Nice job. Did you forge that by hand, or with powered help? I'm looking forward to being able to forge my own hammers someday, but will wait until I have a press built. I always thought a diagonal cross peen on about a 15-20* angle would be very ergonomic, instead of the traditional 45.
Shame about the torch job on the handle!
Not sorry to say so, but I figure any tool that has honest signs of use and wear, is a LOT better looking than if it has been done over with a torch to make it look scorched.
Seems sorta like digging through a house fire to frame half-burnt pictures you found...
Decent looking hammer head though...
Good to know. I won't be getting too deep into smithing projects until the winter, and that is entirely dependent on getting the forge setup by then. I'm trying.......Thank you! I forged it by hand. Punching the eye was easier than I thought it would be, so don't wait for a press just to make a hammer; just be sure to start with a small diameter punch. Making a rounding hammer is next on my list. The 45 deg angle is probably not the most ergonomic, but it "fits" most people and since the hammer was made as a present....it was the safe bet.
Good to know. I won't be getting too deep into smithing projects until the winter, and that is entirely dependent on getting the forge setup by then. I'm trying.......
The one great thing about getting into a brand new hobby is the never ending supply of tools and tooling to buy and make for it. I want to make a rounding hammer too. And a guillotine tool, and.....and....
Just wait until you get to the level of having to make a tool, to make a tool, so you can make the tool you are actually trying to make...It was the first burnt finish that I tried and I have mixed feelings about it. The main reason I did it (along with treating the wood with boiled linseed oil) was to preserve the wood and it gives the handle a nice feel in the hand. It doesn't slip when my hand gets sweaty like many of my commercially made varnished handles that need to be sanded before any serious use. As far as the aesthetics go, I certainly was not going for a hipster vibe or to make the tool appear to be used.