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  2. Ironwork - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ironwork

    Details of ironwork on the central portal of the west facade of Notre Dame de Paris (France). Wrought ironwork is forged by a blacksmith using an anvil.The earliest known ironwork are beads from Jirzah in Egypt dating from 3500 BC and made from meteoric iron with the earliest use of smelted iron dates back to Mesopotamia.

  3. Philip Simmons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philip_Simmons

    Philip Simmons (June 9, 1912 – June 22, 2009) was an American artisan and blacksmith specializing in the craft of ironwork. Simmons spent 78 years as a blacksmith, focusing on decorative iron work. [1] When he began his career, blacksmiths in Charleston made practical, everyday household objects, such as horseshoes. [1]

  4. Coalbrookdale Museum of Iron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coalbrookdale_Museum_of_Iron

    displays of domestic and decorative ironwork. the Boy and Swan Fountain cast by the Coalbrookdale Company for the Great Exhibition of 1851; the Deerhound Table designed by sculptor John Bell for the Paris International Exhibition of 1855; cast-iron Coalbrookdale Cooking Pots that introduced Abraham Darby I to the iron trade.

  5. J. W. Fiske & Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._W._Fiske_&_Company

    J. W. Fiske & Company of New York City was the most prominent American manufacturer of decorative cast iron and cast zinc in the second half of the nineteenth century. [1] In addition to their wide range of garden fountains, statues, urns, and cast-iron garden furniture, they provided many of the cast-zinc Civil War memorials of small towns ...

  6. Gallery (New Orleans) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gallery_(New_Orleans)

    This innovation allowed iron to be molded, enabling the creation of highly decorative patterns and intricate filigree that gained popularity in the 19th century. Subsequently, the combination of wrought iron and cast iron railings in balconies started to emerge. [7] An early gallery design at 529–531 Governor Nicholls Street

  7. Jean Tijou - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean_Tijou

    The use of wrought iron allowed Tijou to work in more three dimensionality than seen before in other iron work. [ 9 ] Many works by Tijou were gilded . It is possible that a portrait of Jean Tijou appears at the bottom of the title page of a book entitled A New Book of Drawings Invented and Designed [sic] by John Tijou , [ 3 ] in 1693.

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