Here is a canteen that I made

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Stickman

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Over the past few years I have been learning tinsmithing. Here is a rev war style canteen that I have learned to make.
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I hit the button too soon. I took a class at the Campbell Folk School from Harry Krupenbacher and Clinton Pitts to learn tin knocking.

If anyone is interested in tinsmithing I would enjoy talking more about it.
 
Paul Barnhart, Barnhart Studios, carries a good selection of tinplate, and a lot of other needed supplies.

As for the tools, good luck. I got a few of mine on Ebay before the prices went through the roof. They do not show up in the flea markets around here, but there are some guys online that sell used metalworking machinery. They are not cheap, but better than fighting it out on ebay usually.

The thing that I am learning from books, advise and experience is that a lot of tinsmithing can be done over pieces of pipe, wooden blocks and various found objects. The stakes are great, but not absolutely necessary to get started.
 
I'll see what I can do about getting that chore done. = I don't even own a camera anymore.
(My daughter will likely do it the next time that she visits me.)

Fyi, I paid the princely sum of 5 bucks for it at an estate sale. = The company, that was running the estate sale, was about to trash-can it!
(I wasn't sure what it was & took it to the WITTE MUSEUM & asked the curator of metal objects for an identification.)

yours, satx
 
Neat work! Phil always has pineapple juice in his -- I tell him that is subject to spoilage and maybe dissolving the solder!
 
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