The link below is to a picture of earrings and pin on the craft site guild.com.
How is the wood assembled to get the effect shown? I assume its glued up and
sawn multiple times but if anyone can supply specific details about the process
I would appreciate it. Or do you think each piece is cut and fit together?
http://www.guild.com/artitem/17801.html
thanks, Mike in Arkansas
In article <[email protected]>, JMWEBER987
<[email protected]> wrote:
> Or do you think each piece is cut and fit together?
Nope, they're a crosscut of a long glue-up. You're looking at end grain.
That and the profile should give you enough to figure out how it was
done.
Got some interesting cloisonné - style made with sawdust for my daughter at
a show I did this year.
I don't see anything but face grain, which makes me think veneer. Puts us
squarely in x-acto country.
"patriarch [email protected]>" <<patriarch> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Dave Balderstone <dave@N_O_T_T_H_I_S.balderstone.ca> wrote in
> news:151020042120030786%dave@N_O_T_T_H_I_S.balderstone.ca:
>
> > In article <[email protected]>, JMWEBER987
> > <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> >> Or do you think each piece is cut and fit together?
> >
> > Nope, they're a crosscut of a long glue-up. You're looking at end grain.
> >
> > That and the profile should give you enough to figure out how it was
> > done.
> >
>
> You may be able to get a good idea on an alternate technique by looking at
> how marquetry is done.
>
> Patriarch,
> who doesn't do marquetry, but has met some really good artists who do, and
> has seen some of their work.
Fretsaw. Finer and quick to turn. Sandwich between ply to prevent chipping
out. For one-offs, knife should do, however.
Use a board for support.
http://mikestools.com/Woodworking_Pages/fretsaws_and_boards.asp
"Nate Perkins" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> [email protected] (JMWEBER987) wrote in message
news:<[email protected]>...
> > Thanks to all for your replys. I was hoping it would be a simple
glue/resaw
> > process. Don't really wwant to learn a new skill. Quite overwhelmed by
the
> > irons I have in the fire already. sigh
> > Mike in Arkansas
>
> Hi Mike,
>
> You can do this. Just take 3 or 4 sheets of 1/16" veneer, stack them
> and secure them along the faces with double stick tape. Then cut the
> entire stack more or less randomly with a small saw (a coping saw with
> a very fine blade would work).
>
> Separate the sheets, reassemble the pieces from the different sheets,
> and glue down the pieces on a small piece of thin MDF, etc. If you
> wanted to get fancy, you could fill in the voids with colored epoxy
> and then sand it flat.
>
> Nate
[email protected] (JMWEBER987) wrote in message news:<[email protected]>...
> The link below is to a picture of earrings and pin on the craft site guild.com.
> How is the wood assembled to get the effect shown? I assume its glued up and
> sawn multiple times but if anyone can supply specific details about the process
> I would appreciate it. Or do you think each piece is cut and fit together?
> http://www.guild.com/artitem/17801.html
> thanks, Mike in Arkansas
Hi Mike,
It's made from a few pieces of veneer, stacked together and cut with a
jeweler's saw or a scrollsaw. Then the pieces are rearranged and
reassembed on a substrate, and it looks like the sawkerfs are filled
with some kind of black filler.
It's similar to marquetry, except in marquetry you tilt the piece
being cut so that the sawkerf isn't seen in the end product. There's
a really good article by Greg Zall in FWW, June 1995.
Marquetry is a pretty easy technique; here's an example of my fifth
attempt at a marquetry inlay:
http://home.earthlink.net/~nateperkins1/Woodworking/projects/mayflowerbox.htm
Regards,
Nate
>It's made from a few pieces of veneer, stacked together and cut with a
>jeweler's saw or a scrollsaw.
Thanks Nate and George. Very helpful specifics. Very much appreciated. I have
jewelers saws since I also do silver work from time to time and thought that
the wood effect with the silver made an interesting combination.
Mike in Arkansas
[email protected] (JMWEBER987) wrote in message news:<[email protected]>...
> Thanks to all for your replys. I was hoping it would be a simple glue/resaw
> process. Don't really wwant to learn a new skill. Quite overwhelmed by the
> irons I have in the fire already. sigh
> Mike in Arkansas
Hi Mike,
You can do this. Just take 3 or 4 sheets of 1/16" veneer, stack them
and secure them along the faces with double stick tape. Then cut the
entire stack more or less randomly with a small saw (a coping saw with
a very fine blade would work).
Separate the sheets, reassemble the pieces from the different sheets,
and glue down the pieces on a small piece of thin MDF, etc. If you
wanted to get fancy, you could fill in the voids with colored epoxy
and then sand it flat.
Nate
Dave Balderstone <dave@N_O_T_T_H_I_S.balderstone.ca> wrote in
news:151020042120030786%dave@N_O_T_T_H_I_S.balderstone.ca:
> In article <[email protected]>, JMWEBER987
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Or do you think each piece is cut and fit together?
>
> Nope, they're a crosscut of a long glue-up. You're looking at end grain.
>
> That and the profile should give you enough to figure out how it was
> done.
>
You may be able to get a good idea on an alternate technique by looking at
how marquetry is done.
Patriarch,
who doesn't do marquetry, but has met some really good artists who do, and
has seen some of their work.
On 16 Oct 2004 03:14:20 GMT, [email protected] (JMWEBER987) calmly
ranted:
>The link below is to a picture of earrings and pin on the craft site guild.com.
>How is the wood assembled to get the effect shown? I assume its glued up and
>sawn multiple times but if anyone can supply specific details about the process
>I would appreciate it. Or do you think each piece is cut and fit together?
>http://www.guild.com/artitem/17801.html
>thanks, Mike in Arkansas
Read the techniques/links on these sites, Mike:
www.marquetry.org www.intarsia.com
At www.amazon.com , search for books, "marquetry".
I'll bet the individual pieces of wood are cut,
glued onto paper, sanded smooth, and cut to fit
the jewelry.
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