Lons
Established Member
This is from the experience of an expert woodcarver.Carving MDF will give you experience at carving. It's about sculpting shapes one way or another, that's the difficult bit.
This is from the experience of an expert woodcarver.Carving MDF will give you experience at carving. It's about sculpting shapes one way or another, that's the difficult bit.
It all looks difficult to me.Carving MDF will give you experience at carving. It's about sculpting shapes one way or another, that's the difficult bit.
Why is mdf specifically not suitable......
Soap stone etc would also be rubbish for wood carving practice and yet people carve it.
I’m not sure it is the difficult bit. Carving shapes while taking account of grain direction is the difficult bit. You won’t get that with MDF.Carving MDF will give you experience at carving. It's about sculpting shapes one way or another, that's the difficult bit.
Ultimately, it depends what you mean by carving. Carving and sculpture are not necessarily the same thing. I suppose , to some extent it mirrors the difference between Art and Craft.Carving MDF will give you experience at carving. It's about sculpting shapes one way or another, that's the difficult bit.
Could argue the opposite - that having to tackle difficulties of materials and tools can only improve your skills. In fact it could be a good idea.It all looks difficult to me.
A discussion about the medium we work in/with/on is rather like the discussion about the tools we use. Does a poor tool/material limit or otherwise reduce the skill and intents of the worker? Personally I think it can and often does.
The point I'm making is that the mental and visual processes of forming shapes is the difficult bit.I’m not sure it is the difficult bit. Carving shapes while taking account of grain direction is the difficult bit. You won’t get that with MDF.
Soap stone.... A rather silly comparison. People don't practice on soapstone to give them the skill to do woodcarving. They carve soap stone because they want to carve something in soap stone. It's a bit different and has to be approacched as such, and yes I have carved soap stone
So ..... what to use after the practice cuts/board? I have amounts of cherry, black walnut, ash, oak and some afromosia (old chemistry bench tops) as well as small amounts of yew, cedar, beech and one or three others. I have carved oak in making various decorations, handles and the like for furniture I've made so I know its not ideal but perhaps worth practicing on since it may well be what I end up using "in anger". I must admit that I'm not fond of the blandness of lime - although its perhaps good for relief carving in that the grain doesn't overpower the shapes of what's carved ........ .
I'll ponder a while on the matter whilst I get on with doing the practice board in me bit of tulipwood.
So its not a silly comparison then? Because that is exactly what i said.
The question i asked is what is specifically bad about carving mdf.
You seem pretty keen to knock Jacob who has pointed out more than once now that carving doesn't just mean carving wood, its nothing to do with whether he is a wood carver or not.
I can't figure skate but i know pratting about on ice with metal blades on my feet is still skating.
Soap stone etc would also be rubbish for wood carving practice and yet people carve it.
But the OP makes clear he wants to carve wood and asks for the view of someone with experience, rather than those that don’t, or (to use your phrase) a muppet.I will give it one more go.
A artist who predominantly paints in oils can learn much is their sketchbook with a box of charcoal.
Its plainly nonsense to claim it serves no purpose to carve something in a different material. There is still plenty to learn from it, any muppet (including Jacob and Me) can see that. It might not teach you some of the specific challenges.
You can keep misreading what i said but it doesn't make you any less wrong![]()
Given that the website I referenced in the intial post shows someone carving in what looks like many of the fashions taught by Mr Pye, I would accept that such a medium as MDF can indeed allow a novice such as moi to practice making the forms, shapes and reliefs, even if the final result is not likely to last long .... and I'd be resharpening quite a lot. I don't dismiss it outright, especially if wood for carving is not readily available whilst every house in the land has oodles of MDF with, presumably, the scrap parts somewhere awaiting use (but maybe in the depths of the landfill).But the OP makes clear he wants to carve wood and asks for the view of someone with experience, rather than those that don’t, or (to use your phrase) a muppet.![]()