Wednesday, November 28, 2012

A New Handle on Things


The knife in the handle                                                       

The Rough handle again
I set the knife in the handle a couple days ago. The handle is a beautiful piece of Yew that Tom found for me in the back corners of the shop. I cut a strip off of it, planed it, then cut it in half and routed a groove in one side that would fit the knife. After that I took an epoxy and glued the two halves together. Now I am working on the shape of the handle. Ideally it will fit my hand well and stay symmetrical. I cut the whole groove in one side instead of cutting half in each side so I have to cut one side about an eighth of an inch more so the blade will be in the middle. I'm getting close to being finished with the knife now and onto another piece which will be a clay piece where I use Native American Styles of woodworking to create a clay box.

Saturday, November 3, 2012

Ground, Not Sharpened

Blade in the Handle

Unpolished

Polished to 300 grit

Well I only got down to the shop twice this week, but I did get a lot done on my knife. I was able to create the basic shape for my handle, cut the groove where the blade will rest in the handle and ground the blade more. The blade is now polished to 300 grit and almost ready for its first sharpening! More pictures to come!

Glazed, Fired.


I brought home the glaze fired chop yesterday. I used a green underglaze with an "ocean spray" regular glaze. I think it ended up pretty cool looking. The ocean spray kind of took over the piece but the green underglaze adds a nice tint to the piece.

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

A Great Poem About a Bear Named Ivan

This doesn't have a whole lot to do with the work I have been doing but this is an awesome poem Jae Choi a  guest in a recent creative writing class that reminded me of the class. It's about a bear, when I imagine the bear I like to imagine a bear in Haida form style. I also have decided that I am going to try and make a bas-relief piece which I will carve first in wood and then transfer to clay based around the line "all I want is the fish to glow at night."

Je M'appelle Ivan
I am alone  I am a real bear  with a head full of
hazard and light    I live in nature    live with no
friends   and no equity   who needs it   I have
my face  I have my hands  which are as I speak
mauling the air    one time I took a trip     I lay
horizontal on a marvelous raft     I did look up
regard the blank stars   and accept them as holes in
the frame   one time I ran so fast   I left my own
self behind    my own self wandered into an old
birch   and it fell over   I have now escrow    O
bees though sweet kingdom of noise   I worship
freely    and I pee on the leaves     and the wind
impulses right through me  like a small clean rock
all I want is the fish to glow at night           when
 everyone on earth is trying to reach me       hello
yes    hello   this never happens    yet other events
go on and on   the dimming of the moon    I am
upright   I am lumbering    alone with no liquidity
and I live on berries    deliver me berries   if later
on you glide   into these wild and wilder woods


-Heather Christle, from The Trees The Trees


For those interested here is a version of a bear done in the Haida style by Artist Joe Mandur Jr.



Thursday, October 25, 2012

Just Grinding Away

Today I got to start on the grinding of what will hopefully become a blade I can use for carving. I am using part of an old saws-all blade which is made of tempered steel for the blade, and yew for the handle. My guide for now is a blade that Tom shaped awhile ago. It is a drop point blade which is great for all around carving. For the handle I am taking the basic shape from an old Kestrel Tools catalog, but am putting my own spin on it. Kestrel tools is a company that makes different northwest coast art carving tools like adzes, crooked knives and basic carving knives. It was started and is still run by a friend of Tom's. If all goes well in the next couple days there will be a finished blade in my hand! It is also worth noting the absolutely beautiful piece of yew I am using for the handle. When I cut open the piece of wood I was awestruck by how amazing the wood was. The grain created a beautiful pattern and the purple in the wood is unbelievable.


Blade, Handle Sketches, and the future handle

Toms knife (Silver) and my knife (Black)

The future handle in a beautiful piece of wood

First Firing

The chops are now Bisque Fired, meaning they are ready to be glazed. I have put a green under-glaze on the chop, and now just need to add a glaze. Tom's pieces also came out so soon I will get to be the teacher for a little bit and work with him on glazing techniques! Woohoo! More pictures to come

Thursday, October 18, 2012

The Finished Product


Last week I finished my first project. It took a lot of time to get everything in order but last week I finished routing my chop and got to do a couple practice impressions. I took awhile to find the right way to create a deep enough cut to provide an adequate impression. Eventually I used a router with the smallest bit I could find in the shop. It ended up working great when I put it between two pieces of wood and in a vice so I could squeeze them together. I'm about to start working on a knife that I can use to carve with my next project.

Monday, October 1, 2012

Sketches and First Drafts


Just a couple photos of the process I am going through with my Chop or signature.I decided to give it an native american spin by using the ovoid, one of the classic shapes in Northwest coast art. I also employed the U-shape in the bottom of the R. I have decided to not use classic carving techniques for this piece after talking with Tom because I will not be able to make the indentations deep enough to leave an impression in the clay. Therefore I have decided to use a router type tool to get the job done. I haven't experimented with this type of carving at all yet so I'm excited to see where it goes. more pictures to come!

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

New study material!

Just got some new books by Hilary Stewart and Cheryl Shearar this weekend, super excited to start reading them. Looking through them a bit I can already see they are going to be inexhaustible resources.

First Meetings

These past couple weeks have been a pile of meetings, all enjoyable. It started with a bunch of impromptu meetings with Tom everyday for about a week. We had some hilarious conversations, most of them involving him telling me stories from his crazy past, but we also got a bunch of ideas rolling. I then had a formal meeting with him and we went over some ideas for the study and what I wanted to focus on. From there I brought these ideas to Nance and she formulated a sort of curriculum for the first couple months of the study. I am super excited to move forward with my first project, a carved stamp that I can use in ceramics!