ArmorerRoy
40 Cal
I found a small rusty tin can on a hike. I cut off the top, added a wire handle, and cut an oval hole in the side to make a small candle lantern. I keep it inside my tea pot.
You got skilz for sure. I would have butchered the can and myself doing that.Dremel
It works surprisingly well.You got skilz for sure. I would have butchered the can and myself doing that.
If you had said "plasma cutter", I would have said "Whoa....now you've gone toooooo far with non-period correct...."Dremel
They would be very thin and probably prone to cracking I think, perhaps a better solution would be Isen glass (hope I spelled that right)Some cow horns are white, has anyone ever heard of scraping them very thin and using them as break proof panels for a candle lantern?
I would think a thin horn used for powder is still a little thicker than a horn panel for a light and as you stated I think the heat might be a problem, If you decide to use a thin horn panel such as was mentioned by Tyler let us know how it holds up to the heat, my guess after some use it may blister and I still think it would be prone to cracks. Good luck.Well, I'm told some cow horns were shaved so thin you could see through them and tell how much powder was left in the horn. My worry is if the candle heat would melt or discolor the horn.
17th century Russia made and exported mica windows as a cheaper alternative to glass (called “muscovy windows”), so it's plausible.Mica panels were also used for lantern panes. Very break resistant, but I don't know how far back in history that practice went.
I tried horn for another project, but I found that heat quickly warped it. I doubt it would work in a lantern for that reason.Some corn horns are white, has anyone ever heard of scraping them very thin and using them as break proof panels for a candle lantern?
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