Showing posts with label crease. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crease. Show all posts
Wednesday, November 09, 2016
Diamond's Back! Questions and Answers About the "New" Diamond Horseshoes and Tools
In 2015 the Royal Kerckhaert Horseshoe Company purchased Diamond Horseshoes and Tools. What had once been the widest-selling shoe and tool line in America (and far beyond) has been getting a new look and, for many products, a new feel and new features. How are things going for the brand, now that the transition to the new owner is complete? Hoofcare and Lameness posed some questions to Farrier Product Distribution (FPD), which we hope will be helpful to everyone who uses--or whose horses wear--the Diamond brand of shoes and tools.
Saturday, June 14, 2008
Can someone tell me about this shoe?
My friend Xavier took this photo...it was on a display board and is not an antique shoe out of a museum.
I have a theory, what's yours?
And can someone explain why and when you'd want to double-fuller like that? It would be a good forging test to get the arcs parallel; this farrier did a good job. A smooth arc on a single crease is an art...but parallel ones?
Maybe one of the British farriers can tell us if there is a name for double fullering. However, this is not a British shoe, as far as I know.
Leaving a comment to explain your theory about this shoe is easy: scroll to the bottom of this post and click on the word "Comments". A new window will open. Type your comment in the box on the left. On the right, click on "name/url" and a little box drops down. (Or at least it does on my Mac with a Firefox browser.) Type your name or nickname in the box marked "name".
Then hit either "preview" to look over what you typed in the big box, followed by "publish comment". And you're done!
If that's too much to ask, you can email your comment to me and I will post it for you.
If you have a Google or Gmail account and are signed in, you can ask the blog to automatically email other comments about this shoe to you so you can respond to people who respond to you.
The Hoof Blog has a new policy of moderating comments, by the way, since some people have been getting a little edgy and maybe a little too presumptuous of my laissez-faire attitude, so it may take a little while before your comment shows up on the blog until I approve it.
And if you don't like horseshoes, please don't feel obliged to preach to those who do. Just wait til there is a subject you do like. Let's accentuate the positive, my friends. There's plenty of hoof to go around.
I have a theory, what's yours?
And can someone explain why and when you'd want to double-fuller like that? It would be a good forging test to get the arcs parallel; this farrier did a good job. A smooth arc on a single crease is an art...but parallel ones?
Maybe one of the British farriers can tell us if there is a name for double fullering. However, this is not a British shoe, as far as I know.
Leaving a comment to explain your theory about this shoe is easy: scroll to the bottom of this post and click on the word "Comments". A new window will open. Type your comment in the box on the left. On the right, click on "name/url" and a little box drops down. (Or at least it does on my Mac with a Firefox browser.) Type your name or nickname in the box marked "name".
Then hit either "preview" to look over what you typed in the big box, followed by "publish comment". And you're done!
If that's too much to ask, you can email your comment to me and I will post it for you.
If you have a Google or Gmail account and are signed in, you can ask the blog to automatically email other comments about this shoe to you so you can respond to people who respond to you.
The Hoof Blog has a new policy of moderating comments, by the way, since some people have been getting a little edgy and maybe a little too presumptuous of my laissez-faire attitude, so it may take a little while before your comment shows up on the blog until I approve it.
And if you don't like horseshoes, please don't feel obliged to preach to those who do. Just wait til there is a subject you do like. Let's accentuate the positive, my friends. There's plenty of hoof to go around.
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