Flint Skills

Les Marshall

Life Member
Jan 21, 2004
174
1
67
Chichester West Sussex
Can someone recommend a good book that will show me a step-by-step guide to making flint tools, and the techniques needed? I'm thinking of taking it up as a hobby as there seems to be an abundance of flint where I live.
Cheers :p
 
There are a number of master knappers. I have met DC Waldorf, Jim Redfern, Dane Martin and a few others. If you are not able to to work with a teacher I would recommend a combination of books and tapes. There are learning aspects that you can get better from one source than the other. For example you can see the power of the baton blow better in a tape, however the concept of "below center plane" may be more clearly illustrated in the book. Here are some good reference sources.

http://www.eskimo.com/~knapper/catolog.html
 

spiritofold

Banned
May 7, 2004
701
1
53
Winchester
www.spiritofold.co.uk
Take a look at John Lord's site, http://www.flintknapping.co.uk/
He sells a small book that explains alot of the basics to flintknapping using Norfolk flint.This bloke really is the master,you should see the arrowheads he
makes,they are perfection.John also runs knapping courses,give his site a lookup.

One other book i found usefull is by John.C.Whittaker,called
"Flintknapping,Making & understanding stone tools"

I have an ebook that i'll uplod to my site later on as well,showing some good basic skills.

Regards,
Andy in very rainy Winchester
 

Tvividr

Nomad
Jan 13, 2004
256
38
Norway
www.gjknives.com
Les Marshall said:
Can someone recommend a good book that will show me a step-by-step guide to making flint tools, and the techniques needed? I'm thinking of taking it up as a hobby as there seems to be an abundance of flint where I live.
Cheers :p
I have The Art of Flint Knapping by D. C. Waldorf and 20th Century Lithics by D. C. Waldorf - both of them are good. Can't remember where I got mine, might have been at BOSS before they closed their store for non students or alumni, but you can get them at the link that Jeff Wagner posted.
I also have the Flintknapping Flash Cards by Errett Callahan. Quite good too.
You will also find lots of information (on a lot more bushcraft stuff than flint knapping only) in the different issues of The Bulletin of Primitive Technology.
A big favorite of mine is "Mand og Flint" by Anders Kragh, which I value perhaps more than The Art of Flint Knapping. The big problem for you though, would be that it is in Danish only :roll:
 

Snufkin

Bushcrafter (boy, I've got a lot to say!)
Oct 13, 2004
2,099
139
54
Norfolk
I would suggest this DVD, the shipping cost isn't bad and it really is helpful to see a knapper working and Mark Bracken is really good at it. The books suggested are very useful too but with the DVD you see how hard to hit and at what angle.
 

PC2K

Settler
Oct 31, 2003
511
1
37
The Netherlands, Delft
i tryed flint knapping, it's really hard ! I really did nothing that making a piece of flint more useless than before. :?: i somehow seem to hit the wrong side everytime, because my logics says i should hit the other side to creat a certain shape. Maybe i should start doing the opsite of what i think... or pay more attention when it was explain and shown for me... more than once...

here are my flint knapping tool with a hitting stone and flints piece around it.They where free... :eek:):
flint_working_tools.JPG
 

Gary

Bushcrafter (boy, I've got a lot to say!)
Apr 17, 2003
2,603
2
58
from Essex
Great minds think a like Les, this is an avenue I'm thinking of following too!
 

James Watson

Tenderfoot
Jul 30, 2004
84
0
46
Salisbury
www.nativeawareness.co.uk
spiritofold said:
Take a look at John Lord's site, http://www.flintknapping.co.uk/
He sells a small book that explains alot of the basics to flintknapping using Norfolk flint.This bloke really is the master,you should see the arrowheads he
makes,they are perfection.John also runs knapping courses,give his site a lookup.

One other book i found usefull is by John.C.Whittaker,called
"Flintknapping,Making & understanding stone tools"

I have an ebook that i'll uplod to my site later on as well,showing some good basic skills.

Regards,
Andy in very rainy Winchester


Hi
I Can recommend learning from John Lord. I've had a couple of "one on one" sessions with him. A true master of his art. He will teach other primitive skills also, bone work etc. Oh, Val his wife knows her stuff also. She's specialising in cordage and textiles at the moment.

Best wishes,

James

If your in the Devon area, i've got some flint to knapp.
 
If you are not able to work with a teacher I suggest a video as the next best approach. There are subtlties that are difficult to grasp from a book alone IMHO. There are also more and less forgiving materials to knap. I tried a cobble of English flint a few years ago - I think its tough stuff to learn on.
 

Tony

White bear (Admin)
Admin
Apr 16, 2003
24,326
1
2,039
54
Wales
www.bushcraftuk.com
I know it's a ways off but we're aiming to have flint knapping at the meet up (BushMoot :wink: ) next year. It should be a good hands on introduction for a lot of the members :biggthump
 

ChrisKavanaugh

Need to contact Admin...
Knapping is my favourite method for humbling people who think anything before 1950 is irrelevant or crude. Master knappers can take up a core and analyse it with the same skill as a diamond cutter. I've read some artifacts even show evidence of tempering to improve the grain structure.The late Donald Crabtree was the dean of american knapping. His medium was obsidian, and meeting a european practitioner they found each other's material totally foriegn. Crabtree underwent major heart surgery and prepared a complete obsidian kit for his operation. The surgeon had to practise first. The obsidian edge is literally one molecule thick and required retraining his hand muscles for the fine incisions. The upside was a faster healing time and glass edges are now common. Local materials are to dear, so I make due with glass. My best effort was a dart that sported the Coca-Cola logo.
 

brucemacdonald

Forager
Jul 5, 2004
149
0
right here
ChrisKavanaugh said:
My best effort was a dart that sported the Coca-Cola logo.


At the first Wilderness Gathering Anthonio Akkermans said that he used beer bottles. :uu:

He did however point out that he perfected this skill whilst working as a barman in a pub in London.....

Best wishes


Bruce
 

R-Bowskill

Forager
Sep 16, 2004
195
0
60
Norwich
Glass comes in different types, ordinary window glass isn't much use, forget any 'toughened' or 'safety' glass. It wants to be quite thick especially when you start off. OLD bottles are best. I don't use glass often as I'm near the source of the best flint in the world. Start making something simple, a hand axe or blade / scraper before going for a barbed and tanged arrowhead or a knapped sickle.

I'm a long way from being an expert but like many things each time I do some knapping I either get a little better or learn what I did wrong.
 

Tvividr

Nomad
Jan 13, 2004
256
38
Norway
www.gjknives.com
Beer bottles, coke bottles, TV tubes etc all work very nicely. Something in between flint and obsidian. I've had students start of on glass to get the basics before knocking on more valuable stone (no natural flint in Norway, we only got quartz which is not as easily worked as flint or the even sharper and easier to work ... pure obsidian)
You can also use sanitary ceramics ("Thunderstone" or "Thunderchert" is a flintknappers popular word for toilet bowl ceramic :roll: ).
Cheap sources for those without easy access to flint, obsidian or other knapable stone.
 

ChrisKavanaugh

Need to contact Admin...
I may have mentioned this in another thread. One of the spanish galleons plying the great circle route came to grief on the California coast with a shipment of chinese ceramics. The local indians slavaged the ceramics and used them for knapping. It is something of a holy grail to find an example. I did a few times, a lovely projectile point in white with a tree and temple and a scraper with a yellow dragon. A few asides worth mentioning. I hope everyone is wearing safety glasses? Please be carefull WHERE you do your knapping. I was working a active site with several field students. This one idiot fancied himself a born again Neolithic Hunter. Fine enough, until I found him chipping merrily away on native chert- in a excavation unit. I wanted to slit his throat with my trowel. Cultural and literary references to lithic tools are also ready to be 'mined.' There are references to metal objects being a safety talisman against the kidnappping by fairies. This no doubt goes back to the irish invasion cycles, when the Tuatha de Danu, a neolithic people worshipping Dianna, were subjugated by the Milesians, a metal using people from Spain. I can't remember my source, but I believe in Shakespeare or another bit of classical literature mention was made of burying a noblewoman with flints. It's amazing how much of our culture still retains the faint, but still rich smell of ancient campfires. :chill:
 

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