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Blade Forger - Albert Craven (1979) 

Ken Hawley Collection Trust
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20 окт 2024

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Комментарии : 73   
@krg1965
@krg1965 20 дней назад
What a wonderful film and an amazing craftsman. The pride he took in his work was so clear to see. I'm going through these Ken Hawley videos and loving each and every one. I did a little bit of research into Albert. Born 16th January 1895 (!) in Sheffield, a true Victorian. He married Elsie in 1922, they lived in Hillsborough, Sheffield and had one daughter. Elsie died in 1973. As Albert says, he 'retired' (at the age of 85!) to the seaside town of Bridlington and lived there for ten years. He died in 1989 at the age of 94. One technical thing that amzed/impressed me. As far as I used them in my engineering days, 'lump' hammers were a standard 4lb, but the hammer Albert was energetically wielding looked bigger than that. Amazing strength and precision combined - just wonderful to see and hear his work.
@GavCritchley
@GavCritchley 15 дней назад
I've just found them too. What an amazing resource. My son is at Uni in Sheffield, so different now, but the heritage is amazing.
@iddqds
@iddqds 11 дней назад
i thought the same about that hammer. it looks really heavy yet he uses it in with seemingly no effort at all.
@gorbalsboy
@gorbalsboy 13 дней назад
No gym bunny muscles😂 no tats(for tadgers)no unnecessary swearing, just a man doing skilled work 😊
@marknewsome9563
@marknewsome9563 20 дней назад
Fantastic, what skills we have lost over the years. True craftsmen
@jamesholdsworth733
@jamesholdsworth733 13 дней назад
This guy is just one of many amazing craftsmen who made Britain great !
@jonathanallchorne5401
@jonathanallchorne5401 10 дней назад
And for decades now the political class who have no skills have been destroying it.
@tedking6790
@tedking6790 2 года назад
What an inspiration. My great grandfather was born 1899 and was a stone mason, a craft that is all but truly lost, and I did it for a summer and decided it was a craft I wouldn’t be keeping alive either. Into my 20s I was drawn to the forge, and today I do my best to keep the cutler’s tradition alive. If, when I die, I am half as good at the craft as this man, I will be overjoyed. Thank you for sharing.!
@alexanderguesthistorical7842
@alexanderguesthistorical7842 2 года назад
That was truly fabulous! Absolutely wonderful to see one of the original craftsman, see how he worked and what he produced. Great to hear his comments about piece work and making 2 over to the dozen for "breakages". I wonder who benefitted from the extra 2?? And his comments about how he started as child and was apprenticed to his grandfather til he was 21. The blades he made were only little tiny ones, and one thought "Oh he's only used to making pen knife blades, that's probably all he could do". Then at the end he just blew me away with the two massive bowie knives and a skinning knife which looked a bit awkward, until he unfolded it!!! So he really knew his onions. Great shame it's all gone. Crafts like this still survive in various countries like Japan, but here......"not so much". I would have loved to take up the reigns from him and be apprenticed to him, but I was only 8 at the time. And didn't know he existed. although I wasn't far away in Solihull at the time. Ah well.
@diabolicalartificer
@diabolicalartificer 21 день назад
Astounding craftmanship. In his day he had to make 100's of blades all exactly the same. Try it sometime, making two item's the same ain't easy. Was surprised at the size of the hammer he used for the little blades. Another excellent video, thanks.
@daibhiseaghdha153
@daibhiseaghdha153 2 года назад
I knew a skilled man from Sheffield In his 50's, back in the 80's, he came down to London, to teach us welding, he came down because they were shutting all the works down, and demolishing every thing, he told me that the skilled people who had learnt their skills from generations of knowledge and experience, were trying to get jobs, just to survive, doing anything, and were going to end up in their graves with all their knowledge, what a waste.and shame. once " the workshop of the world " now the UK is mainly a nation of consumers of foreign stuff, made not to last., and with built in Obsolescence.. not good. thanks for the video, I remember a true story about a" little mester " who even the skilled japanese wanted to meet over here, to learn from him, but either the council, or the government would not le it happen, due to the " little mester " not having paper qualifications or something irrelevant, if you know anything about it, please fill me in, thanks.for doing a great job.
@manchagojohnsonmanchago6367
@manchagojohnsonmanchago6367 22 дня назад
your society was weak and it lack interest in its own culture.
@diabolicalartificer
@diabolicalartificer 21 день назад
@@manchagojohnsonmanchago6367 With respect how old are you? If you've lived any time at all on this planet you'll know that loss of any culture is incremental & often only appreciated after decades have passed, by which time, it's too late. Ken Hawley fortunately recorded this passing at a time when home/DIY filming was expensive & rare. To quote Joni Mitchell - Don't it always seem to go, That you don't know what you've got, Till it's gone.
@johngibson3837
@johngibson3837 13 дней назад
Beautiful film and man thanks for showing
@starcarrier1874
@starcarrier1874 День назад
I could’ve watched about another couple of hours of that. Very interesting stuff.
@daemonharper3928
@daemonharper3928 Год назад
As an amateur knife / sword / axe maker I can confirm that this guy is incredibly good at his job - if I ever get to be 10% as good as him I'll be happy.
@paulscot9417
@paulscot9417 10 дней назад
A pleasure to watch, thank you for posting
@P61guy61
@P61guy61 6 дней назад
Thank you for sharing this treasure of a man.
@urmelausdemeis3495
@urmelausdemeis3495 11 дней назад
Beeindruckend. Schrecklich dass diese Fähigkeiten nicht als "Nationale Schätze " weitergepflegt wurden und verloren gegangen sind.
@BokorRider
@BokorRider 3 дня назад
amazing work
@nutryenea
@nutryenea Месяц назад
Amazing work!!
@johnryan2193
@johnryan2193 2 года назад
He makes it look easy , respect !
@precertvideo
@precertvideo Год назад
Another very interesting video, thank you very much.
@KenHawleyCollectionTrust
@KenHawleyCollectionTrust Год назад
Glad you enjoyed it
@Anthony-q7f
@Anthony-q7f 2 дня назад
Awesome!
@zen4men
@zen4men 2 года назад
I bought an 8 inch Bowie knife in a secondhand shop in Plymouth over 40 years ago, and sadly lost it ( stolen ) within 5 years. ...... I lived on a country estate, and it would chop down a branch without worrying about it. Maybe Albert Craven forged the blade! ....... What a Gentleman - a True Englishman!
@kieranfinnerty631
@kieranfinnerty631 Месяц назад
What a lovely talented man 👍
@gadgetgus
@gadgetgus Год назад
I first watched this video about a year ago and was fascinated by it - great, humble craftsman 🏅 In the last 5 minutes, he shows off some of his amazing work - I wonder how many missed that? I would have loved to meet him and learn some new skills 🔥 🗡 I will visit the museum and take a tour of Sheffield soon... Thanks for sharing, Gus
@althesmith
@althesmith 2 года назад
This was a man.
@matthewmcnamee4563
@matthewmcnamee4563 Месяц назад
Great to see.
@normanfawley7379
@normanfawley7379 День назад
Wow !
@anthonyconlon8609
@anthonyconlon8609 3 года назад
hard man!
@twatmunro
@twatmunro 2 месяца назад
These RU-vid knifemakers who toss about taking weeks to make a single knife would shit their pants at the idea of doing two gross in a day -- and that's 14 to every dozen in that two gross!
@steve-ey3rx
@steve-ey3rx 23 дня назад
Sorry to bring this back from the dead. Does a gross in this video mean 144? That's uncanny. Even with a 16 hour day is there really enough time to forge that many blades?
@clemclemett5312
@clemclemett5312 22 дня назад
​@steve-ey3rx A Gross is 12 dozen, so normally taken to be 12x12=144. In this specific case, he says his customer initially defined a 'dozen' as 14 (to cover breakages!), so his 2 gross at that time would have been 2x12x14=336 blades in a day . Astonishing, isn't it?
@steve-ey3rx
@steve-ey3rx 22 дня назад
@@clemclemett5312 Astonishing? I'd say "incredible". :) 336 blades in 12 hours is what, two and a half minutes per blade? Did we see him make any blades in two and a half minutes?
@boatbeard7767
@boatbeard7767 21 день назад
@@steve-ey3rx We saw him draw and refine a tang in six or so blows, and form a complete blade profile from the red hot steel blank including forging the bevel in literally a minute flat... Do you really think for the purposes of filming he was working anywhere close to full production speed? He said in his prime, when he was at the peak of his capacity those were his output numbers - there is hard proof of these numbers because that is how he was paid, by the numbers produced and provided to the customers who certainly would not have paid for anything they were not receiving...
@paulhill2012
@paulhill2012 13 дней назад
​@boatbeard7767 , yes, they were paid on " piece work", which meant that they were paid by the number of pieces that they produced. I did that too for a time, if you were quick and motivated you could make better money than some one working on flat pay, but you had to be on top speed day after day.
@matusmikoviny
@matusmikoviny День назад
forging even ricasso is truly smthing
@asensibleyoungman2978
@asensibleyoungman2978 2 месяца назад
Computers and robots are killing humanity.
@Peter-od7op
@Peter-od7op 2 года назад
What year was this taken. Did i miss it
@KenHawleyCollectionTrust
@KenHawleyCollectionTrust 2 года назад
The film was made in 1979 and you didn’t miss it if you meant by that being on tv. It was made as part of a series only available on video
@TheChipmunk2008
@TheChipmunk2008 18 дней назад
i now know why it's called the tang, it's the sound!
@Andy-Gibb
@Andy-Gibb 5 дней назад
It is so sad that all these crafts are lost for ever due to machines.
@JohnMccabe-kr7du
@JohnMccabe-kr7du 2 дня назад
There now are many bladesmiths working in uk again,it's a revived craft. There is a market for hand forged knives again
@tigertiger1699
@tigertiger1699 5 дней назад
🙏🙏🙏
@CanadianBriar
@CanadianBriar Год назад
Does anyone know why he makes that final little "tail" when he's constructing the tang?
@geofftp
@geofftp Год назад
I would say that the small tail he forged in serves two purposes. 1. Something to hold on to when forging the tang to keep the tongs away from the hammer blows. 2. To hold the blade when heat treating the blade. The tongs act like heatsinks.
@rossstenner4402
@rossstenner4402 21 день назад
I saw him at Abbydale industrial museum in around 1976 and 1977 he said that the little tang was for the grinder to true up his wheel before grinding the blade. He used to give away blank blades, I watched the demonstrations several times on each visit and had a chat between demonstrations, he gave me his hammer to hold the handle of which fitted my hand perfectly, it was amazingly steerable. I still have the 2 blades made a year apart, you cannot see much difference between the little tails
@славаславин-ж2б
@славаславин-ж2б 3 месяца назад
Как же он без гриндера и Rex 121 выживал
@manchagojohnsonmanchago6367
@manchagojohnsonmanchago6367 22 дня назад
haha well in the past they used a water wheel and files and scrapers. the water wheel is grinding as wlel as a modern machine
@slick_slicers
@slick_slicers Год назад
Does anyone still forge blades like this? Most are laser/water cut from rolls of steel, CNC ground and tumble polished.
@славаславин-ж2б
@славаславин-ж2б 3 месяца назад
Leonid Arhangelsky Леонид Архангельский. Ученый, инженер, кузнец и металлург
@manchagojohnsonmanchago6367
@manchagojohnsonmanchago6367 22 дня назад
in iran the pen knives that were inspired by english pocket knives are still forged this way, as are the larger folding knives probably inspired by knives from the spanish and portugese
@RichardT2112
@RichardT2112 День назад
Sad part is that he only enjoyed 10 years of retirement. 😢
@iddqds
@iddqds 11 дней назад
anyone can read any of the boats names?
@MrUmpleby
@MrUmpleby 4 дня назад
The large dredger is Gypsy Race which is also the name of a small river that runs into Bridlington harbour, I remember this boat from the 70s 80s when boat fishing there
@iddqds
@iddqds 4 дня назад
@@MrUmpleby thank you
@MrUmpleby
@MrUmpleby 4 дня назад
@@iddqds Fishing boats at the time we used were all owned by three brothers, Arthur, Neil and Ted Newby and were called Three Brothers, Two Sisters, White Heather and Sportsman
@iddqds
@iddqds 3 дня назад
@@MrUmpleby great info. did any of them appeared here?
@MrUmpleby
@MrUmpleby 3 дня назад
@@iddqds Sadly not !
@tedmartin5402
@tedmartin5402 Год назад
What a shame their expertise has died with them.
@urmelausdemeis3495
@urmelausdemeis3495 11 дней назад
Schrecklich
@jasonmorris2813
@jasonmorris2813 13 часов назад
Ok
@jasonmorris2813
@jasonmorris2813 13 часов назад
That old man is just beating the crap out of nothing for nothing and yall thinking he's making a sword 🤡
@zymkriger
@zymkriger День назад
Now the new age so called "blacksmith " smack some steel a few times so they can claim hand forged the spend 4 hours on a grinder shaping and polishing 😅
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