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When making a Mästermyr tool chest a drill may come in handy. As it happens such a drill pattern can be found in the original Mästermyr find itself. I have made other sorts of drills back home, spiral drills, but none suitable to the primitive tool-set I use in the forest forge. The drill forged in this video turned out to be surprisingly simple to make, grinding always take time using the local stones, but forging took only about 15 minutes this time. I also made a smaller and a larger drill as well as three chisels. The thinner two where forged from a rusty piece of old spring steel that I bought from a scrap yard some 20 years ago as was the drills. The thicker chisel was forged from an old harrow. I heat treated the two small chisel for wood work and the thicker one a bit harder for cutting steel. You will se in upcoming videos of how it will be used to make a file made to use when making a saw made to use when making a tool chest... if everything turns out the way it is planes. I also made my second attempt ever to colour grade, compensating for my beginners camera-skills. This time as in my last attempt over a year ago I have focused on the green nuances on the site. Please comment and help me with new ideas and ways of making the videos more enjoyable... but I will keep having them this slow, it may be boring for some but craft is a slow pains taking process and I do want to publish a unique nature experience as well as the full process of forging in such a setting. But otherwise, what do you miss? what do you like/disslike? how about more clips of the ice, moss and the Swedish spring slowly blooming out? or the close ups vs. far away pichtures, what makes you watch another few minutes of this sort of content?