A craft born in F.I.R.E. Craig Soelberg

“The Financially Independent Retire Early (F.I.R.E.) movement inspired me to take control of my work life and explore what i’m passionate about. I found that I love working with my hands and pursing a craft. I worked with Jim Hand (see below) as an apprentice for two years while still working in the mortgage industry full time. Jim is an amazing teacher and showed me the value of proper technique and sticking to the traditional blacksmith skills.”

Craig lives with his wife Terri and son Hunter (6) in beautiful McCall, Idaho. When not in the shop he and his family hike, fish, ski, and spend time in the outdoors.

A Lifetime of Crafting. Jim Hand

My first memory of metal working at age 4 or 5 was watching my dad (an aircraft welder) repair copper plumbing at home. It was the coolest thing I had ever seen. Watching the solder flow with the heat of the torch was something I had to do. A few years later dad got some welding equipment for me at home. The first thing he did, was teach me how to use a torch (I still use that same torch in my shop today).

One of the things I liked to do when I was a kid, was go to the Idaho history museum, my favorite display was the blacksmith shop and imagined working with that hammer and anvil making a part for a wagon. The idea that mattered is how it was made, the idea of moving metal with heat. Only Forging could be better than welding. With a hammer you can form the metal into any shape almost like working with clay.

I got a book a blacksmithing and started to teach myself how to forge. At age 12 or 13 my dad took me to visit a blacksmith he had heard about named Nahum Hersom (see below). He was a true master, one of the few that kept the old techniques alive. Nahum knew every thing about metal work from Iron Age metal joinery and tool making to modern welding techniques. Nahum was a great teacher and friend. As I got older, I worked in a few welding shops and explored other career ideas. But I held on to idea of making a living as a blacksmith. In 1995 I built a shop and spent the next 10 years improving my skills and getting the equipment needed. In 2005 I quit my day job and start Alpenglow Metal Works, with the goal of teaching and creating fine metal.

A master of Old world craftsmanship -Nahum Hersum

Sheet metal working techniques are carried out on cold metal. Repousse is the hammering out of a pattern on a metal sheet placed on a resilient base by means of a number of small punches. The base may be wood, or a special pitch, or lead, depending on the gauge of the sheet. After hammering from one side, the sheet is reversed and details are hammered from the other side to finish the pattern.