



Almost certainly made for metalsmithing.Here is an interesting hammer I found at a coastal junk...I mean antique shop. I first spotted it a month or so ago but as it was marked down about 40% last week, I picked it up. We were at the coast to see the King tides but the ocean was flat as it gets so we went shop hopping instead. Probably a smith made job. I don't think I've ever seen a double ball hammer quite like this one. Probably for metal shaping work, it may come in handy someday. No marks found on it. Ed.
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Estwing makes loads of them at 16" long, the 22oz, 24oz, 28oz and 30oz, I'm not sure if they do a long version of the 20oz.Picked these up over the weekend. Don’t recall ever seeing a super long Estwing before.
Almost certainly Plumb IMO
CripeYellow hammer not yellow. Anyone know anything about this brand?
LOL, my google searches showed the same. I imagine some ********* hammer collector would love it. I only keep hammers I would like to use and this one isn't one. It's decently made but not perfectly balanced and the handle is just too thick all around.Cripe
I’ve googled, deleting or excluding everything that wasn’t a real hammer.
"yellow hammer" -bird -drink -cocktail -coral -florist -garden -birds "claw hammer" -"yellow handle"
Amazing how much **** bears that name that isn’t really a hammer, and how many “stock” photo companies are selling images of hammers that aren’t yellow, but have a yellow handle that they lump together.
There is some Roll Tide post game cheer that is tied to the term Yellow Hammer, maybe some alumnae made it, but otherwise, I got NOTHING USEFUL.
The long-handle is for stand-up framing. If you don't know what that is, you don't need a long-handled hammer.Estwing makes loads of them at 16" long, the 22oz, 24oz, 28oz and 30oz, I'm not sure if they do a long version of the 20oz.
There's also a 25oz cali framer style head which is 18" long, which imo is best avoided and they really should do a shorter version of it.
Maybe this trademarkIs anything known about this tool line? I have a scratch awl under the same name -"Red Diamond" with the same font.
The Audubon society and ornithologists agreed to rename both the Yellow-Shafted Flicker and the Red-Shafted Flicker (as well as the Gilded Flicker) to "Common Flicker" (Colaptes auratus) years ago.Well, Yellow Hammer is a type of woodpecker--Yellow-Shafted Flicker--found east of the Rockies.
I have nothing that matches that.Can anyone identify the maker of this hammer, it’s a stamped circle with a V with the point aiming forward
Yes, because the Red and Yellow freely interbreed where their ranges overlap, hence the Gilded.The Audubon society and ornithologists agreed to rename both the Yellow-Shafted Flicker and the Red-Shafted Flicker (as well as the Gilded Flicker) to "Common Flicker" (Colaptes auratus) years ago.
I have nothing that matches that.
Check Wolfgang's site - that hammer may well be European.




I'm betting that is an older version of a rock-climbers piton hammer. Primarily used to install and remove pitons--kind of big, flat nails driven into cracks in the rock to work as anchor points.
Interesting claw hammer followed me home from a friend’s ongoing cleanout.
At first, I was inclined to think it said “Fussstahl,” but other tool examples stamped “Gussstahl” and a more logical meaning of cast steel versus foot steel persuaded me otherwise. I am not certain about “28” but did find a lookalike “22” on Worthpoint. It’s not grams or kilograms, not ounces, either. The head is about 16oz, the entire hammer is 22oz.
A possible forge mark or brand stamp looks a bit like a star-of-david, more like a valentine superimposed on an equilateral triangle, with possible letters inside. The other (Worthpoint) hammer I saw had something more like a toothed gear.
TryHeart and a triangle:

Now, did Herr Wallbrecher make mountaineering equipment? Or was this hammer meant for brechen walls? Did it help brech the Berlin Wall?
Thank you! I saw the P, but had thought H or M, not W. There are a lot more axe and hatchet heads identified P.Wallbrecher on the web than hammer heads.
Love Mountain is, of course, a ski area. Their logo is a three-peak mountain in a heart. So close....Heart and a triangle:
Love Mountain (Climbing)
That VIDAR VALI is interesting; not words, but names, and not even German names but Norse. or Icelandic, I think. Two sons of Odin by two different jötnar, and both specialized in deadly revenge.