I had some good suggestions in a thread I started last month about some garden tool ideas for my wife's birthday. I bought a Hori Hori knife and a pair of Felco secateurs intending to make leather holders for both.
The Hori Hori knife arrived with a rather poorly thought out (or at least, boring) beech handle, so that provided me with an opportunity for customisation (of course with Walnut)...
So off it came, which revealed the tang following the concave nature of the blade for a little longer than was convenient. A little hand chiseling (and 2 pairs of wasted scales) got me a pair of oversized scales that clasped the tang nicely. After gluing up, I channeled my inner Diresta and whittled away using the bandsaw. I've never done anything freehand like that before and it was very intimidating (particularly after screwing up something as simple as shaping scales around the tang), but I aimed to keep the handle big and creep up on and, and that largely worked.
After rough shaping on the bandsaw, I started refining/carving using a reverse motion on the bandsaw blade, this was really effective and let me get to the final shape using the bandsaw alone.
The last two photos above show off the final shaping, unfortunately I didn't get a shot of the handle before I moved to sanding .
Lots of sanding required to remove the deep blade marks, but I can honestly same that the final shape was accomplished on the bandsaw alone, which feels like a decent accomplishment for a novice.
The Hori Hori knife arrived with a rather poorly thought out (or at least, boring) beech handle, so that provided me with an opportunity for customisation (of course with Walnut)...
So off it came, which revealed the tang following the concave nature of the blade for a little longer than was convenient. A little hand chiseling (and 2 pairs of wasted scales) got me a pair of oversized scales that clasped the tang nicely. After gluing up, I channeled my inner Diresta and whittled away using the bandsaw. I've never done anything freehand like that before and it was very intimidating (particularly after screwing up something as simple as shaping scales around the tang), but I aimed to keep the handle big and creep up on and, and that largely worked.
After rough shaping on the bandsaw, I started refining/carving using a reverse motion on the bandsaw blade, this was really effective and let me get to the final shape using the bandsaw alone.
The last two photos above show off the final shaping, unfortunately I didn't get a shot of the handle before I moved to sanding .
Lots of sanding required to remove the deep blade marks, but I can honestly same that the final shape was accomplished on the bandsaw alone, which feels like a decent accomplishment for a novice.