Whitesmith

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A whitesmith is a person who works with white or light-colored metal (such as tin) and does finishing work, such as filing and/or polishing, on iron to remove black oxides.

"Whitesmith" also refers to those who finish or polish 'black metals' such as iron, but don't forge it. While blacksmiths work mostly with hot metal, whitesmiths do the majority of their work on cold metal (although they might use a forge to shape their raw materials).

At some points in time, it was illegal for a blacksmith to craft any sort of armor, as the blacksmiths produced shoddy, inconsistent plate armor. 'Allwhyte' armor took longer to make (and was therefore not as profitable), but provided greater protection. As armor became obsolete, the faster blacksmithing method came into common use again for armors, which served more as decoration than protection.

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