Trickeration
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I didn't want to hijack the Hobo Nickels thread so I decided to start a new thread regarding trench art. I was just wondering if anyone collects or owns any trench art pieces. I haven't really started collecting yet, but it's something I've been interested in for a while.
The only pieces I have just now are modern examples. My husband made these rings for himself and for me during a deployment to the North Pole about 15 years ago (before either of us knew what "trench art" was). They're made from inconel nuts that they used on his submarine. He explained to me that inconel is used in the nuclear plant because of high strength and resistence to corrosion. He spent many months filing the rings down on a lathe a few minutes at a time. When they were finished, one of his shipmates engraved them both with SSN 751, the hull number of the sub.
Now I know that a sub is not actually a trench, but I'm sure that the other submariners here will agree that submarine life is life in the trenches.
The only pieces I have just now are modern examples. My husband made these rings for himself and for me during a deployment to the North Pole about 15 years ago (before either of us knew what "trench art" was). They're made from inconel nuts that they used on his submarine. He explained to me that inconel is used in the nuclear plant because of high strength and resistence to corrosion. He spent many months filing the rings down on a lathe a few minutes at a time. When they were finished, one of his shipmates engraved them both with SSN 751, the hull number of the sub.
Now I know that a sub is not actually a trench, but I'm sure that the other submariners here will agree that submarine life is life in the trenches.