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Clay Smith (left) said that a new blacksmith needs just an anvil, a hammer and a forge with a bellows to get started.
Photos by AMY FLOWERS UMBLE/THE FREE LANCE-STAR

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red hot HOBBY Blacksmiths gather at Spotsylvania farm

Red Hot Hobby: Blacksmiths gather at Spotsylvania Farm

Date published: 10/24/2006

By FLOWERS UMBLE

By AMY FLOWERS UMBLE

Cling. Clang.

Sizzle. Snap.

More than 50 people watched as Clay Smith poked at a small fire, holding a variety of tools.

Over and over they watched, as he held metals in the fire, then drew them out, orange and glowing, and hammered them into shape.

At first, the crowd sat around and watched transfixed.

After a while, the children wandered over to the food tent in search of a doughnut or a soda.

Soon, teenagers and a few others whispered back and forth.

But the devoted blacksmiths watched intently as Smith created. Some scribbled notes to use when they returned to their own forges and workshops.

Many asked questions--some about the materials Smith used, others about what it was like to have a job many of them dreamed of--as a blacksmith at Colonial Williamsburg.

Blacksmithing is becoming more popular as a hobby, Smith said. But there aren't many who can make a living at it.

Some find jobs at living-history centers like Williamsburg. Others, like Spotsylvania County blacksmith Pete Robertson, work as farriers and wheelwrights.

Many sell artistic works at craft shows. But they often make only enough to pay for the hobby.

Still, the numbers of blacksmiths seem to grow. The Central Virginia Blacksmithing Guild is so large that it needs to find a permanent place to meet, said Karen Smart, whose husband is president of the guild. She credited younger recruits for the new surge in blacksmithing.

Smith said some of the popularity comes because people want to remember the old days, when blacksmithing was a necessity.

"People are very nostalgic," he said.

Plus, for people who want to work with their hands, blacksmithing is the perfect hobby, Smith said.

"It's a good way to work out frustrations, and it's not really expensive to get into it," he said.

Most people start out by making Christmas gifts, and can make jewelry, hardware, candleholders, door-knockers, fireplace pokers, ornamental household items and more, Smith said.

He was the main attraction when blacksmiths gathered Oct. 14--a crisp, fall day--at Robertson's farm to talk smithing and to watch demonstrations. People came from as far away as upstate New York for the fifth annual gig.


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Date published: 10/24/2006