Owner / instructor (Welding and jewelry)
Elizabeth Cameron is a Tucson, Arizona–based metalsmith, educator, and co-owner of Desert Metal Craft, a hands-on metalworking school dedicated to preserving and advancing traditional and contemporary fabrication skills. With a Masters degree in Materials Science and Engineering and a passion for craftsmanship, she plays a central role in developing classes, mentoring students, and fostering a creative community around blacksmithing, welding, and decorative metalwork. Known for her practical expertise and approachable teaching style, Cameron helps guide both beginners and experienced makers as they build technical skills and confidence in the shop, contributing to Desert Metal Craft’s reputation as a welcoming and high-quality learning environment in the Southwest.
• Email Liz at liz@desertmetalcraft.org
Owner / instructor (ferrous metal arts, welding and jewelry)
Rich Greenwood is a renowned knife maker originally hailing from Detroit, Michigan, who has carved a niche for himself in the metalworking community. Now residing in Tucson, Arizona, Rich co-owns Desert Metal Craft, a prestigious metal arts school, alongside his business partner Liz Cameron. With a passion for traditional craftsmanship and innovation, Rich has dedicated his career to teaching and inspiring others in the art of knife making and metalwork. His expertise and skill have earned him a spot on the hit TV show “Forged in Fire” not just once, but twice, where he showcased his exceptional talent and creativity in crafting blades. Rich’s journey from the industrial backdrop of Detroit to the vibrant artistic community in Tucson highlights his commitment to the craft and his desire to pass on his knowledge to future generations of metal artists.
• Email Rich at rich@desertmetalcraft.org or call him at 520.272.4328
administrative assistant / instructor (Ferrous metal arts)
Logan Lichtenhan is a Bladesmith based out of Tucson, Arizona. He focuses on hand-forging and designing unique artisan pieces including blades, spoons, ladles, culinary and household tools and items.
• Email Logan at Info@desertmetalcraft.org
Mario Hernandez has been forging knives for the last 6-7 years. He started his metalworking journey at Pima Community College, PCC, under Jason Butler. When Rich Greenwood started teaching the class at PCC he learned the proper technique to make knives he has never stopped making them. After taking the class with Rich Greenwood for 6-7 semesters he started becoming a teachers assistant. So when Desert Metal Craft opened he didn’t hesitate to offer his help with the classes so Rich could get more done. Soon he started teaching the beginner knife making course and was just crowned the winner of Forged in Fire Season 10 Episode 27!!
Creative metal artist Jonathan Wick of Hereford, AZ! Jon began his career with a one-year apprenticeship to a French trained Goldsmith and training at the Revere Academy of jewelry arts SF, CA, followed by 12 years as a bench jeweler at Abbott Taylor Jewelers in Tucson, Arizona. Jon also studied blade smithing at the American Bladesmithing Society School in Washington, Arkansas and holds a rating of journeyman smith with the ABS. Jon was a finalist on the History Channel’s “Forged in Fire” S2E3 “The Claymore”. Most recently Jon has been studying sword making with world renowned sword maker and author Peter Johnson.
Pablo was born and raised in Tucson. A true Tucsonan at heart, with a natural ability to make something from nothing. He graduated from the University of Arizona in 2005 with a BA in Psychology, but his heart is in the arts. Knowing this, his wife enrolled him in a course at DMC in 2018 and his love for bladesmithing began. In December of 2020 Pablo appeared in Season 8 episode 6 of the History Channels Forged in Fire where he was a finalist in making George Washington’s battle sword. He is a survival and camping enthusiast and mainly focuses his knife making in camp knives and utensils.
Don couldn’t decide between being a physicist, chiropractor, musician or car designer, but he knew he loved taking an idea and making it a real, physical thing. Chopping onions with a small knife provided his “eureka!” moment, so he started making his own knives, studied at Pima Community College, graduated with a degree in Materials Science and Engineering from the University of Arizona, and launched his knife-making business in 2017.
Nick operates Nick Rossi Knives out of his Vassalboro studio where he creates dynamic, world class cutlery for almost every purpose. Nick is influenced by fine art, traditional blacksmithing and early industrial techniques. Nick teaches blacksmithing and bladesmithing at Colby College, hosts private lessons in his own studio and travels the country teaching bladesmithing at the finest craft schools. Nick is a certified Master Bladesmith, a member of the Maine Craft Guild and a member of the New England Bladesmith Guild.
Annie Pennington is a Tucson, Arizona–based jeweler, metalsmith, and designer whose work blends expert craftsmanship with a playful sense of humor. As the founder and creative force behind Radish Fight Jewelry, Annie creates hand-crafted silver and gemstone jewelry that celebrates individuality, self-expression, and the joy of not taking life too seriously. Holding a BFA in Jewelry Design and an MFA in Metalsmithing, she has exhibited widely and has been featured in numerous publications and books. Her career has included roles as Associate Editor of Art Jewelry magazine, freelance writer for Rio Grande, and assistant to renowned art jeweler Marjorie Schick. Through Radish Fight Jewelry, Annie continues to create distinctive, high-quality pieces that encourage people to wear their weirdness with pride.
Keli Beth Smith graduated from the Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore with a Bachelor of Fine Arts. She has worked with metal at the Baltimore New Arts bronze foundry and at Pima Community College in Tucson, Arizona. She says she gets inspiration from the artists she admires, and motivation from her desire to emulate their achievements. In addition to being a welder, she is interested in figurative sculpture, working with bronze, furniture making, and custom motorcycle parts — she designs and fabricates metal gas tanks and handlebars and is thinking about making a tank entirely from copper.
Tedd comes from a small Wisconsin town and brings with him an appetite for creativity and a passion for teaching. He got his BA in art in 1996 from the University of Wisconsin, LaCrosse, where he was introduced to Damascus steel and mokume-gane, which he has been making since 1994. He earned his master’s in fine arts from Arizona State University in 2001, and has taught at Wayne State, University of Toledo, Bowling Green State University, Toledo Museum of Art School of Art & Design, and Pima Community College in Tucson. He is currently on the faculty at ASU, where he teaches jewelry and blacksmithing classes, as well as a class dedicated solely to the mokume-gane process. He has conducted mokume-gane workshops nationally and been a faculty member at numerous universities, teaching beginning and advanced classes in jewelry, metalsmithing, blacksmithing, 3D design, sculpture, and art appreciation. His ingenuity, love of art and appreciation of the creative spirit direct him in his pursuits, though he’s happy to get distracted by fishing, hockey and draft horses, especially Clydesdales.
Dylan Cook, an AABA vice president who owns Oso Blanco Iron Works in Prescott, Arizona, bases his teaching methods on his own on-the-job training and life experiences. He has 15 years of metalwork experience and concentrates on the practical and functional aspects of ornamental and decorative smithing. In his classes he encourages information sharing and focuses on tool safety and care, familiarity with the material, creativity through basic forging techniques and concepts, and promoting stewardship of the blacksmithing craft.
Tom Ward has been making metal art for 10 years, focusing on bladesmithing and ancient weaponry. He has worked on reproduction pieces, ornamental iron, and interior architectural metalwork. He was a Fulbright research scholar and is a journeyman bladesmith in the American Bladesmithing Society. He is pursuing his MFA in blacksmithing at SIU Carbondale, home to the nation’s only master’s-level blacksmithing program and widely regarded as the birthplace of modern American metalsmithing.
Steven Fisher has been working metal for more than 30 years and blacksmithing since 2005. He has studied under world-class smiths Gordon Williams and Mark Aspery, and performed demonstrations at antique tractor shows and the Arizona Renaissance Festival, and for the Arizona Artist Blacksmith Association and countless Arizona school children. His great grandfather, whose tools he still uses, took up the trade in Texas sometime in the 1910s.
Dennis Johnson has been a welder for 25 years and holds the American Welding Society’s challenging D1.1 certification for flux-cored arc welding, as well as certifications for shielded metal, gas metal and gas tungsten arc welding, and for layout and fabrication. He specializes in structural welding, and you can see his work in Tucson’s Reid Park Zoo, where he built the enclosures and climbing structures for the zoo’s gibbons. He comes from a family of hotrod-loving welders, among them a few race car builders. When he’s not working on structural welding, he pursues his own designs and fabricates everything from barbecue grills to furniture to weightlifting equipment.
Michael started blacksmithing in the fall of 2009 when he signed up for a blacksmithing class at pima community college.
Immediately falling In love with the craft, he continued to take the class for a total of 8 or 9 semesters to further his education in the art. One semester early on, Tucson bladesmith Tom McClain was enrolled as a fellow student and introduced Michael to Damascus and bladesmithing. Michael’s first Damascus knife was a 1000+ layer Bowie.
Michael continued to learn from fellow smith’s and personal research. Along the way he met Rich Greenwood at a mutual friends shop, and has enjoyed learning from and with Greenwood.
In March 2019, Michael appeared in episode 6 or season 6 of the history channel’s show Forged in Fire, the Barbarian Sword episode! He placed 2nd.
Now Michael makes knives in his spare time for the love of the craft and takes on commissions here and there. He teaches periodically at desert metal craft.
Momoko Okada was born and raised on a dairy farm in Hokkaido, Japan.
She began studying metals and glasswork in the U.S. and the U.K. and received B.F.A. from Southern Illinois University. Then she started to realize that the importance of her Japanese heritage and began studying traditional Japanese metals techniques at Kanazawa College of Art. After receiving M.F.A. in Japan, she continued her graduate study on differences of Eastern and Western aesthetics and metals techniques at Bowling Green State University. Momoko also studied under Kazuo Kashima, a 5th generation master of Kashima-style Nunome inlay. Momoko has been showing her work around the world and has won various awards. Her work can be seen in 500 Metal Vessels.
I’m Salem Straub, the owner-operator of Promethean Knives. I’m located in beautiful Tonasket, Washington, in the heart of scenic Okanogan County. I’ve been forging knives since 2003, when an off-grid building project first got me into blacksmithing. A lot has changed since those simple days with a hand-cranked charcoal forge and a dirt floor… but my love of the craft and my commitment to turning out the best work possible have only increased. I make a wide range of cutlery, from folding knives to swords. I’ve always loved to cook, and I’ve worked in cafe/restaurant/catering businesses as well, so making kitchen cutlery is a natural direction for my work. As a practitioner of sword arts, I also greatly enjoy making longer bladed weapons for practice and display.