer, Jeff pringle and Rick furrer to mention just a few.....) that was not a little cutting edge for me . The teath have potential and I am looking forward to scaling them up to a more "Owen" sized seax....
Ill post up pictures when I have the blade finished.
all the best Owen
forging soul into steel .
www.owenbush.co.uk the home of bushfire forge school of smithing .
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Guy Thomas
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Posted: Sun 10 Nov, 2013 3:19 pm Post subject: |
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Nice work Owen! The shape and dimensions of that seax are quite pleasing.
Guy Thomas
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Luka Borscak
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Posted: Sun 10 Nov, 2013 3:47 pm Post subject: |
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Unusual pattern, but very interesting.
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Leo Todeschini
Industry Professional
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Ryan Hobbs
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Posted: Sat 30 Nov, 2019 10:18 pm Post subject: |
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Wow, thanks for that photo of the original! I've never seen that seax fro that angle and didn't realize just how thick it is along the spine, very interesting!
And very nice work on your recreation; beautiful as always!
No discipline seems pleasant at the time, but painful. Later on, however, it produces a harvest of righteousness and peace for those who have been trained by it.
Hebrews 12:11
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