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Detail of window from south showing wall remodelled using brick.
DP 280621
Description Detail of window from south showing wall remodelled using brick.
Date 5/7/2018
Collection Historic Environment Scotland
Catalogue Number DP 280621
Category On-line Digital Images
Scope and Content Blacksmiths/smiddy windows tend to have a simple structure which allows ease of replacing broken panes and allows maximum light into the workshop. Blacksmithing, or the rendering of metal malleable by heating in a forge or hearth to high temperature enabling it to be fashioned into objects, is an ancient craft. The smithy/ smiddy/ smidy or blacksmith's shop was once a common building type but became less so during the 20th century. The rise of factory production and the uptake of the internal combustion engine (especially the introduction of the tractor) meant that this craft was less in demand for the production and sharpening of agricultural implements, making or replacing cartwheel tyres or for farrier work. This is an example of a traditional blacksmith's shop with its open hearth, anvils, bellows, work benches, metal storage racks and smithing tools for working mostly ferrous metals. All of the hearth processes were manual. This smithy is on the former main road, hence its location. This road has been byepassed by Hadfast Road.
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/collection/1762067
File Format (TIF) Tagged Image File Format bitmap
Attribution: © Historic Environment Scotland
Licence Type: Full
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