OK - I am no expert on spoon carving .... I find that compared to the real experts my spoons are crude and I take far too long to carve them ... but they give me great satisfaction and I love using them!
My subject for discussion here is the shape of the spoon - not how to achieve that shape
In general I was always taught to choose a piece of wood that had the natural curve you want in a spoon, grown into it or to carve the spoon to give the strength where it is needed - at the join between bowl or handle.
I see a lot of "bush carved" spoons that have no curve to them at all (not just bushcrafters spoons but also locally made spoons in the African spoons) and which have thick walled, deep bowls and thick handles - all of which add up (in my eyes at least) to an inelegant if usable spoon.
If you look at a standard dining table spoon you will see (usually!) a handle that not only is wider at the base compared to the neck but also of very thin profile and with a very obvious curve to the profile as well.
To mimic this in a spoon, where the woods grain does not follow the curve you want for an elegant wooden spoon, you will want to shape the neck to give strength and hopefully avoid the failure of the spoon due to the neck snapping where the integrety of the grain is compromised by the shaping.
To achieve this, I was taught to carve the neck of the bowl thin in plan view but deep in profile, tapering the shape in plan and profile to morph into the wide in plan view, thin in profile handle section.
neck to bowl transition involves an equally subtle continuation of the neck shape to the deepest part of the spoons bowl, forming a rib or keel effect to give strength to the neck as well as an attractive, elegant shape.
The shape of the bowl is fairly immaterial in itself, though traditionally a desert spoon is egg shaped, a soop spoon is round bowlled and some ancient spoons are even a flatened oval with the long axis at rightangles to the handle.
For me the walls of the bowl need to be as thin as is practicable without being week - the thickest section wants to be the end most used - the tip for a desert spoon, the sides for a soup spoon and so on - but carved at the edge to give the impression of thinness without the weakness.
The depth of the bowl wants to be no more than that which your upper lip can reach - if it is deeper then you will have trouble getting your spoon licked clean!
As to size of bowl - this relies on what the spoon is for!
If it is to be an eating spoon be sure it fits in your mouth
Small mouthfuls are easy to eat - struggling to nibble off a spoon you cannot get in your maw is frustrating! Smaller bowls make for easier eating.
The spoons illustrated are just a random selection of ones I have made over the years, from various woods, along with a spoon from my kitchen drawer for comparison.
I do not claim to have the most elegant, best carved spoons or that I have followed my own advice/thoughts on design in all the spoons I have ever made - they are all part of the journey of discovery which forms the practice of every craft and my ideas have formed as I go!
I hope folk find this collection of thoughs/ideas of interest
The
My subject for discussion here is the shape of the spoon - not how to achieve that shape

In general I was always taught to choose a piece of wood that had the natural curve you want in a spoon, grown into it or to carve the spoon to give the strength where it is needed - at the join between bowl or handle.
I see a lot of "bush carved" spoons that have no curve to them at all (not just bushcrafters spoons but also locally made spoons in the African spoons) and which have thick walled, deep bowls and thick handles - all of which add up (in my eyes at least) to an inelegant if usable spoon.
If you look at a standard dining table spoon you will see (usually!) a handle that not only is wider at the base compared to the neck but also of very thin profile and with a very obvious curve to the profile as well.
To mimic this in a spoon, where the woods grain does not follow the curve you want for an elegant wooden spoon, you will want to shape the neck to give strength and hopefully avoid the failure of the spoon due to the neck snapping where the integrety of the grain is compromised by the shaping.

To achieve this, I was taught to carve the neck of the bowl thin in plan view but deep in profile, tapering the shape in plan and profile to morph into the wide in plan view, thin in profile handle section.
neck to bowl transition involves an equally subtle continuation of the neck shape to the deepest part of the spoons bowl, forming a rib or keel effect to give strength to the neck as well as an attractive, elegant shape.

The shape of the bowl is fairly immaterial in itself, though traditionally a desert spoon is egg shaped, a soop spoon is round bowlled and some ancient spoons are even a flatened oval with the long axis at rightangles to the handle.
For me the walls of the bowl need to be as thin as is practicable without being week - the thickest section wants to be the end most used - the tip for a desert spoon, the sides for a soup spoon and so on - but carved at the edge to give the impression of thinness without the weakness.

The depth of the bowl wants to be no more than that which your upper lip can reach - if it is deeper then you will have trouble getting your spoon licked clean!
As to size of bowl - this relies on what the spoon is for!
If it is to be an eating spoon be sure it fits in your mouth

Small mouthfuls are easy to eat - struggling to nibble off a spoon you cannot get in your maw is frustrating! Smaller bowls make for easier eating.
The spoons illustrated are just a random selection of ones I have made over the years, from various woods, along with a spoon from my kitchen drawer for comparison.
I do not claim to have the most elegant, best carved spoons or that I have followed my own advice/thoughts on design in all the spoons I have ever made - they are all part of the journey of discovery which forms the practice of every craft and my ideas have formed as I go!
I hope folk find this collection of thoughs/ideas of interest

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