19th Century  Curran Village, Orrington & Holden, Maine

Blacksmithing & Knifemaking Information

Saturday & Sunday, January 6 & 7, 2023: Blacksmithing: Knife Making Workshop. Start to finish class. Begin with hand forging a blade and a handle tang from high carbon steel. Grind, file and sand your blade to perfection. You will temper the knife with a oil quench and an oven heat. You will prepare your tang to receive brass rivets and hard wood handle scales, You can sand these and oil finish them. We use a fast-drying epoxy in addition to the brass rivets to hold your handle together. Bring a bag lunch, safety glasses with side shields, ear plugs, leather gloves, natural fiber clothing, leather footwear, and a 2.5-3 lb. metal working hammer ( pein type or drill hammer ). Cost: $325 In case we have to cancel due to snow we will negotiate with you a makeup weekend. Gift certificates available.

Student Information:

  1. All students for our Beginning Blacksmithing Workshop and Knife Making Workshop must be at least 15 years of age. We can offer a one-day blacksmithing workshop for ages 11-15 as well as adult/child workshops in which two can take a class for the price of one; parents serve in a mentoring capacity allowing the instructor to evenly distribute instruction time to all members of the class. Check our calendar for these types of workshops.
  2. It is recommended that blacksmithing/blade-smithing students wear leather shoes, cotton or wool clothing (not man-made clothing), work gloves, ear plugs (optional) and, most importantly, eyewear.
  3. Students will bring a 2. – 2.5 lb. lb. ball, cross or straight pein or machinist’s drilling type hammer. Always wear safety glasses with side shields, ear plugs (optional), leather work gloves, leather shoes, and natural fiber clothing. Ear plugs might be a good idea.
  4. Fill out a “Waiver of Liability” form before you begin blacksmithing at one of our smithies. If you are injured, you need to inform the instructor or the overseer of the smithy at that time. We have a first-aid kit on premises.
  5. Always treat tools in the smithy as your own. No tools are to leave the smithy without the permission of the museum director of 19th Century Curran Village.
  6. Clean forge after using it is important to everyone using the smithy. As part of the course you will learn to recognize the difference between coal, coke, and clinker. All of these materials should be treated accordingly. Coke is used to start your forge fire, coal is used to fuel your fire, and clinker is the inevitable waste of the coal fire. Clinker should be cleaned from the fire pan after each use; it is to be put into a metal bucket. Coke can be used when starting forge fires and should be placed in a metal bucket under the forge for later use. Clinker is to be dumped in a place designated by the instructor when the pail containing it is full.