:QUOTE [quotetype:personal] Steel remembers heat. Your job is to move it before it forgets. :INFO Why Propane Over Coal for Beginners A propane forge (a refractory-lined box heated by a venturi burner) is quieter, cleaner, requires no forge welding coke, and is legal in most residential and suburban areas where coal forges are not. A single-burner propane forge ($300 to $400) reaches welding temperature (2400°F) and requires no bellows or blower. 1/2-inch to 3/4-inch mild steel bar is the standard starting material — available from metal suppliers and steel yards by the foot. :COUNTER.half 1800 to 2200 F | :COUNTER.half 3 Pound :PATH Set Up the Forge and Safety Zone Establish your forge, anvil, and quench bucket layout before lighting. | :INFO Set Up the Forge and Safety Zone Position the forge on a non-combustible surface (concrete, firebrick). Place the anvil close — 2 to 3 steps maximum from forge to anvil. Time from forge to anvil is work time: every second counts. Set a quench bucket (water for mild steel, oil for tool steel) within reach. Clear a 10-foot radius of flammable material. Wear leather apron, face shield, and leather gloves for moving hot metal to the anvil only (not for hammering — gloves reduce feel). :PATH Heat the Steel Correctly Yellow-orange heat for drawing and shaping — no sparking white heat. | :INFO Heat the Steel Correctly Light the propane forge and allow 10 to 15 minutes to reach working temperature. Insert the steel and watch the color change: black, red, dark orange, bright orange, yellow. Yellow-orange (around 2000°F) is working heat for mild steel. Move the steel at this color. Below red-orange, the steel is too hard to shape efficiently and you risk damaging hammer and anvil. Sparking white heat damages the steel's carbon structure. :PATH Draw Out a Taper Hammer at a 45-degree angle, rotating 90 degrees between heats. | :INFO Draw Out a Taper Place the hot steel on the anvil face. Strike at a 45-degree angle to draw (lengthen) the material while thinning it. Rotate 90 degrees between blow sets to keep the taper even on all four sides — square taper first, then round if desired. Work quickly while the steel is at or above red heat. Reheat as soon as the color drops to dark red. :PATH Bend and Shape For a hook: draw the taper, then forge the bend over the horn or edge of the anvil. | :INFO Bend and Shape For a simple hook: draw a taper on one end of a 12-inch bar. Heat the middle section to working temperature. Drape over the anvil horn (the cone-shaped end) and hammer down to create the hook curve. Quench the finished piece to cool. Clean scale with a wire brush. Finish with oil (flaxseed or beeswax) to prevent rust. :CHECKLIST Starting Kit [ ] Single-burner propane forge (NC Whisper Momma or similar) [ ] 100 to 150 lb cast iron anvil [ ] 2 to 2.5 lb cross-peen or rounding hammer [ ] Flat jaw tongs for 1/2-inch round stock [ ] Wire brush for scale removal [ ] Quench bucket (water for mild steel) [ ] Leather apron and face shield :NOTE Never Hammer Black Steel Striking cold steel transmits shock back through the hammer, tool head, and into your elbows. It produces almost no useful movement and damages hammer faces and anvil surfaces. If the steel is black, it goes back in the forge. Develop the habit of working only in the orange-yellow range from the first session. :QUOTE [quotetype:personal] Every piece of ironwork that has survived a century started as someone's first project at a forge. Start yours. :LINK https://www.anvilfire.com/articles/blacksmithing-basics/ Anvilfire — Blacksmithing Basics: Complete Beginner Reference