Hello folks, some friends told me about this great website and I came over for a look-see. Man, this is great! It's fantastic to find other folks who are interested in the same kind of things.
Thought I'd post some photos of an adz I made out of an old truck leaf-spring, and show you a bowl I made using the adz, and some other tools:
Here's a photo of a split sycamore log, my adz, and two small axes (one a Gransfor and the other fashioned out of a rail road spike) I'm about to use to make a bowl. The wood is "green."
Here I've used my axe to flatten the bottom of the bowl, and to begin to shape the handles:
Now I'm using a drawknife to clean up the handle areas, and the outside of the bowl:
Here's a shot of the rough outside shape:
Using my home made adz to begin to hollow out the bowl. Note that the blade is easily removed from the handle. This is a style of adz common to the North/west Pacific Coast of North America.:
The adz makes short work of the hollowing process:
Next, I switch to a bent, spoon gouge to work some more on the bowl:
I also use another Pacific North/West Coast Indian style carving tool - a crooked knife to help hollow the bowl:
Here's a pic of some new crooked knife blades that I recently forged out of a couple of old "*******" files:
Crooked knives are excellent for carving spoons and bowls and such!
Anyway...here's the almost finished green wood bowl:
I'll let it dry for a while (inside a paper sack so it dries slowly and avoids cracking), and then finish it up.
I know it's nothing fancy! I'm not very good at carving, but do enjoy trying. I especially enjoy making things using tools that I made from scratch!
Tom Mills
California, USA
Thought I'd post some photos of an adz I made out of an old truck leaf-spring, and show you a bowl I made using the adz, and some other tools:
Here's a photo of a split sycamore log, my adz, and two small axes (one a Gransfor and the other fashioned out of a rail road spike) I'm about to use to make a bowl. The wood is "green."
Here I've used my axe to flatten the bottom of the bowl, and to begin to shape the handles:
Now I'm using a drawknife to clean up the handle areas, and the outside of the bowl:
Here's a shot of the rough outside shape:
Using my home made adz to begin to hollow out the bowl. Note that the blade is easily removed from the handle. This is a style of adz common to the North/west Pacific Coast of North America.:
The adz makes short work of the hollowing process:
Next, I switch to a bent, spoon gouge to work some more on the bowl:
I also use another Pacific North/West Coast Indian style carving tool - a crooked knife to help hollow the bowl:
Here's a pic of some new crooked knife blades that I recently forged out of a couple of old "*******" files:
Crooked knives are excellent for carving spoons and bowls and such!
Anyway...here's the almost finished green wood bowl:
I'll let it dry for a while (inside a paper sack so it dries slowly and avoids cracking), and then finish it up.
I know it's nothing fancy! I'm not very good at carving, but do enjoy trying. I especially enjoy making things using tools that I made from scratch!
Tom Mills
California, USA