Mr Ed
Established Member
This piece was requested by my sister-in-law to hang up necklaces and jewellery items.
I decided to go for a quite organic form, as a bit of a departure from what I normally do and also to get something of a challenge out of the project.
The piece is made in American Black Walnut, with a small bit of oak in the laminations. I made the laminated sections to get over the short grain issue that would have arisen due to the shape of the ribs. I also quite like the effect is has of making the rib look visually thinner.
The finish is around 10 coats of shellac, topped off with 2 coats of Black Bison Wax, which is my finish of choice for things like this. The ribs connect to the spine with a notch, half to each piece. The spine then connects to the base with a mortise and tenon.
I formed the scallop in the base by routing out the main waste of the flat bit in the middle and then created the curves with my newly rehandled ancient gouges. My carving skills are not finely developed so it was finished off with a random orbit sander.
All in all, I'm quite pleased with the end result, although working with everything curved is tiring as the reference surfaces/points all disappear when you cut things out.
Thanks for looking
Ed
I decided to go for a quite organic form, as a bit of a departure from what I normally do and also to get something of a challenge out of the project.
The piece is made in American Black Walnut, with a small bit of oak in the laminations. I made the laminated sections to get over the short grain issue that would have arisen due to the shape of the ribs. I also quite like the effect is has of making the rib look visually thinner.
The finish is around 10 coats of shellac, topped off with 2 coats of Black Bison Wax, which is my finish of choice for things like this. The ribs connect to the spine with a notch, half to each piece. The spine then connects to the base with a mortise and tenon.
I formed the scallop in the base by routing out the main waste of the flat bit in the middle and then created the curves with my newly rehandled ancient gouges. My carving skills are not finely developed so it was finished off with a random orbit sander.
All in all, I'm quite pleased with the end result, although working with everything curved is tiring as the reference surfaces/points all disappear when you cut things out.
Thanks for looking
Ed