Wood carving Amazing wooden gate, some serious chainsaw skill |
- Amazing wooden gate, some serious chainsaw skill
- A little cat I just finished.
- Hand carved mushroom, my latest. In boxwood (Buxus)with signed silver plaque. Modelled on a Death cap mushroom, the deadliest in Europe.
- Best wood for coffee mugs
- New set of carved Comfort Birds - Ash, Burnt Ash, and epoxy with gold leaf
- Emporer Penguin and chick - basswood (in progress)
- If you remember my cutting board dad ring, I made a Marine Corps ring for my nephew
- A question about wooden toys
Amazing wooden gate, some serious chainsaw skill Posted: 06 Sep 2021 07:51 AM PDT
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Posted: 05 Sep 2021 11:58 PM PDT | ||
Posted: 06 Sep 2021 10:02 AM PDT I live in California, USA. I would really like to make a wooden coffee mug, preferably with a handle, and out of one piece. The only power tool I own is a dremel, meaning I will not be turning the wood, so the time between making the cut off of a tree and carving it to completion will be lengthy. I have learned from reading online that mineral oil should be the safest treatment for a hot liquids vessel. I also do not drink coffee when it is hot so in other words the contact time the wood will have with heat is only the length of time it takes to pour milk into the vessel. Which wood from CA do you think I should use?sequoia, pine, some other kind of conifer, oak, manzanita, aspen, sycamore, etc? Thank you for your help in advance. My main concern will be keeping the wood from splitting before I have completed carving the wood. [link] [comments] | ||
New set of carved Comfort Birds - Ash, Burnt Ash, and epoxy with gold leaf Posted: 05 Sep 2021 12:40 PM PDT
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Emporer Penguin and chick - basswood (in progress) Posted: 06 Sep 2021 08:24 AM PDT
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If you remember my cutting board dad ring, I made a Marine Corps ring for my nephew Posted: 06 Sep 2021 09:15 AM PDT
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Posted: 06 Sep 2021 04:55 AM PDT Hey there people, i've recently finished carving a little bear from Tilia. It's meant as a gift for a young kid (2 years) and i'm unsure about treating/staining it. I'm a complete newbie, but i guess something sturdy that might even colour the wood a little darker would be nice. Do you have any ideas or suggestions what to look at? Any help is much appreciated. [link] [comments] |
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