Hello all,
Hopefully this isn't too dumb a first post, thanks for reading.
I've recently become interested in wood/metal/practical work and have not long completed a nice little test project - cutting out an inlay in mother of pearl.
I used my home-built CNC mill and it was originally intended for use on a guitar fretboard. Due to a small fracture across the face of the MOP along with the work slipping a bit on the final pass, it's destined to become an ornamental reminder of what can go wrong. It's still a reasonable looking piece and I'd like to mount it in a small chunk of (ethically sourced) African Blackwood I bought especially for this purpose.
The idea is to pocket the Blackwood with the shape of the inlay and then epoxy the inlay into place. As you can see on the picture - the inlay has a relief of its own and once glued in I was hoping to use the same epoxy to fill in the relief, let it dry hard and then sand back over it to reveal the inlay. My questions are as follows - although all advice on how best to mount this is welcome:
Should I use a dye with a clear 2-pack epoxy, or should I use wood dust taken from sandings?
Once sanded back - what would be the best way to give the Blackwood back a shiny Rosewood depth?
Thanks for your time and advice.
Wal.
Hopefully this isn't too dumb a first post, thanks for reading.
I've recently become interested in wood/metal/practical work and have not long completed a nice little test project - cutting out an inlay in mother of pearl.
I used my home-built CNC mill and it was originally intended for use on a guitar fretboard. Due to a small fracture across the face of the MOP along with the work slipping a bit on the final pass, it's destined to become an ornamental reminder of what can go wrong. It's still a reasonable looking piece and I'd like to mount it in a small chunk of (ethically sourced) African Blackwood I bought especially for this purpose.
The idea is to pocket the Blackwood with the shape of the inlay and then epoxy the inlay into place. As you can see on the picture - the inlay has a relief of its own and once glued in I was hoping to use the same epoxy to fill in the relief, let it dry hard and then sand back over it to reveal the inlay. My questions are as follows - although all advice on how best to mount this is welcome:
Should I use a dye with a clear 2-pack epoxy, or should I use wood dust taken from sandings?
Once sanded back - what would be the best way to give the Blackwood back a shiny Rosewood depth?
Thanks for your time and advice.
Wal.