- One that forges and shapes iron with an anvil and hammer.
- One that makes, repairs, and fits horseshoes.
[From the color of iron.]
blacksmithing black'smith'ing n.
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[From the color of iron.]
blacksmithing black'smith'ing n.In colonial times, the blacksmith was an important part of the community. In 1607 the first colony at Jamestown brought over a blacksmith.
In 1810 Pennsylvania reported 2,562 blacksmith shops doing $1,572,627 worth of work. In 1850 the United States had 100,000 blacksmiths and whitesmiths, in addition to gunsmiths and machinists.
The basic equipment of the blacksmith shop was forge and bellows, anvil and slack tup, hammer and tongs, swage and cutter, chisel and punch, and file and drill. The blacksmith not only made shoes for horses and oxen and applied them but also made such hardware as latches, hinges, and irons, farm tools, nails, hammers, axes, chisels, and carving tools. In horse-drawn society he was the mainstay of transportation. He welded and fitted wagon tires and hub rings and made and fitted all metal parts of wagons, carriages, and sleighs. Moreover, he was the single source of decorative ironwork for fine houses. Most skilled of all blacksmiths were those who shaped iron to the precise and intricate needs of ships. Warships and whaling vessels usually carried their own blacksmiths to repair fittings and guns at sea and to make grappling hooks and harpoons.
In the latter part of the twentieth century, blacksmiths had all but disappeared from the American scene. A few dressed picks and mattocks, air drills, stone chisels, and various knives used in industry. Others, known as farriers, worked in rural areas caring for racing and riding horses, though these were more in demand for their veterinary practices than for their knowledge of ironworking.
Bibliography
Bayly, E. Marks. "Skilled Blacks in Antebellum St. Mary's County, Maryland." Journal of Southern History 53 (1987): 537–564.
Bezis-Selfa, John. "A Tale of Two Ironworks: Slavery, Free Labor, Work, and Resistance in the Early Republic." William and Mary Quarterly 56 (1999): 677–700.
Daniels, Christine. "Wanted: A Blacksmith Who Understands Plantation Work: Artisans in Maryland, 1700–1810." William and Mary Quarterly 50 (1993): 743–767.
—Herbert Manchester/A. E.
We took our horse to the blacksmith so he could check its shoes.
A blacksmith is a person who creates objects from iron or
steel by "forging" the metal; i.e., by using hand tools to hammer, bend, cut, and otherwise shape
it in its non-liquid form. Usually the metal is heated until it glows red or orange as part of the forging process. Blacksmiths
create such products as wrought iron gates, grills, railings, light fixtures,
furniture, sculpture,
A blacksmith who works primarily with horses, especially making and fitting horseshoes, is called a farrier.
Blacksmiths work with "black" metals, especially iron. The black color comes from a layer of oxides that form on the surface of the metal during heating (called fire scale).
The term "smith" originates from the word "smite", which means to hit.[citation needed] Thus, a blacksmith is a person who smites black metal.
Blacksmiths work by heating pieces of wrought iron or steel in a forge until the metal becomes soft enough to be shaped with hand tools, such as a hammer and chisel. Heating is accomplished by the use of a forge fueled by propane, natural gas, coal, charcoal, or coke.
Modern blacksmiths may also employ an oxyacetylene or similar blowtorch for more localized heating. Color is important for indicating the temperature and workability of the metal: As iron is heated to increasing temperatures, it first glows red, then orange, yellow, and finally white; then it melts. The ideal heat for most forging is the yellow-orange color appropriately known as a "forging heat." Because they must be able to see the glowing color of the metal, many blacksmiths work in dim, low-light conditions.
The techniques of blacksmithing may be roughly divided into forging (sometimes called "sculpting"), welding, heat treating, and finishing.
Forging is also referred to as sculpting because it is the process of shaping metal. Forging is different from machining in that material is not removed by these processes (with the exception of punching and cutting); rather the iron is hammered into shape. There are five basic operations or techniques employed in forging: drawing, shrinking, bending, upsetting and punching.
These operations generally employ hammer and anvil at a minimum, but smiths will also make use of other tools and techniques to accommodate odd-sized or repetitive jobs.
The five basic processes are often combined to produce and refine the shapes necessary for finished products. For example to fashion a cross-peen hammer head, a smith would start with a bar roughly the diameter of the hammer face, the handle hole would be punched and drifted, the head would be cut (punched, but with a wedge), the peen would be drawn to a wedge, and the face would be dressed by upsetting.
In the example of making a chisel, as it lengthened by drawing it would also tend to spread in width, so a smith would frequently turn the chisel-to-be on its side and hammer it back down -- upsetting it -- to check the spread and keep the metal at the correct width for the project.
As another example, if a smith needed to put a 90-degree bend in a bar and wanted a sharp corner on the outside of the bend, the smith would begin by hammering an unsupported end to make the curved bend. Then, to "fatten up" the outside radius of the bend, one or both arms of the bend would need to be pushed back into the bend to fill the outer radius of the curve. So the smith would hammer the ends of the stock down into the bend, 'upsetting' it at the point of the bend. The smith would then dress the bend by drawing the sides of the bend to keep it the correct thickness. The hammering would continue—upsetting and then drawing—until the curve had been properly shaped. In this case the primary operation was the bend, but the drawing and upsetting are done to refine the shape.
Welding is the joining of metal of the same or similar kind such that there is no joint or seam: the pieces to be welded become a single piece.
A modern blacksmith has a range of options and tools to accomplish this. The basic types of welding commonly employed in a modern shop include traditional forge welding as well as modern methods, including oxyacetylene and arc welding.
In forge welding the pieces to be welded are heated to what is generally referred to as "welding heat". For mild steel most smiths judge this temperature by color: the metal will glow an intense yellow or white. At this temperature the steel is near molten .
Any foreign material in the weld, such as the oxides or "scale" that typically form in the fire, can weaken it and potentially cause it to fail. Thus the mating surfaces to be joined must be kept clean. To this end a smith will make sure the fire is a reducing fire: a fire where at the heart there is a great deal of heat and very little oxygen. The smith will also carefully shape the mating faces so that as they are brought together foreign material is squeezed out as the metal is joined. To clean the faces, protect them from oxidation, and provide a medium to carry foreign material out of the weld the smith will use flux -- typically powdered borax, silica sand, or both.
The smith will first clean the parts to be joined with a wire brush, then put them in the fire to heat. With a mix of drawing and upsetting the faces will be shaped so that when finally brought together the center of the weld will connect first and the connection spread outward under the hammer blows, pushing the flux and foreign material out.
The dressed metal goes back in the fire, is brought near to welding heat, removed from the fire, brushed, flux is applied, and it is returned to the fire. The smith now watches carefully to avoid overheating the metal. There is some challenge to this, because in order to see the color of the metal it must be removed from the fire, and this exposes the metal to air, which can cause it to oxidize rapidly. So the smith might probe into the fire with a bit of steel wire, prodding lightly at the mating faces. When the end of the wire sticks the metal is at the right temperature (a small weld has formed where the wire touches the mating face so it sticks).
Now the smith moves with rapid purpose. The metal is taken from the fire and quickly brought to the anvil, the mating faces are brought together, the hammer lightly applying a few taps to bring the mating faces into complete contact and squeeze out the flux, and finally returned to the fire again.
The weld was begun with the taps, but often the joint is weak and incomplete, so the smith will again heat the joint to welding temperature and work the weld with light blows to "set" the weld and finally to dress it to the shape.
Other than to increase its malleability, another reason for heating the metal is for heat treatment purposes. The metal can be hardened, tempered, normalized, annealed, case hardened, and subjected to other processes that change the crystalline structure of the steel to give it specific characteristics required for different uses. Only steel, not iron, can be heat treated, and generally speaking, the higher the carbon content of the steel, the more it can be hardened.
When working with steels, a blacksmith will heat the metal and then quench it in various liquids such as water or oil. The purpose of quenching is to produce rapid cooling to generate specific microstructures in the metal. A quench from a bright red or orange heat generally results in steel that is hard and brittle, so a second process, called tempering, is usually done to increase the toughness of the piece and reduce its hardness.
Tempering involves heating the material to a specific temperature (lower than red heat) usually called "critical temperature" and judged for common steel by the temperature at which the metal loses its magnetic attraction. Sometimes it is quenched again after this heating.
With most tool steels, the degree of temper achieved can be gauged by the appearance of a colored oxidation tint on the metal surface. Different uses require different hardness and toughness combinations, and so receive different degrees of temper. It is possible to temper different parts of an object to different levels of hardness, which is one area where the skill of the blacksmith comes into play.
For example, the face of a hammer is often made harder than the main body, giving a blend of a hard wearing face with a resilient and tough head. Edged weapons, in particular, are often treated to provide a hard edge (which will retain sharpness with use longer) while keeping the main body of the blade tough to be more flexible and resist breaking from a powerful or jarring blow.
Depending on the intended use of the piece a blacksmith may finish it in a number of ways:
When iron ore is smelted into usable metal, a certain amount of carbon is usually alloyed with the iron. The amount of carbon has extreme effects on the properties of the metal. If the carbon content is over 2%, the metal is called cast iron. Cast iron is so called because it has a relatively low melting point and is easily cast. It is quite brittle however, and therefore not used for blacksmithing. If the carbon content is between .25% and 2%, the resulting metal is tool steel, which can be heat treated as discussed above. When the carbon content is below .25%, the metal is either "wrought iron" or "mild steel." The terms are never interchangeable. In pre-industrial times, the material of choice for blacksmiths was wrought iron. This iron had a very low carbon content, and also included up to 5% of glassy slag. This slag content made the iron very tough, gave it considerable resistance to rusting, and allowed it to be more easily "forge welded," a process in which the blacksmith permanently joins two pieces of iron, or a piece of iron and a piece of steel, by heating them nearly to a white heat and hammering them together. Forge welding is more difficult to do with modern mild steel. Modern steel production, using the blast furnace, cannot produce true wrought iron, so this material is now a difficult-to-find specialty product. Modern blacksmiths generally substitute mild steel for making objects that were traditionally of wrought iron.
Over the centuries blacksmiths have taken no little pride in the fact that theirs is one of the few crafts that allows them to make the tools that are used for their craft. Time and tradition have provided some fairly standard basic tools which vary only in detail around the world.
"All a smith needs is something to heat the metal, something to hit the metal on and something to hit the metal with."
The forge is the fireplace of a blacksmith's shop. It provides the means to keep the fire contained and controlled.
The anvil at its simplest is a large block of iron or steel. Over time this has been refined to provide a rounded horn to facilitate drawing and bending, a face for drawing and upsetting and bending, and one or more holes to hold special tools (swages or hardies) and facilitate punching. Often the flat surface of an anvil will be hardened steel, and the body made from tougher iron.
Blacksmiths' hammers tend to have one face and a peen. The peen is typically either a ball or a blunt wedge (cross or straight peen depending on the orientation of the wedge to the handle) and is used when drawing.
While a great deal of work is done with those three basic tools blacksmiths tend to augment their tools with some of the following, depending on the kinds of work they do.
Tongs are used to hold the hot metal. They come in a range of shapes and sizes.
Swages (hardies) and fullers are shaping tools. Swages are either stand alone tools or fit the "hardie hole" on the face of the anvil. The metal is shaped by being driven into the form of the swage. Opposite to the swage in some respects is the fuller which may take a number of shapes and is driven into the metal with a hammer. Swages and fullers are often paired to bring a piece of metal to shape in a single operation, essentially a set of dies. A fuller and swage pair might be spoon shaped, for example, the swage dished to form the bowl and the fuller the convex mirror of the swage. Together they will quickly stamp a spoon shape on the end of a bar.
There are many other tools used by smiths, so many that even a brief description of the types is beyond the scope of this article and the task is complicated by a variety of names for the same type of tool. Further complicating the task is that making tools is inherently part of the smith's craft and many custom tools are made by individual smiths to suit particular tasks and the smith's inclination. In the late 1930s Alexander G. Weygers (a sculptor, painter, and smith} published The Complete Modern Blacksmith, in which he provided instructions for creating many useful tools for a blacksmith, which was followed in 1979 by The Making of Tools.
With that caveat one category of tools should be mentioned: jigs. A jig is generally a custom built tool, usually made by the smith, to perform a particular operation for a particular task or project. For example, a smith making decorative scrolls for an iron fence will make a bending jig, or scroll iron, to apply a particular shape to the stock, ensuring that each scroll has the same bend. (To estimate the length of stock required to form a scroll of any given size and number of turns the Clackson scroll formula is used.)
Prior to the industrial revolution, a "village smithy" was a staple of every town. Mass production techniques have reduced the marketplace for blacksmith work except in Africa, India, Southeast Asia, and South America where large numbers of artisans continue to do traditional work. In more industrialized regions, an increasing demand for custom metalwork has given rise to a new breed of smiths commonly known as Artist-Blacksmiths. In recent years the forging of stainless steel has given rise to a fresh approach to architectural blacksmithing. Blacksmith tools are no longer used in war but is rather a decorative weapon or used by collectors.
One famous blacksmith, albeit a mythical one, was Hephaestus (Latin: Vulcan). He was the blacksmith of the gods in Greek and Roman mythology. A supremely skilled artisan whose forge was a volcano, he constructed most of the weapons of the gods, and was himself the god of fire and metalworking.
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| Metalworking smiths | Smiths • Blacksmith • Coppersmith • Goldsmith • Gunsmith • Locksmith • Pewtersmith • Silversmith • Bladesmith • Tinsmith • Whitesmith |
| Metalworking tools | Anvil • Forge • Forging • Fuller • Hardy hole • Hardy tools • Pritchel • Slack tub • Steam hammer • Swage block • Trip hammer |
| Metalworking topics | Casting • CNC • Cutting tools • Drilling and threading • Fabrication • Finishing • Grinding • Jewellery • Lathe • Machining • Machine tooling • Measuring • Metalworking • Hand tools • Metallurgy • Milling • Occupations • Press tools • Smithing • Terminology • Welding |
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Français (French)
n. - forgeron, maréchal-ferrant
Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - σιδηρουργός, σιδεράς, πεταλωτής
Português (Portuguese)
n. - ferreiro (m)
Español (Spanish)
n. - herrero
Svenska (Swedish)
n. - grovsmed, hovslagare
中文(简体) (Chinese (Simplified))
铁匠, 锻工, 马蹄铁匠
中文(繁體) (Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 鐵匠, 鍛工, 馬蹄鐵匠
العربيه (Arabic)
(الاسم) حداد
עברית (Hebrew)
n. - נפח, מפרזל סוסים
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