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In this episode of UnEarthed, we travel deep into the German highlands to witness traditional iron plate making exactly as it was done centuries ago. Check out this video next - • 1977 Stonemason Quarry: Hand Tools Only! From preparing the sand bed to pouring molten iron at over 2,500°F, every step follows a closed-loop process built on patience, precision, and inherited knowledge. There are no shortcuts here. Each mold is used once. Each plate cools for hours. And every mistake becomes permanent the moment the iron is poured. Once used to heat homes, these cast-iron plates now live on as wall art and historical artifacts—proof that early industrial processes were as refined as they were unforgiving. This isn’t mass production. It’s craft. It’s process. It’s iron, shaped by human hands. 👇🏾 WATCH NEXT 👇🏾 File Makers: • Why This 100-Year-Old Skill Almost Disappe... Saw Blades: • Why These 1971 Grinding Masters Had to Be ... Wooden Shoes: • This Man Made Wooden Shoes for 60 Years: W... 🔔 New videos every day—don’t forget to subscribe!: https://bit.ly/3JONbZw Got a question? Drop it in the comments! This isn’t just metalwork — it’s history in motion. 👉 Watch till the end to see the final fit. Original source materials: / @alltagskulturenimrheinland – CC BY 4.0. https://archive.org/ Edited by Zideoz. Licensed under CC BY 4.0. Welcome to UnEarthed, your go-to place for immersive history brought to life through immersive, on-site archaeology and old-world craftsmanship. Learn traditional skills and technologies, forgotten trades, stone quarries, early industry, and real historical engineering; all captured exactly as they were practiced. Subscribe for authentic sounds, hands-on history, and stepping back in time, one skill, one tool, and one story at a time.