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04-17-2015, 08:12 PM | #3 | ||||||
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Would very much like to hear more about Mr. Melling's connection to Remington!!
Samuel Melling, Ince Forge Co., Wigan, a member of the Iron & Steel Institute https://books.google.com/books?id=NF...AJ&pg=PR44&lpg Wigan is a town in Greater Manchester on the River Douglas Ince Forge Co. http://www.gracesguide.co.uk/Ince_Forge_Co Melling’s Iron Twisting Machine https://books.google.com/books?id=Dn...g=RA3-PA59&lpg Thomas Melling https://books.google.com/books?id=cH...J&pg=PA356&lpg James Melling http://www.boatfamilies.org.uk/getpe...e=CanalFamily1
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08-02-2015, 09:03 PM | #4 | ||||||
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Hello Whitefish, Rose Damascus indeed is real. To make the rose pattern, the smith will most of the time take a package of about 60 to 90 layers and drill a pattern of shallow blind holes into the flat side approx. 5mm deep this is done to both sides, then the piece is then forged flat again. the result is a pattern of irregular sized circles with snaking lines interspersed between them. The drilling disrupts the somewhat orderly layers of forged steel and that gives you the multilayered small circular patterns that are known as Rose. There is another interesting variation on this process called the Nail pattern Damascus, in which you drill holes all the way through the piece and then insert shortened nails into it then forge flat, although I prefer the rose Damascus pattern myself.
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08-02-2015, 09:16 PM | #5 | ||||||
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We would very much like to see an example of this "Rose Melling" or "Rose Damascus" pattern.
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08-02-2015, 09:26 PM | #6 | ||||||
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Here are a few examples that I dug up.
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08-02-2015, 09:31 PM | #7 | ||||||
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You may know these examples by a different name but this is what those who are into Damascus steel know it by.
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08-02-2015, 09:36 PM | #8 | ||||||
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So, is it a more modern innovation or do you have some earlier examples, say from the 1890's and into the next decade of the 1900's?
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08-02-2015, 09:49 PM | #9 | ||||||
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Learn something new in this hobby every day
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08-02-2015, 10:20 PM | #10 | ||||||
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I don't know for sure, but if I were to make a guess I would say that it is not a new innovation as Damascus steel blades have been around since the middle ages and feel certain that this pattern has been produced long before the 1900s, although as with any product, processes are refined. Back then the Damascus blade was considered state of the art weaponry and considered to be the magic sword by those who faced it in battle . the secret of making it was closely guarded and could only be afforded by those who could afford them , mostly noblemen. The mystic was enhanced by swordsmen in battle who's Damascus swords could slice their opponent's blades in half.
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