carving challenge!

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vestlenning

Settler
Feb 12, 2015
717
76
Western Norway
Frying spatula sanded and baked with walnut oil along with my "trekopp".

Observe the chisel "grind" on the spatula. As a Norwegian I should of course have made a Scandinavian grind, but I think the chisel grind is more practical.

Both are pine, but with very different colours. The kuksa has gotten really nice after the oil treatment imo.

baked_woodwork.jpg


And doubles as a fly-swatter!

Do the walnut treatment make it better or worse as a fly swatter?
 
Just started this 2-3 months ago...

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Eastern red cedar

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Numbers 4 and 5 that I have done - Sycamore (with a buck rub on it) and Hophornbeam (eastern Ironwood) the ironwood looks like muscles to me.

I need to learn to make them look less judgemental.

Biker - Love your Dryad. Care to do a tutorial?
 
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Robson Valley

Full Member
Nov 24, 2014
9,959
2,665
McBride, BC
The handles look too skinny for me. My old hands are starting to get arthritic = having to really curl my fingers and "pinch" to hold a handle hurts. I don't think that I'm alone.
Please make mine 7/8" x 7/8" (Kestrel Constant) with well rounded corners, thank you.

But, I like the shapes. If you were to drill a hole, say 3/4" in the middle of the blade, they splash less with stirring.
 

Robson Valley

Full Member
Nov 24, 2014
9,959
2,665
McBride, BC
I spent a couple of years building handles and hafting crooked wood carving knife blades which are so common and popular in the Pacific Northwest.
I spent a year making kitchen prep "sticks" (70 spoons and 30 forks). I realized that there was a particular handle diameter which was comfortable of me to hold.
Comfortable for many middle aged and older people to hold, as well. Marketing research with free/hand-out tools gave me that feedback.

From Kestrel Tool, I bought the entire information package with a view to deciding if I really wanted to build up an elbow adze. That's another iconic carving tool in the PacNW.
Kestrel (aka Gregg Blomberg) wrote that the ideal handle size for a day's workout with either adze or knife would be just so that in a fist grip,
"the tips of your second and third fingers just touch the fat ball part of your thumb." So, I picked up dozens of the things I had made.

Those which fit the best matched what I have coined as the "Kestrel Constant." Gregg & Charlie know about it.
For me, for everything, that begins as a 7/8" x 7/8" blank. Next, I built up a very expensive Kestrel D-adze, the last of the common PacNW carving tools.
With no experiment, I carved the handle area to 7/8" square. The result was just as I had hoped.
I have big hands and long fingers, span is almost 10"/25cm without stretching too much.
Average hands, I suggest 3/4" to start.

The holes in the spoons is a trick recommended by two professional chef friends in a Culinary Arts School.

Here are some examples:

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Robson Valley

Full Member
Nov 24, 2014
9,959
2,665
McBride, BC
Thank you. I use them daily. Their versatility surprised me.

The elbow adze also displays the "Holm Constant", not something that you would ever recognize.
My elbow adze is 55 degrees. When you come off the bevel edge at 90 degrees, that point on the handle is the ideal
placement for the top of your first finger in the grip.
If you have no plans to spend day after day after day on totem poles or feast dishes, maybe it doesn't matter.
On a 60" carving for me, it does.

That's the break between the upper yellow whipping and the middle black whipping. That's the top of where I grip the adze.
BTW, no adhesive. both those adzes are whipped hard and dry and they don't wiggle.

Have to add this: If you strike like a maniac with an adze, you won't last 20 minutes. Listen to your heart.
While it may seem abyssmally slow, strike at your heart rate and you can go all day!
 
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humdrum_hostage

Full Member
Jul 19, 2014
771
2
Stradishall, Suffolk
Let's revive this thread as I have had a bit of time on my hands recently.

These are both made of cherry. The cup/kuksa (not sure when one becomes the other) had a small void in the middle of the ring with some sort of sap in it, which ended up right where my handle was and it also has a pin whole in the side of it, maybe be just decoration now. It ended up a bit smaller than planned but still holds pretty much bang on 100ml. The spatula is for my kit bag and will have a small length of cord through the handle soon.













 

humdrum_hostage

Full Member
Jul 19, 2014
771
2
Stradishall, Suffolk
I got some unknown yellow wood and didnt want to make anything for food use so I just started hitting it with my adze to see what happens. Once I got going I thought about the bowls that are measured with a compass, nails and string. Now I want to get a big ring and try the technique properly.

And of course the other half has nicked it already for her jewelery.







Any one else made one of these bowls?
 

Robson Valley

Full Member
Nov 24, 2014
9,959
2,665
McBride, BC
This is wonderful. Great display of diversity. My GF found a brand of dark rum, very heavily laced with vanilla. If I wrote it down, I can't find it.
Maybe this next weekend in the city, I'll recognize it if I see it.

All to explain that it's high time that I tried to carve a kuksa for such a ceremonial drink.
 

humdrum_hostage

Full Member
Jul 19, 2014
771
2
Stradishall, Suffolk
This is wonderful. Great display of diversity. My GF found a brand of dark rum, very heavily laced with vanilla. If I wrote it down, I can't find it.
Maybe this next weekend in the city, I'll recognize it if I see it.

All to explain that it's high time that I tried to carve a kuksa for such a ceremonial drink.

Its about time I made another kuksa but I am struggling to get hold of some wood at the mo :(
 

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