it was called the plastic of the time's!Very early on horn was discovered to be able to be shaped into a myriad of things. Horn combs, spoons etc.
Once this was discovered a flattened horn was an easy thing to do.
it was called the plastic of the time's!Very early on horn was discovered to be able to be shaped into a myriad of things. Horn combs, spoons etc.
Once this was discovered a flattened horn was an easy thing to do.
I would like to know how this idea that if you flatten a horn by boiling it will revert to its original shape got started.The flattened horns are as likley to get engraved / 'Scrimshawed 'as any other .They got flattened by HEAT not boiling as if sufficentley heated till they about melt( & drive the cook crazey ) As they do give of' A slight oader of melons'?, might be prudent to do this away from the house eh . A group of wooden wedges helps in this & a Book press is usefull . .The boiling idea seems the way to go but the horn will get a' memory' and is wont to revert to the original roundness , Wheras if cooked it will stay flat .The same as the flatted horn you find as butt plates or knife scales revolver grips ect & early arms such as .
.Scots horns seem to be decorated with a compass & circular forms . But later commercial offerings mostly Continental Europe with various charger tops where not offererd decorated & you don't see many with added work . Really earlier stag flasks & horns did see engraved work . Sailors ammusment 'Scrimshaw 'is the same idea cut into the horn surface then rub in some black gunk or coloured inks to get a 'polycrome' effect same idea as a tattoo . In the days before plastic all such items as butt plates knife scales .horn caps for shotguns all such as might today be plastic where made in shops with a lot of leg vise like set ups where the die was forced into hot horn trimmed to fit the die and as they cooled the next vise & the next to it would speed up the items required .. This trade was an important production of Sheffield and coupled with the hollow ware industry made the town a natural to produce powder flasks of lant horn & Ide expect any glass like items such as the stern' windows' of ships . There is or was a' pub 'called' The Pressers Arms '. Read 'Tavern' for some readers .
Regards Rudyard
How it began is down to the fact that boiling generally does have a memory . While heated dosn' t suffer this memory .That you & I have made horns either way dosn't alter the fact most all such horns where done by heating . I shall soon post photoes of horns Ive owned or made . The flat Scots horn blank was given me by Roland Cadle a noted Horner along with a larger horn both I made into Scots flasks .My smaller one being best suited for a hunt & the base has a protrusion with a square hole to tighten the Snaphance rifle flint jaws it being an early style I made in 45 cal . Though I wrote for the Honourable Horners Guild, I don't claim to be any Master Horner . But had a lot to do with Sheffield Horn scale cutters & cutlers who used to rent just such a horners workshop .On West Street they found drawers full of pressed items such as the horn tips commonly found on single ML shotguns . Items I allways fettled from solid when needed . The Firm of Scarlet & Whiteing where on Rockingham Street Mr Scarlet was our rent man in his spare time once & Mr Whiting was 90 still sawing up stag & horn for scales . They had an oven & a old book press to flatten out the nye melted horns . I asked Mr Whitting cutting up horn did he worry about the dust.? He replied " No it just made soup". On Mr Scarlets desk was an ivory carveing of Marshall Fosh & in his drawer was the' Dead mans penny' & scroll still there from the 14 /18 War when Mr Whittikers previous owners son was killed . .When they packed up I was offered the firm but I didn't want to be so tied to what was a very small & dieing industry . I used to buy pressed Buffalo horn from India & 'Sea Elephant 'tuskes from them . That Ide carve revolver grips from but where so hard a surface it dulled hacksaw blades you had to grind the surface of them. Anyway I digress Some like that & it is info you cant get anywhere else ! And the price is right .I would like to know how this idea that if you flatten a horn by boiling it will revert to its original shape got started.
I have flattened 4-5 horns by boiling some a couple of decades ago and none have ever reverted, if they do how long does it take a hundred years or so?
I even had a well known horner who was a friend who believed this and stuck to the belief even after my successes.
That being said, I boil them for a LONG time, some times several hours until they are pretty soft and stick a wooden wedge in them, squeeze them in the vise and let set over night and have never had a problem.
never, as the branch is bent so shall the tree grow! it will never straighten up again!I would like to know how this idea that if you flatten a horn by boiling it will revert to its original shape got started.
I have flattened 4-5 horns by boiling some a couple of decades ago and none have ever reverted, if they do how long does it take a hundred years or so?
I even had a well known horner who was a friend who believed this and stuck to the belief even after my successes.
That being said, I boil them for a LONG time, some times several hours until they are pretty soft and stick a wooden wedge in them, squeeze them in the vise and let set over night and have never had a problem.
Also common in Scotland.Scrimshawed flat horns can be found in Germany.
I intended to mention that.Also common in Scotland.
Well I did get three pics as promised but the Scots flattened flask didn't get sent Ile try later .My E experts gone to town. Iv.e one of a boiled horn & the Heated flatted one . The boiled was made from scraps of wood & bits off a tractor while trapping Opposums in 1968 the charger nozzle was a three o three cartridge case . I couldnt bore out the rear no drill but oddly I did have a small cannon barrel so I contrived to fire a gun nail through it . You want primitive? I certainly had 'primitive ' them days . The scrimshawed Possom tree'd by a dog was off the Wilson Neal fur buyers advert .And the vine like thing is native' Supplejack.' & the hen like bird was my Weka that hung around my ' humpy '(Rude shack) as Ide flick it meat from skinning the furs . I made two muffed up waster pelts into a rude hat ' eat your heart out Ben Gunn ' it was just after the Ahanganua earth quake & there was often a' Boom' then the whole place shook & bounced my clock off the mantlepiece but it didn't work so wasnt a problem , You got used to the after shakes . The district nurse called me 'The wild man of Borneo . She may have had a point . I didn't make much but still fondly recall my time on the West Coast chaseing opposums & kept some skins in the bottom of my sleeping bag for years .
Regards Rudyard
Nice, but I would prefer on the original flag of 13 stars in a circle.I just started making powder horns. I have made 1 flattish one so far. It's definitely not hard to flatten and it stays when it cools. Historically speaking I have seen a few in books but even then I couldn't be sure if that are authentic. Picture below is the one I made. The guy that wanted it ask me to make it for pan powder.
I would too, that's what he wanted though.Nice, but I would prefer on the original flag of 13 stars in a circle.
Boiling in oil at 330 degrees or heating to that temperature will make it permanent ...that's the way horners did / do it.I would like to know how this idea that if you flatten a horn by boiling it will revert to its original shape got started.
I have flattened 4-5 horns by boiling some a couple of decades ago and none have ever reverted, if they do how long does it take a hundred years or so?
I even had a well known horner who was a friend who believed this and stuck to the belief even after my successes.
That being said, I boil them for a LONG time, some times several hours until they are pretty soft and stick a wooden wedge in them, squeeze them in the vise and let set over night and have never had a problem.
Despite the miopic notions some seem to have, I append a pic of a small Scots Horn formed by heat with its square ' spanner' to tighten the flint. Then a boiled horn made while chaseing Opposums with the dog bailing up an Opposum . Then the' humpy' shack with hot & cold running After shake tremors . Hard to see but there are two Native flightless Weka's in the fore ground . and against the hut beside two dead possums leans a matchlock 'got up' from a scrap tube with treaded ends for some reason but though I had no hack saw I had a piece of broken blade suffice to lop off the muzzle end then the breach end , with no drill I used the blade to saw a star like reduction which with the aid of a Concrete nail punched the vent through , The pan was a Shroder Valve cap tin (Whatever they are ). The stock a length of Rimu. Its lock and ramrod of the iconic 'number 8 wire' contrived into a combined match holder pivot & trigger in one . I had powder & a jungle carbine . But not best suited for small game. Though I et a lot of Opposum' tree rats '. To the rear is the Karamea Bluff . Certainly its your' Fixer upper ' But it was ,home sweet home ,for me the winter of 1968 . Thank you Coinreach for your kind comment .IMHO you're about as authentic as a man can be Ruddy, never change.
I've been holding a flat priming horn I made for years here, waiting for a scrimshaw design that appeals to me, that one of yours there shines to this mans eye.Despite the miopic notions some seem to have, I append a pic of a small Scots Horn formed by heat with its square ' spanner' to tighten the flint. Then a boiled horn made while chaseing Opposums with the dog bailing up an Opposum . Then the' humpy' shack with hot & cold running After shake tremors . Hard to see but there are two Native flightless Weka's in the fore ground . and against the hut beside two dead possums leans a matchlock 'got up' from a scrap tube with treaded ends for some reason but though I had no hack saw I had a piece of broken blade suffice to lop off the muzzle end then the breach end , with no drill I used the blade to saw a star like reduction which with the aid of a Concrete nail punched the vent through , The pan was a Shroder Valve cap tin (Whatever they are ). The stock a length of Rimu. Its lock and ramrod of the iconic 'number 8 wire' contrived into a combined match holder pivot & trigger in one . I had powder & a jungle carbine . But not best suited for small game. Though I et a lot of Opposum' tree rats '. To the rear is the Karamea Bluff . Certainly its your' Fixer upper ' But it was ,home sweet home ,for me the winter of 1968 . Thank you Coinreach for your kind comment .
Regards Rudyard
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