A while back along with my candle moulds I received a dedicated charcloth making tin from Carl and Marcia Giordano over in the US.
I'd got sick of things like treacle tins coming apart at the seams and having the lids deform etc so when they mentioned they had made a tin for making charcloth with rolled solder free seams for a guy over there I asked if they could make me one.
Anyroad I finally had a need to make some char so cut up some scraps of 100% flax linen I'd saved and made a twig fire and cooked it up out back.
It did just what I wanted it to, didn't deform despite glowing red hot at times, lid came off and went on easy. I was a bit impatient so plugged the hole before it had completely stopped smoking hence the not completely charred material in the pic. Needless to say with flax it takes a spark from a strike-a-light great.
It's not on their website so you'll have to ask them for one and to see what the price is. The usually make top end replicas of 18th C tin items and I've found their prices great for such quality.
http://www.cg-tinsmith.com/index.htm
I'll freely admit I'm a friend of theirs now they are such lovely folk to deal with.
ATB
Tom
PS heres a pic you can see the side seams in
I'd got sick of things like treacle tins coming apart at the seams and having the lids deform etc so when they mentioned they had made a tin for making charcloth with rolled solder free seams for a guy over there I asked if they could make me one.
Anyroad I finally had a need to make some char so cut up some scraps of 100% flax linen I'd saved and made a twig fire and cooked it up out back.
It did just what I wanted it to, didn't deform despite glowing red hot at times, lid came off and went on easy. I was a bit impatient so plugged the hole before it had completely stopped smoking hence the not completely charred material in the pic. Needless to say with flax it takes a spark from a strike-a-light great.
It's not on their website so you'll have to ask them for one and to see what the price is. The usually make top end replicas of 18th C tin items and I've found their prices great for such quality.
http://www.cg-tinsmith.com/index.htm
I'll freely admit I'm a friend of theirs now they are such lovely folk to deal with.
ATB
Tom
PS heres a pic you can see the side seams in
Last edited: