Decide to not place this with a hoop but instead make a base with waves. I really need to learn how to photograph these better. This is a gift for Karen who loves seahorses.
Tuesday, August 26, 2014
Rabbit and Hoop finished piece
This is a gift for Hazel who was born Thursday August 21st 2014. You can see the horribly shot video at the bottom of this post to see just how it works. I burned the red foxes with a wood burner that I've never used before. Came out really nice and I didn't burn myself (much).
Tuesday, August 19, 2014
Thursday, August 14, 2014
Video of Rabbit and Hoop toy idea
New idea I'm working on. It's a variation of the horse in hoop. The round wood weight inside the hoop keeps the rabbit balanced however the weight also slightly rolls/scrapes against the hoop which causes the rabbit to sprint back and forth. It still needs some work.
Metal stamping
Playing around with some steel letter stamps. I want to make a dining room hanging lamp shade thingy with intros from classic novels circling it. For example the intro to Moby Dick or A Tale of Two Cities or Edgar Allan Poe.
Below is a test of the lettering for a spinning magic 8-ball thing. The corners would be arrow in shape and one corner would be "Yes", one "No" and the last two "Maybe".
Below is a test of the lettering for a spinning magic 8-ball thing. The corners would be arrow in shape and one corner would be "Yes", one "No" and the last two "Maybe".
Thursday, August 7, 2014
Test balancing acrobat toy
Completed this in around a hour or so. Just a test out of pine. Not very detailed. I'd like to do a series of five or six acrobats and have them outside maybe as potted plant decorations each balancing on their own wire.
Test run of water feature
Pump is not strong enough to really force the water out of the mouth hole, also there's about 25 feet of tubing running from the pump to the dragon. There's more work to do on the front mouth and then the opposite side of the face however it's coming along very nicely for only the fourth piece of stone I've ever worked on.
Tuesday, August 5, 2014
Progression
About another four hours of work on the fountain head. Drilled part of the spout however the drill bit isn't long enough so it's off to the local hardware store tomorrow for a masonry drill bit and more heavy duty dust masks.
Most of my stone carving tools
From left top:
Big wood carving rasp that I've had for decades, my wonderful Trow & Holden 1/2 pneumatic stone carver with three chisels, and the very important ear protection.
Bottom right:
Peddinghaus hammer, chisel used for tile work (on of my favorite tools), small chisel, DeWalt angle grinder with diamond sanding blade. Not show, a DeWalt air compressor to run the pneumatic carver, face masks (you definitely don't want to inhale limestone dust), and a cheap shop-vac used to blow the stone dust away.
Most of these can be purchased from your local hardware store, the Trow & Holden can be ordered from Amazon or from the Trow & Holden site.
Big wood carving rasp that I've had for decades, my wonderful Trow & Holden 1/2 pneumatic stone carver with three chisels, and the very important ear protection.
Bottom right:
Peddinghaus hammer, chisel used for tile work (on of my favorite tools), small chisel, DeWalt angle grinder with diamond sanding blade. Not show, a DeWalt air compressor to run the pneumatic carver, face masks (you definitely don't want to inhale limestone dust), and a cheap shop-vac used to blow the stone dust away.
Most of these can be purchased from your local hardware store, the Trow & Holden can be ordered from Amazon or from the Trow & Holden site.
Saturday, August 2, 2014
Limestone dragon fountain spout WIP
Only one side has really been worked on. The black is charcoal used to make the photo clearer. The gray is untouched stone. Once the piece is nearly completed I'll start figuring out how to drill the hole to turn it into a water spout thingy. Tools used, angle grinder with a diamond grinding blade, Trow & Holden 1/2 pneumatic stone carver, various hand chisels (used for home floor tiling) and wood carving rasps. Approx. four hours of work(?), approx. 45 lbs.
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