2012年11月27日星期二

Inlaid Steel Thingies guild wars 2 gold nh

Inlaid Steel ThingiesQuestions are a super-easy way to get answers from the Instructables community. Learn how to build, do gw2 gold, or make anything! You just ask a question and the community will provide answers. You choose the best answer!Submit a Forum Topic!The forums are the place to ask questions, share a cool project from another site, find collaborators for your latest project, or discuss anything of interest to the Instructables community.GuidesWhat is a guide?Guides are a collection of Instructables, such as '5 Minute Recipes' or 'Father's Day Gifts'.Start creating your own now!Start a new groupDo you have a lot of images to upload?If you prefer to upload your images before you submit, then this is for you.Remember to tag them so they will be easier for you to find when you are viewing your library.You can also upload images when you are creating your posts.Did you find a bug or have a suggestion for us?We appreciate all the help our users give us in tracking down bugs and making the site better for everyone.IntroInlaid Steel ThingiesI'M NOT DEADSorry about the long absence, but there were exams and stuff to deal with, then I didn't make much of anything i felt the need to post for a while, but yesterday guild wars 2 gold, while playing around guild wars 2 gold, I found the answer to a problem that TMs been weighing on my mind for a while: Inlaying.I TMve never really been clear on how its done, and no one wanted to tell me, so I had to work it out for myself.These little steel things are easy enough to make, as long as you TMve got the heat, so let's begin.wyvernflight says:Apr 22, 2008. 12:56 PMReplyAnother way of doing the inlays is to use scribes and such to undercut the metal, making a trapezoid like hole and hammering (lightly tapping to slightly bend the softer inlay metal) inlays in. This is done remarkably well with copper based alloys that change weird colors when heated like you have done or with inlays made of wire. Try to use a small chisel to indent the metal for small lines and then undercut. Some metal combinations need heat, either like what you have done above where the whole piece is heated and then hammered, or just a torch to heat the inlay material so it stays soft.Austringer says:Jul 20, 2007. 9:54 PMReplyIn "The Complete Metalsmith" by Tim McCreight he gives a brief description of how to do Mokume-gane. He describes putting sheets of copper, silver and/or gold which have been cleaned with pumice (and surprisingly, not fluxed) between two steel plates which are tightly bolted together. You put this in a forge, heat it until the metals you are fusing start to have a sweaty look, then pull it out, give it a few quick taps, and take it out of the steel clampy thing. He talks about the inlay method you describe, Jtobako, and just about ever other technique that jewelers use. A fun little book.
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