Racers
Established Member
- Joined
- 22 Apr 2005
- Messages
- 9,172
- Reaction score
- 136
Hi,
I always fancied carving spoons, but you need a crook knife, so I knocked one up yesterday morning.
I had a strip of O1 steel left over from making a plane blade; it was the off cut from the slot.
I filled it to a bevel starting with a big Dreadnought file and drilled a couple of holes in the tang.
Hardened it with my blowtorch, I had to stick in inside a length of pipe to conserve the heat and get it up to temperature all the way along the blade.
Then tempered it, mounted it in a piece of Hawthorn with a couple of lengths of brass as rivets, hawthorn is a nice tough wood and should stand up to the use well.
I have some very green Sycamore that I am carving into a bowl and used a off cut to make the spoon, it’s still wet and needs drying and final finishing.
The knife works very well, spoons are quite tricky to make, lots of draw knifing and much spoke shaving using my Hock bladed spokeshave and my Millars Falls cigar shave.
Pete
I always fancied carving spoons, but you need a crook knife, so I knocked one up yesterday morning.
I had a strip of O1 steel left over from making a plane blade; it was the off cut from the slot.
I filled it to a bevel starting with a big Dreadnought file and drilled a couple of holes in the tang.
Hardened it with my blowtorch, I had to stick in inside a length of pipe to conserve the heat and get it up to temperature all the way along the blade.
Then tempered it, mounted it in a piece of Hawthorn with a couple of lengths of brass as rivets, hawthorn is a nice tough wood and should stand up to the use well.
I have some very green Sycamore that I am carving into a bowl and used a off cut to make the spoon, it’s still wet and needs drying and final finishing.
The knife works very well, spoons are quite tricky to make, lots of draw knifing and much spoke shaving using my Hock bladed spokeshave and my Millars Falls cigar shave.
Pete