Tom Balding Bits & Spurs

Tom Balding Bits & Spurs is a small metalwork manufacturer in Sheridan, Wyoming that designs and sells handmade equine riding equipment. Their products, most notably bits and spurs, are used by professional horsepeople and trainers.

Tom Balding Bits & Spurs
Founded1984
Headquarters
Sheridan, Wyoming
,
United States
ProductsMetalwork
Websitetombalding.com/index.php/

History

In the 1960s, Tom Balding began working with metal as a teenager in Ontario, California, building such things as custom hot rod parts and aluminum backpack frames. In 1974, he opened his first welding and fabrication shop specializing in a precise type of welding called TIG welding.[1][2][3]

He continued to TIG weld in the aerospace and sailing industry until he moved to Sheridan, Wyoming in the late 1970s. In Wyoming, he worked as a ranch hand until 1984, when a neighbor asked him to repair a broken bit. He built her a new one, and for the next 15 years, he ran Tom Balding Bits & Spurs out of a repurposed mobile home.[1][2][3]

After that, the business expanded due to increased popularity from the endorsement of multiple National Reined Cow Horse Association (NRCHA) Snaffle Bit Champions such as Bobby Ingersoll. The business is now widely recognized throughout the world of western horsemanship.[3]

Metalwork Products

The company handcrafts metalwork products and other items in Sheridan, Wyoming. All custom pieces are made at the fabrication shop where they are precision cut into parts and fitted together, instead of being cast. Each part of every product is made to 1/1000 of an inch accuracy.[4]

Their products include spurs, custom spurs, heel bands, spurs, shanks, and rowels. They also handcraft bits made for shank bits, snaffle bits, baseline bits, bit shanks, and mouthpieces for Western and English markets.[1][2][5][6]

The company also sells other items such as jewelry and belt buckles, including a variety of silver and turquoise jewelry; money clips, leather belts, and photo albums.[7][8]

Tom Balding Bits & Spurs products are known for their design and craftsmanship and have been featured in galleries and in museums. The company has also been featured on Discovery Channel’s How It’s Made.[1][3][4][7][9][10][11]

gollark: Yes. Like your face.
gollark: @Keanu73#0000 chisel to stone brick.
gollark: 4. various random files which happen to be related, and the exact version relations of a few bits of code
gollark: 1. PotatOS Registry (new config)2. `.settings` out of sandbox (stuff like removable mode, legacy hidden mode)3. `.settings` in sandbox (not much now, actually, but `shell.allow_startup` at least)
gollark: Ooh, here's an idea: list some features in the docs, claim they're "premium mode", *but never add a premium mode*.

References

  1. Ebert, Susan L. "Crafting a Legend, Bit by Bit” Western & English Today, p. 14. Early Spring 2014.
  2. Boatwright, Abigail. "Cowboy Welder." WesternShootingHorse.com, p. 22. Apr/May 2012
  3. Western, Samuel. "Tom Balding: Custom bridle & bit craftsman was inspired when bucked off a horse." WyoFile. June 26, 2012
  4. McFarland, Cynthia. The Horseman's Guide to Tack and Equipment: Form, Fit and Function 2013. pg. 106
  5. Dolhun, Marie Catherine. "Eperons et mors, Tom Balding” NEWestern Way of Life. March 2014
  6. Ehringer, Gavin. "Tom Balding Bits & Spurs”. Wyoming Lifestyle Magazine, p. 44. Summer 2011. Copy available here
  7. Fritsche, Kathleen. "Tom Balding Bits and Spurs" Cowboys and Indians Magazine. July 2009
  8. "Balding Bits & Spurs makes gear for Texas Tech University”. The Sheridan Press. Oct. 16, 2012. Copy available here
  9. Falstad, Jan. "Wyoming artisan sells his bits and spurs worldwide." Billings Gazette. June 13, 2010
  10. Estes, Brad. "Tom Balding, Discovery Channel Complete Filming." Sheridan Media. Sept. 28, 2011
  11. "The Science of Spurs" HorseLink. Nov 2011
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