In 2010 I began practical research on historical methods used in the Viking age to forge axes. My purpose was to publish a DVD tutorial which would enable an intermediate-level blacksmith to forge such an axe. In preparation for the tutorial I made about 40 axes in order to try out different approaches to asymmetric axe forging. The goal was to find a procedure that could best produce the my “ideal" wish-list of features in a Viking-style axe eye with fairly simple tooling:
1. A thick poll and thin, symmetrical cheeks
2. Long langets (the pointy bits above and below the eye)
3. A weld joint with no obvious seams inside or outside the eye
4. A relatively short weld-joint lap combined with symmetrical placement of the eye within the finished axe body
5. A weld seam strong enough to withstand the substantial transverse forging later required to shape the profile of the axe In addition
In addition I wanted to be able to forge the eye nearly to its finished shape by using basic blacksmithing techniques that would have been common in the Viking age (especially drawing and fullering). The procedure I settled on is an asymmetric variation of a classic, symmetrical axe forging technique which I believe was often used in the 18th century.
























