I need help with these hammer thanks for the help.


A couple of additions:
The smith's hammer head weighs 38 oz. ans is a GrayBar. oddly it has two flat faces, usually these have one flat and one rounded, but not nearly as rounded as a BP.
Can someone identify this hammer? It came from the grandfather of a friend. She's been calling it a glazing hammer and using it to assemble beehive frames.
It's a beautiful featherweight thing. I thought it worked great when I used on the beehive frames.

My guess is tinners riveting/ setting hammer.
They were often used by glaziers.
Small metal workers hammer; larger are used by sheet metal workers and above, small with skinny handels like that one more like silversmiths and watchmakers/jewelers...
The sharper end on that one was probably ground flat for starting brads.
A double headed hammer with one face flat and the other slightly domed is a rounding hammer (also called a turning hammer). If both faces are the same it is a linesman/engineers hammer (for electrical and utility work). Both Estwing and Vaughan still make a linesman hammer.
Estwing:
http://www.estwing.com/s_linemans_hammer.php
Vaughan:
http://www.vaughanmfg.com/shopping/Products/36-OZ-Supersteel-Linemans-Hammer__L36.aspx


Outlaw: Could your hammer maybe be what a person cutting cedar shakes with a froe would use? my grand dad had a huge tree limb on the handle of his to hit the froe with, but maybe yours was modified with the metal to keep it from splitting.
nice looking hammer and plenty old looking so nice find no matter what use you intend to use it for.

I saw your metal was sticking out beyond the wood, but you know how those old guys didn't mind beating their metal on metal if it fixed their tool. i'll keep watching to see and hear if somebody else has a better answer.
how many chisels or metal wedges have you see with the metal curled over? those froes could have probably been hit with steel hammers if the froe with the wood head wasn't handy.
Here are some better pics. The claw hammer looks pretty old. I don't know the intended use of the square one.
Are those threads showing in pic 3?
Do ball pein hammers actually weigh the amount they are stamped? Example, a 16 oz hammer, does the head weigh 16 ozs., with or without handle or is it just a ball park weight?