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Thursday, August 5th, 2004 01:37 pm
Over the last few weeks I've blown glass. I've welded (gas and stick). I added an outlet in the basement and I've handled hot video lights. I moved flammable liquids galore to the new house. I even biked 102 miles under a unusually bright and hot sun.

So how, exactly, did I get a nice inch long burn on my hand? The worst burn I've had in several years? By reaching into an oven -- a boring, electric kitchen oven -- to remove a pie. I suck.

It was a really yummy pie, at least.

Edit: Nice. Not nine. If it was a nine inch burn I'd be posting pictures or something.
Thursday, August 5th, 2004 02:12 pm (UTC)
I've never burnt myself blacksmithing (which I've done for hundreds of hours), but I have burnt myself cooking, too. It happens. :)
Thursday, August 5th, 2004 02:59 pm (UTC)
Just about to leave Mexico, and I don't have enough money to go back to Coyoacan and buy a Mahuaquitl. So I've resigned myself to making one myself.
I've already purchased a significant amount of obsidian through e-bay, so there's no point in trying to talk me out of it.
Essentially, it's a large, flat wooden sword with three inch long pieces of obsidian set lengthwise up the two edges, to create a very sharp "glass" edge.
This requires knapping obsidian.
I know next to nothing about stonecarving, and I need someone to help me figure stuff out.
The obsidian pieces don't need to be pretty, just uniform and roughly the same size.
I've already figured out how I'm going to set them in the wood, that's taken care of. There is nearly no information on the web about knapping obsidian and I'm about at my wit's end. I know it to be extremely dangerous due to the molecule-thick, lung-bound flakes that fly everywhere.
Essentially, I need a list of inexpensive tools that I can use (preferably primitive tools, chisels, that sort of thing.) My wife won't let me spend more that $150 on this little pet-project. If this first one works out well I might do others.
From my experience, banging on solid glass with sharp objects usually doesn't yield the desired results.
Thanks a ton.
Thursday, August 5th, 2004 03:02 pm (UTC)
Fishy? You know, I misread that as getting 'a nine inch long burn on [your] hand' and was thinking... my god, how big are his hands?
Thursday, August 5th, 2004 03:08 pm (UTC)
Owwwwwwwwwwwww! Yes, darn it, it's not when you're being attentive and careful that such horrible things happen, but in everyday life and the inevitable moments of wandering attention.

Hope they give you good meds to deal with the burn, and that the hand heals thoroughly and quickly!
Friday, August 6th, 2004 12:36 pm (UTC)
Whoa! You've actually seen a maquahuitl? Very, very cool. I'm interested for two reasons; I collect tribal weaponry and I'm working on a thesis concerning elements of post-classical mesoamerican governance. I wanted some cool "visuals" to add to my presentation. So far I have some fantastic replica codice pages done on mate paper with traditional dyes, and a replica of an olmec piece that was discovered in Xochicalco that I can demonstrate influenced the naturalistic art style popular in Texcoco around 1500 (I made friends with a couple of artisans from Oaxaca.) Very cool stuff, but I've only seen one, poorly made, overly priced maquahuitl since I've been down here. It looked like it was made from an old two by four. I couldn't even find a model to photograph in the Anthro Museum in D.F. or at the Armaments museum in Cuernavaca. It has been frustrating. Whenever I talk to obsidian workers and describe what I want they always say, "Oh, yeah yeah. I know what you're talking about. No, I've never seen one." I understand that it takes a reasonable ammount of obsidian (I'm bringing a backpack-full back into the states.) I really want to do it myself. Is there any way you could get me in contact with the person who worked on the sword that you saw, maybe they would have some designs that I could work from. Thank you so much for replying!