Snarling iron
A Snarling iron is a metal worker's tool used to drive the walls of metal vessels. "A snarler... is a worker in teapots, and may... be compared with the leaf bumper who bumps up the leaves commonly seen in metalwork".[1] Examples have come to light in different historical contexts, as in Chanhudaro,[2] Indus Valley Civilization.
Notes
- ^ "Manufacture of Silver Ware". Louisville Evening Bulletin. Louisville, Kentucky. December 14, 1854. p. 1 – via Newspapers.com.
He draws on the surface the design to be chased; then raises the parts to be raised, by means of the snarling iron. This is a long bar covered at each end; one end is held by a vice; the other is passed into the inside of the pitcher; by striking on the end nearest the vice, the other end is caused to spring up.
- ^ Paul Yule, A Harappan 'Snarling Iron' from Chanhu daro, Antiquity 62, 1988, 116–118, ISSN 0003-598X URL: http://archiv.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/savifadok/volltexte/2008/145/