Timestamp: 1st of Spring, 518 A.V.
"We'll start with the basics," Ros said.
The Isur man was ruggedly handsome, possessing the sharp angled look of his race in full and sporting a thin, ringed goatee. His powerful arm was deep and grey with silver lines running through it, almost as if it proclaimed by right to be made of rock and molten metal itself.
"You can shape iron well enough to do some work here," the master smith admitted. "I've got some teaching to do for you when it comes to that, but you'll carry your weight most days."
"You need to know more than that to really know what you're doing," Ros was upfront. "What separates me from any blue-blooded city smith is that I know the ins and outs of not only how I'm working, but what I'm working with. The alloys are mine to make and alter as I need to, project by project. Any old steel will make a sword, for example, but certain swords are meant for different types of fighting--each type of fighting will benefit in different trade offs of sharpness, brittleness, and weight. You can manage that somewhat with your crafting itself, but it all starts with the raw materials and with how you put them together, beginning from the very rocks themselves."
Ros held up his more human hand. "And I know you're not a weaponsmith; we can work on that too, but first the metalsmithing. It's the core of the complete craft."
Bandin felt a bit of pressure mixing in with the excitement. The man in front of him was obviously very, very well informed when it came to their shared trade of working metal; he'd without a doubt likely forgotten more than the young smith had ever know to even begin with.
"Alright," Bandin said. "So, where's the beginning, practically speaking? What's the hands on of that?"
Ros brought his raised hand to his chin and, almost without thinking, replied: "fires".
"Different from a forge bed?" the young smith inquired. "I've seen the blast furnaces."
Ros waved him to follow after him and began working.
"Just right," he said. "Different ore makes different metal. Different fires work different ores. And different woods make different fires."
"That's the simple way to say it."
They approached a large, stacked upcropping assembled from bricks and that sported a large opening.
"This furnace here has no coal or wood bed," he said. "We're not using it right now. Do you know why?"
Bandin paused; there was plenty enough work that the furnace could be doing.
"In a forge that always has orders, that could be using every bit of its resources, why is this one furnace empty and cold?" he further prodded.
"I don't know," Bandin admitted.
"Do you see the wood and coal there?" he asked. "Go to it."
Bandin kneeled down beside the burlap sacks of mined, black rocks leaning against the furnace; some were open, others were drawstring tied shut. Stacks of wood sat beside them.
"We keep the furnace cool to teach with it. We don't hoard knowledge here, but we expect you to learn it as the price for that," Ros explained. "It's worth the lost mizas to us."
"Wood burns cool. Hot enough to burn flesh and deform weaker steels, not hot enough to melt them down," Ros went on into an explanation of the fuels sitting in front of Bandin. "Coal is hard to catch, but it's good enough for the hard stuff. You make steel with coal."
"We're working bronze today, something good enough for a knife guard, since it won't be catching any large blows head-on, if the user is smart--it just doesn't need the strength in its hand-guard that a sword does. Steel would be a waste," Ros paused. "We aren't wasteful here. Even if the customer wants us to be."
Bandin picked up on what he seemed to feel was a philosophy of the smith; perhaps it was something cultural?
"Alright, so we'd go for wood, then? Since it's softer than steel?" Bandin guessed.
"We'd go for wood because bronze is made up of copper and tin. Bronze is the end-result; we're not worried about melting it right now. We're worried about making it. So, its the heat needed to smelt its components that we're going to focus on," Ros explained. "Always think like that. Don't be wasteful, again, not even in your choice of fuel. Coal isn't for soft metals, even if it'll smelt them."
Bandin picked up a bundle of wood, stacking his arms.
"More. Put that in the furnace floor and then grab another handful," Ros instructed.
The young apprentice did as he was told. And just like that, his metalsmithing journey had begun with the art of building a fire in a furnace.
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