Sunday, February 7, 2016

Hand making an axe in Oakland, Maine

8 comments:

  1. Fascinating. I found an unused broad axe at the site of a miners cabin on some property my dad bought back in the 60's. I still have it. It weighs about 5 pounds. I've seen others for sale for enormous prices, but they all have less than half of the blade. Wonder where it was made? No marks at all on it.

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    1. Could have been the local blacksmith made it back in the day.

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  2. That was an incredible amount of work and craftsmanship it took to make one axe.
    You also got a real axe when you bought one of those.
    Compare those to the crap they sell now, there is no comparison actually, they are all crap unless you pay big bucks.
    I love old tools, always have and this is the perfect example of why.

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  3. Very cool. Old time Mainers. Nice and chilly here in Maine today

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    1. I like those corn cob pipes those guys were smoking. Probably Missouri Meerschaum, which are indeed still made in the states today.

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    2. I used to smoke a pipe and those Missouri Meerschaums were great smokes when I was working ! Great video also, never knew how they forged those blades 'til now !

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  4. Thanks. That was fascinating. In today, that was a unique perspective for an USAF officer. No precision indeed....

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  5. Love to see how things were made back in the day, when people (craftsman really) took pride in their work, thanks!

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