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Large Stamp Hand Hanmmered??

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I used to have 22" Large Block stamp, which had plenty of hanmering on it.

I'm not sure if it was hand hammering or by machine.

sorry for the quality of pics. It was cellphone camera.

[IMG]http://lh3.ggpht.com/_mGFKfWahMic/S15myW8H5iI/AAAAAAAAAnQ/0QDUwZ7c-HY/NEC_0756.JPG[/IMG]

[IMG]http://lh6.ggpht.com/_mGFKfWahMic/S15mzcseZaI/AAAAAAAAAnY/IvOnWMXwQT0/NEC_0758.JPG[/IMG]

Today, I received a 24" Large Stamp with three dots no block ZILDJIAN.

I didn't think it was large stamp, so it was lucky to me.

anyway, I found that there are probably no hand hammering on this cymbal.

[IMG]http://lh5.ggpht.com/_mGFKfWahMic/S15kaFKWS0I/AAAAAAAAAlw/jHWxje5XH2E/s800/R0015850.JPG[/IMG]

[IMG]http://lh4.ggpht.com/_mGFKfWahMic/S15kZSycaJI/AAAAAAAAAls/ulfFzDPzTn4/s800/R0015849.JPG[/IMG]

The questions are

How do you identify it's hand hammered or machine hammered?

and when did Zildjian start to use machine? stop hand hammering?

Posted on 14 years ago
#1
Posts: 2628 Threads: 40
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[COLOR="DarkRed"]Mmmmm...both of those show signs of being hand-hammered to me.

Even the old A's had some machine hammering back in the day. So the '50's-60's ones are gonna show evidence of both.

I think come the '70's that's when A. Zildjians became completely machined. By the time you get to the hollow-ink logos...there appears to be no more sign of hand-hammering. But I definitely have had some late '60's A's which still had some hand-hammering to 'em.[/COLOR]

www.2ndending.com
Posted on 14 years ago
#2
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I see. I actually don't know correctly the meaning of hand-hammered.

Does operating the machine by hand mean hand-hammered?

or hold the cymbal by hand and hammered by the machine?

sorry if I'm saying something strange.

I often wonder why hammering on old A zildjian is such consistent.

not like old Ks which every cymbal has different hammering patterns.

Especially trans stamp or 30s, they must had really amazing skill. I almost can't believe it was done by hand.

Do you know anywhere I can learn about this thing?

I bought The Cymbal Book.

Posted on 14 years ago
#3
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Machine hammered on the bottom, and hand hammered on top.

I'll answer your other questions a little later.

Posted on 14 years ago
#4
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From Drumaholic

Machine hammered on the bottom, and hand hammered on top.I'll answer your other questions a little later.

Thank you!:)

Posted on 14 years ago
#5
Posts: 2628 Threads: 40
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[COLOR="DarkRed"]I believe 'hand-hammered' refers to a cymbalsmith with a hammer in his hand, a cymbal, and an anvil (actually numerous sorta hammers). So it's a manual operation, nothing mechanized.

Now, most if not all cymbals today which are called 'hand hammered' are actually both.

[/COLOR]

www.2ndending.com
Posted on 14 years ago
#6
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