October 5, 20223 yr Popular Post Did a few of these a while back but it's been a while. This is soft maple, turned to about 2.5mm or 3/32" and just over 12" diameter. It will get my version of a basket weave illusion done with piercing and pyrography. This is the basic pattern, it's adapted from a Polynesian Lei, Lei weave which is normally done with water hyacinth reeds. The "X" areas will get pierced and the rest will get wood burned and shaded to produce the basket weave illusion. Have just started to layout the grid lines to draw the pattern. That's an LED lamp on the back side. Produce_0.mp4 Hoping this one turns out as it's intended tobe a gift. Edited October 5, 20223 yr by Steve Krumanaker
October 6, 20223 yr Author 5 hours ago, HandyDan said: What's the wiggle video about? Seems I am missing something. Hi Dan, just showing the thinness of it.
October 8, 20223 yr Author Popular Post Moving along with the decorative platter. Here it is with the pattern in pencil. Not going to lie, had to just step away from it a few times, will make a person buggy eyed! Next, I'll take off the bottom and clean it up. Then, burn and establish the areas with the X to pierce and remove. The straight, vertical lines represent the spline and on one side the spline is on top of the weave and on the other it's covered by the weave. The pattern will also be on the other side but won't get drawn until after the piercing is done. That will give me a map to make both top and underside to match. This is the look I'm after. Edited October 8, 20223 yr by Steve Krumanaker add picture
October 8, 20223 yr I love seeing you work Steve, and I love your topics, well worded, well laid out, nice imagery, and you tag your topics perfectly, thanks sir. If anyone here doubts the usefulness of "tags", just click on any of the ones Steve provided.
October 8, 20223 yr Popular Post That's some real wizardry going on there. Would definitely drive me bug house.
October 8, 20223 yr Bug eyed may not be a strong enough term. I can do some zentangle but this is way beyond me
October 8, 20223 yr Author 6 hours ago, John Morris said: I love seeing you work Steve, and I love your topics, well worded, well laid out, nice imagery, and you tag your topics perfectly, thanks sir. If anyone here doubts the usefulness of "tags", just click on any of the ones Steve provided. Thank you John, very kind words.
October 8, 20223 yr Author 1 hour ago, Gerald said: Bug eyed may not be a strong enough term. I can do some zentangle but this is way beyond me Gerald, I love zentangle but I can't say this is that. It's a pattern I devised and so far as I know it hasn't been certified. With that, it does rely heavily on zentangle principles. This particular pattern is deceptively easy once you get in a groove. Amazingly, 3 lines repeated over and over create the whole. A short vertical line, a diagonal line rising left to right, and a diagonal line rising right to left. Once the grid is laid out and the vertical lines are in place you basically just connect the dots.
October 8, 20223 yr What tool do you plan to use for piercing? I use a NSK straight set up like Capt Eddie did his.
October 8, 20223 yr Author 39 minutes ago, Gerald said: What tool do you plan to use for piercing? I use a NSK straight set up like Capt Eddie did his. I will likely use one of the cheap knock-offs from ebay. I invested in the presto but as yet have not used it. The traditional hand piece design works well for me as my hands are not all that steady. I can grip the dental hand piece with two hands and anchor them to the work piece and that really helps with stability. There will also be a fair bit of needle file and xacto knife work in play.
October 9, 20223 yr That is pretty amazing Steve. And that’s a whole lot of carving. Very ambitious. I can’t wait to see the end result. Paul
October 11, 20223 yr Author If anyone is interested here is a progress update. Have started the piercing. This is kind of relaxing and tedious all at the same time. The hardest part is getting a nice perpendicular cut from one side to the other. That's something I struggle with and that's where the xacto and filing come into play on the other side. It's fortunate that the material I'm trying to imitate has it's own irregularities and isn't typically 100% uniform so little imperfections almost look natural. I use a .7mm carbide straight bur spinning at around 350,000rpm and it creates very fine, almost microscopic dust. The Sundstrom respirator really earns it keep when doing something like this. Even without any shading being done the pattern really starts to show up when the triangle areas are gone. You can see the very fine dust that's collected on the surface. A roll of paper towels on end makes a perfect work surface. Edited October 11, 20223 yr by Steve Krumanaker add comment.
October 11, 20223 yr I was reading a post from another source and the person was asking about their project and how to prevent burning from the spinning bit. Is that a problem for you?
October 11, 20223 yr Author 5 minutes ago, lew said: I was reading a post from another source and the person was asking about their project and how to prevent burning from the spinning bit. Is that a problem for you? In my experience it will always burn when doing the piercing. If a person doesn't want that burned edge the secret is to take out the middle and then use very light passes to clean up the edges.
October 11, 20223 yr Looking good. I have tried a few piercings but was put off by the bit getting hot and clogging. The smoke and dust make me not want to indulge either.
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