02-02-2009, 12:53 PM
There is also the burn-in method which is a time-honoured method that sword makers use is also a very probable method... especially when dealing with harder materials like bone.
For sword and sword-component crafting, I can think of no better reference material than Jim Hrisoulas.
[url:2mnp4669]http://www.atar.com/old/index.php?module=pagemaster&PAGE_user_op=view_page&PAGE_id=5&MMN_position=6:6[/url]
Looks pretty decent so far, keep going!
Though personally, I'd do the drilling / burn-in first to avoid wrecking all that work :mrgreen:
What Dremmel fittings did you use to bring it down like that anyway?
Regards,
For sword and sword-component crafting, I can think of no better reference material than Jim Hrisoulas.
[url:2mnp4669]http://www.atar.com/old/index.php?module=pagemaster&PAGE_user_op=view_page&PAGE_id=5&MMN_position=6:6[/url]
Looks pretty decent so far, keep going!
Though personally, I'd do the drilling / burn-in first to avoid wrecking all that work :mrgreen:
What Dremmel fittings did you use to bring it down like that anyway?
Regards,
Q. ARTORIVS CORVINVS
aka: Phillip Vautour
"Rome is but a wilderness of tigers, and tigers must prey."
<a class="postlink" href="http://rubicon.dyndns.org/legioxxi">http://rubicon.dyndns.org/legioxxi
aka: Phillip Vautour
"Rome is but a wilderness of tigers, and tigers must prey."
<a class="postlink" href="http://rubicon.dyndns.org/legioxxi">http://rubicon.dyndns.org/legioxxi