Marking work

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Democritus

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Hi Guys,
I’ve been trying to decide how best to mark my work, i.e sign it, and name the wood it’s made from. I’ve tried Sharpies on unfinished pieces, but the ink tends to soak in and spread. Finished pieces that are waxed and polished won’t accept any Sharpie type marking.
Anyone got any good ideas?
D.
 
I had a few hundred 50mm disks laser cut and had my name contact details and logo on them, only cost a few quid and fit nicely in the recess on turned items or simple to stick onto larger or awkward items, i will see if I have an image of the prototype
 
Thanks, guys. Some great ideas. I’ve seen on You Tube a woodturner in Canada (Sprague Woodturning) signing his work with a pen. He always says that what it is ‘is given in the information below’. It’s never there, or at least I can’t find it.
I had some stick on labels made, but a) they don’t stick very well to waxed surfaces, and b) don’t include details of the wood used.
The ammonia idea looks worth exploring.
 
I had a few hundred 50mm disks laser cut and had my name contact details and logo on them, only cost a few quid and fit nicely in the recess on turned items or simple to stick onto larger or awkward items, i will see if I have an image of the prototype
Where did you get these from?
 
Hmmm I knew you would ask that, It was a guy who turned pens commercially I will see if I can find the details.

S.
 
Being an amateur, just wanting some kind of mark for things I made for friends, standing at the bench one day spotted a really big copper staple that came off a cardboard packing box.

A few moments with a pair of pliers, a cork ..... get red with blowlamp job done. Has lasted well, to get it more even I press it in gently with the flat of an old screwdriver.

IMG_20191207_161300.jpg

It's a nice end point, you fidddle and change and polish and fiddle a bit more, but when the stamp is burned in that's it - finished. Move on.
 
On the occasions that I signed turned pieces - some were too small - I always used a fine indelible marker pen with my normal handwriting and usually the date. This way, as I saw it, each was individual.

I do also (did for a time making a living at it) make one-off pieces, basically what the client wants. Normally this is furniture, though I did occasionally make replica pieces for a builder who did period renovations. In the main it was doors and the occasional newel post or bits of stairs.

Call it a streak if vanity, but again I usually mark this furniture with a small named medallion about 38 mm diameter, that can be recessed somewhere out of sight. I obtained these from someone on this forum about 15 years ago and I'm coming to the end of my supply. These are pinned on. I think that he's moved on..... had a reputation for being a bit unreliable with deliveries, as I recall though I never had a problem in that area. Some older members may remember the guy........
I also put a coin with the year's date somewhere inside the piece. It will usually only be found if the thing is destroyed.
Anyway, in bigger pieces I may also secrete a note.... an idea I got from an old-school electrician I worked with as an apprentice who always stuffed his 'Daily Mirror', complete with all his jottings and half-done crossword under a floor board or down a wall-cavity.
 
I am into pyrography a bit and I have a Peter Childs pen on my Janik pyrography transformer. OK, it's a bit more expensive than things mentioned here, but it not only lets me put my initials on anything in a few seconds, it also lets me really personalise what I am doing. The Peter Childs pen is a hot wire pen and that means it takes a couple of seconds, if that, to heat up and any change of heat setting is instant too. No need for fancy shapes or sizes.
Walnut bottle coasters_edited-1.jpg


These are wine bottle coasters in black walnut from offcuts from a local joiner/cabinet maker. It's not difficult to do if I can do it and it really sets your work off, I think anyway.

Edit : - I forgot to say that it doesn't matter what size or shape your work is either

Walnut beech crochet hooks.jpg


My initials are on the 'fat' end and the hook size is on the side.
 
Thanks for more great ideas, guys.
I like the twisted staple Richard uses. I could probably twist some wire into a D, and try that. I don’t know how I would add the wood type.
I like Jonzjob pyrography. It would solve the marking problem, and also open up decorative possibilities as well. Expensive though.
 
You could make up some of the amonium chloride and keep it in a small ink bottle and then just use a cheap calligraphy set to sign and put on info. the different nibs will give you different styles of letter width for the signature and the printed info and have a stamp with your logo and then heat it
 
On the occasions that I signed turned pieces - some were too small - I always used a fine indelible marker pen with my normal handwriting and usually the date. This way, as I saw it, each was individual.

I do also (did for a time making a living at it) make one-off pieces, basically what the client wants. Normally this is furniture, though I did occasionally make replica pieces for a builder who did period renovations. In the main it was doors and the occasional newel post or bits of stairs.

Call it a streak if vanity, but again I usually mark this furniture with a small named medallion about 38 mm diameter, that can be recessed somewhere out of sight. I obtained these from someone on this forum about 15 years ago and I'm coming to the end of my supply. These are pinned on. I think that he's moved on..... had a reputation for being a bit unreliable with deliveries, as I recall though I never had a problem in that area. Some older members may remember the guy........
I also put a coin with the year's date somewhere inside the piece. It will usually only be found if the thing is destroyed.
Anyway, in bigger pieces I may also secrete a note.... an idea I got from an old-school electrician I worked with as an apprentice who always stuffed his 'Daily Mirror', complete with all his jottings and half-done crossword under a floor board or down a wall-cavity.

The company was "Makers mark" I think. Long since disappeared.
 
The company was "Makers mark" I think. Long since disappeared.

Marcros...... 'Maker's Mark' , that's right - Terrific memory, thank you. I think that I'd forgotten even though I still have some left.
It was a long time ago, in another age completely.
 

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