Erin Burke
Well-Known Member
PHOTOS #30 (Three Versions)
While running the normalizing cycles – all 19683 of them {think (3^3)^3… three is a very important number when it comes to heat treating steel} – I had some time to think about handle options. This is kind of a fun trick to help visualize your options.
PHOTOS #31-33
Developing a hamon plan is a bit like voodoo/magic, only with less cat blood. There are folks out there who have mastered the art of bending the steel’s inner structure to their will. Then there are others who are diligently researching the art through experimentation… still seeking to understand the invisible interactions between the little iron guys and the little carbon guys (not to mention all of those other alloying elements). Finally, there are the actors from Fox’s late hit TV teen drama “The OC”.
I think that I fall somewhere in between the two later groups.
Here I have attempted to sketch a pre-visualization of how I will apply clay to the blade. The little plastic cup contains a very thin mixture of satanite and water. I will apply this with a small shop brush (one of the many that should be laying around here, but are never easy to find) as a thin wash to the entire blade. A heat gun is used to speed up the drying process.
Here is the blade with the thin coat of satanite applied. I don’t know that this clay is necessary, but I feel it helps the thicker clay stick to the blade. Also in this photo, you’ll see that I have started marking the clay pattern on the blade. The folded piece of sand paper was used as a straight edge to transfer the marks to the other side of the blade, ensuring that they would be symmetrical.
Finally, here is the final clay applied to the blade.
While running the normalizing cycles – all 19683 of them {think (3^3)^3… three is a very important number when it comes to heat treating steel} – I had some time to think about handle options. This is kind of a fun trick to help visualize your options.
PHOTOS #31-33
Developing a hamon plan is a bit like voodoo/magic, only with less cat blood. There are folks out there who have mastered the art of bending the steel’s inner structure to their will. Then there are others who are diligently researching the art through experimentation… still seeking to understand the invisible interactions between the little iron guys and the little carbon guys (not to mention all of those other alloying elements). Finally, there are the actors from Fox’s late hit TV teen drama “The OC”.
I think that I fall somewhere in between the two later groups.
Here I have attempted to sketch a pre-visualization of how I will apply clay to the blade. The little plastic cup contains a very thin mixture of satanite and water. I will apply this with a small shop brush (one of the many that should be laying around here, but are never easy to find) as a thin wash to the entire blade. A heat gun is used to speed up the drying process.
Here is the blade with the thin coat of satanite applied. I don’t know that this clay is necessary, but I feel it helps the thicker clay stick to the blade. Also in this photo, you’ll see that I have started marking the clay pattern on the blade. The folded piece of sand paper was used as a straight edge to transfer the marks to the other side of the blade, ensuring that they would be symmetrical.
Finally, here is the final clay applied to the blade.
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