I have been making some axe handles recently, from cleft ash. I usually use a linseed oil/danish oil typpe of finish, but with these decided to add some colour.
Shaping one of the haft's from air dried ash
View along the same haft. I used the natural flow of the grain to my advantage. The form is a fusion of the english and finnish style's
"Finnfoot"
Wedging done with cleft air dried oak wedges. This shows the colour. I mixed oil colour with boiled linseed oil, danish oil and real turpentine. I soaked rags in it, wrapped the handles with them, then in polythene sacks, then left them 48 hours. Some are yellow, some red. The colour isnt as intense as I had hoped-ash doesnt take up colour as well as some other woods do-but the haft's are "well oiled" so to speak...... I used a hot applied buffed wax finish.

Shaping one of the haft's from air dried ash

View along the same haft. I used the natural flow of the grain to my advantage. The form is a fusion of the english and finnish style's

"Finnfoot"

Wedging done with cleft air dried oak wedges. This shows the colour. I mixed oil colour with boiled linseed oil, danish oil and real turpentine. I soaked rags in it, wrapped the handles with them, then in polythene sacks, then left them 48 hours. Some are yellow, some red. The colour isnt as intense as I had hoped-ash doesnt take up colour as well as some other woods do-but the haft's are "well oiled" so to speak...... I used a hot applied buffed wax finish.
