515-SPRING-04
It was late morning in the workshop, and the forge was already built into a roaring wood furnace. After paying the course fees at the reception counter, the student found himself waiting curiously as he watched his towering teacher place more lumber into the forge.
"Today we'll be trying out something a little more interesting than that sword you made," Markwell began. "People call it the Assassin's Dagger, because of its favored status by assassins during the great times of Alahea and Suva."
The blacksmith rolled out a scroll on a nearby worktable, straightening it in place with random tools scattered about untidily. Upon it printed a drawing roughly showing the aforementioned dagger in various angles, with notes of dimensions and measurements scribbled throughout.
"Isn't this just a shorter short sword with a broad blade?" Aedi ventured.
"Or a longer dagger with a broad blade!" Markwell guffawed. "It really depends on your perspective, eh?"
"You will follow this blueprint along with my guidance," Markwell instructed. "You will learn best when you can figure things out without me spoon-feeding you. Just remember what you learned and discovered the days prior."
Aedi nodded as he spotted the approximate dimensions on the blueprint, and he looked around the workshop until he found the appropriate bar of iron. Using his mortal arm to grab it with a set of tongs, he inserted it into the furnace until it was molten hot and ready to be molded to his will.
The first and most important step was to create an unfinished template of the blade, and so he attempted to fashion a rough outline of the dagger from the malleable metal. Using his left arm to firmly hold the material in place against the anvil, he hammered upon it with the tool grasped by his other arm, making sure to grip the metal down tight.
This was important because he was trying to draw out the metal into a shape that befits a blade more than a cube. By hammering it in one direction the material would simply go in another, and by restricting the possible dimensions the material could move to he could essentially force a shape out of the metal. However, doing the same thing continuously would cause an imbalance in the distribution of metal.
In order to mitigate that, he flipped the rectangular bar over so that its neighboring face would lie down on the surface of the anvil, then struck it with the hammer. In a clockwise manner, he painstakingly repeated the process of flipping by one dimension, then striking it to ensure that the bar would get elongated, but maintain a uniform distribution properly. An uneven distribution might seem fine in shape, but would possess severe structural integrity issues should it be put to a functionality test.
Markwell watched patiently as the Isur seemed to have learned from his mistakes, and slowly but surely the bar of iron was hammered into shape, slowly resembling a short rod the length of a human forearm rather than the box of raw iron it was previously.
It was late morning in the workshop, and the forge was already built into a roaring wood furnace. After paying the course fees at the reception counter, the student found himself waiting curiously as he watched his towering teacher place more lumber into the forge.
"Today we'll be trying out something a little more interesting than that sword you made," Markwell began. "People call it the Assassin's Dagger, because of its favored status by assassins during the great times of Alahea and Suva."
The blacksmith rolled out a scroll on a nearby worktable, straightening it in place with random tools scattered about untidily. Upon it printed a drawing roughly showing the aforementioned dagger in various angles, with notes of dimensions and measurements scribbled throughout.
"Isn't this just a shorter short sword with a broad blade?" Aedi ventured.
"Or a longer dagger with a broad blade!" Markwell guffawed. "It really depends on your perspective, eh?"
"You will follow this blueprint along with my guidance," Markwell instructed. "You will learn best when you can figure things out without me spoon-feeding you. Just remember what you learned and discovered the days prior."
Aedi nodded as he spotted the approximate dimensions on the blueprint, and he looked around the workshop until he found the appropriate bar of iron. Using his mortal arm to grab it with a set of tongs, he inserted it into the furnace until it was molten hot and ready to be molded to his will.
The first and most important step was to create an unfinished template of the blade, and so he attempted to fashion a rough outline of the dagger from the malleable metal. Using his left arm to firmly hold the material in place against the anvil, he hammered upon it with the tool grasped by his other arm, making sure to grip the metal down tight.
This was important because he was trying to draw out the metal into a shape that befits a blade more than a cube. By hammering it in one direction the material would simply go in another, and by restricting the possible dimensions the material could move to he could essentially force a shape out of the metal. However, doing the same thing continuously would cause an imbalance in the distribution of metal.
In order to mitigate that, he flipped the rectangular bar over so that its neighboring face would lie down on the surface of the anvil, then struck it with the hammer. In a clockwise manner, he painstakingly repeated the process of flipping by one dimension, then striking it to ensure that the bar would get elongated, but maintain a uniform distribution properly. An uneven distribution might seem fine in shape, but would possess severe structural integrity issues should it be put to a functionality test.
Markwell watched patiently as the Isur seemed to have learned from his mistakes, and slowly but surely the bar of iron was hammered into shape, slowly resembling a short rod the length of a human forearm rather than the box of raw iron it was previously.