You get it direct from Bradford's or via a 3rd party?I LOVE a bit of Estwing…!
Now, I know they’re not perfect. They will be hard on the arm if you’re timber framing all day, but where I am we don’t have timber frame houses, and in all honesty who would use anything but a nail gun for that anyway?
I love the ruggedness of the steel shank. Not just when striking, but I can carry an Estwing anywhere without worrying about damaging a wooden handle. The ball pein shown lives in my road box for that reason.
I love the variety that Estwing offer. It seems that they go out of their way to offer all manner of special tools, and even local patterns. The hammer on the right below, is an “English” pattern (look at the shape of the head) and is utterly superb. By far the nicest balanced steel shafted hammer I own.
I totally love this! Thanks dutchgray - tracked down and ordered!
The only time I think Estwing struggle is with the smaller hammers. I have a 12oz in my property maintenance box for driving small pins etc. It’s durable enough to carry about, but a traditional “Warrington” pattern is a much nicer tool for the task.
Of course, as this is Garage Journal, I have to admit a liking for Vaughan too. In fact my most used hammer is a 20 oz Vaughan Steel Eagle. I‘ve used it for nailing, nail pulling, demolition, the lot, and although it’s seen a lot of service it still looks great with a wipe down.
If I was richer, I’d probably get up and ask myself which Porsche, Aston Martin, Rolls etc I wanted to use that day. I can’t afford that level of choice, but I can have the choice of Estwing or Vaughan. Same privilege, different scale…!
How long until they're forced to rename them FarEstWing.Well it looks like lowes will continue to carry estwing, for now.
Lunchbox yellow is more pleasant to your eyes than a stacked leather grip?Given so much interest in this thread. I went to HD today to play with the hammers. For the 22oz hammers there are estwing 35 marked down to 27, dewalt 33, crescent 27, husky 25. I swing them for a while, the dewalt one actually feels the most confident. Mostly due to handle. It’s also the most pleasant to my eyes in appearance. So unless someone is determined to buy USA made tools, estwing is going to be a hard sell, especially at the normal price. Nobody uninformed knows about durability, right? And seems the dewalt can last a while itself
That is a plastic handle. Not a leather one. I like DeWalt mostly because of the black finish on top. From my experience, shinning clear coat finish, once scratched, can get rusty easy. (To be honest, look-wise, I don't think the leather one looks that great. I prefer wood handle a lot more in appearance.)Lunchbox yellow is more pleasant to your eyes than a stacked leather grip?
FWIWI I rarely see anything but estwing on construction sites here in NYC, it just seems to be the hammer of choice especially in the concrete trades.That is a plastic handle. Not a leather one. I like DeWalt mostly because of the black finish on top. From my experience, shinning clear coat finish, once scratched, can get rusty easy. (To be honest, look-wise, I don't think the leather one looks that great. I prefer wood handle a lot more in appearance.)
BTW, COO wise, DeWalt is from Mexico, Crescent from Vietnam, Husky from China. There is no 22oz Milwaukee. But hammers of other sizes are from Taiwan. So it is pretty diversified.
PS. For folks who want to buy some Estwing, don't jump in now. HD will keep cutting prices. I once bought the DeWalt hammer at $9 each when they switched product number. So it is not hard to see the Estwing drop further. Given it is USA made, maybe buying at $15 each is a good deal?
All the four hammers in my picture have waffle faces and are called framer/framing hammer. They are apparently used to hammer wood. I guess in concrete trade, smooth faced hammers are used, right?FWIWI I rarely see anything but estwing on construction sites here in NYC, it just seems to be the hammer of choice especially in the concrete trades.
I just searched on “red Estwing” and quite a lot of places seem to have them on their websites, including Estwing U.K. but yes, ended up with Bradfords. They were the cheapest (inc postage) and they only had 270 left!You get it direct from Bradford's or via a 3rd party?
Bradford's are a really good local builders merchant, been going since 1770
I read an article somewhere in the trade press talking about how Germany and Northern Italy have a lot of manufacturing, and that those firms held a few traits in common:About the only country left in the western world where specialist one type of hand tool makers seem to thrive is Germany.

They always seemed to be in low stock, every time I go past it always the ball peens would be empty or one left for what ever reason. Either HD wasn't keeping good stock or they would sell fast, have to go to lowes now or order online.I find steel handled hammers to be painful. Menards sells Vaughan which I have come to like.
Perhaps Estwing left HD and not vice versa? A lot of HD shoppers would get along quite nicely with an $8.00 hammer. Maybe Estwing wants to sell through more pro-type stores And not compete with cheap hammers?
I agree that is kinda depressing. Variety and competition is good for all of us. My hope is that as Milwaukee continues to grow, particularly in the hand tool market, that they will make more and more of those hand tools at their new facility in the US. I will be happy to support more Milwaukee hand tools if they are produced domestically.Not to derail, but my local Agway/Ace -- locally owned and hands down the best source for fasteners and expert advice -- just swapped out an entire aisle of yellow, white, blue and mixed color tools and blades and bits and more with entirely red products. Looked kinda freaky and sad.


Nice job looks good!I always wanted an Estwing hammer. I knew I could simply buy a new one. But I really wanted one I could fix up. I found one at a garage sale and got it, a shovel and a few screwdrivers for $8. See below. A number of the leather discs were rotted. I had an old brown leather belt (+20 years old) that was on its last leg. I watched some videos and removed all the discs. The white ones were all torn. I replaced about 7 of them with discs I made from the belt. I was happy with the results and use when I need that type of hammer. You can see a change in the brown at the bottom. Those are off my belt. Note, this hammer was made in 1955.![]()