You have to hit while the iron is hot . You ca n’t have too many chains in the fire . It has a nice ring to it . Go at something hammer and tongs . These are all phrasal idiom that have blood line in blacksmithing , so Scott Wadsworth ofEssential Craftsmandecided to literally show us what all those idiom look like when perform in real life and explain how they are related to to their meaning .
It ’s kind of fun to see the phrasal idiom as action , rather of just phrases . You get to compare the actual deviation between striking while the Fe is blistering versus striking while the iron has chill off . When the metal is hot , it gets flattened in three strikes . When the alloy is not hot , forge it does nothing . The thought process behind the idiom , of course of action , is that the same amount of body of work can have a much gravid effect when condition are correct .
Wadsworth illustrate more of those idioms in the telecasting below .

Iron
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