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Does anyone wood carve?

Posted: Wed Oct 11, 2006 10:28 am
by minks
I want to try it

I am not into the fine tiney detail stuff but some crude garden figure stuff. I have seen some around and they look cool but how easy is that to do really? I would like to carve up a something for my folks garden as an xmas gift, do you think it's just a matter of picking up a few tools and a log and chipping away at it? Hmmmmmmm I am stumped (pun intended)

Does anyone wood carve?

Posted: Wed Oct 11, 2006 10:34 am
by valerie
I did a little in art class in high school... don't know what happened to

any of it...



You can go to a crafts store, a lot of them will have simple tools to

do it...



Are you artistic in that you "see" something in a block of wood? Know

what I mean? Sometimes I was good at that, other times not so...



Dad used to carve "beer chairs" out of humoungous logs using his

CHAINSAW!! ;)



Buy "soft" wood, it's easier to carve, and be very, very careful,

sometimes tools slip and you can carve a gigantic gash in your hand.



:-6

Does anyone wood carve?

Posted: Wed Oct 11, 2006 10:37 am
by minks
valerie wrote: I did a little in art class in high school... don't know what happened to

any of it...



You can go to a crafts store, a lot of them will have simple tools to

do it...



Are you artistic in that you "see" something in a block of wood? Know

what I mean? Sometimes I was good at that, other times not so...



Dad used to carve "beer chairs" out of humoungous logs using his

CHAINSAW!! ;)



Buy "soft" wood, it's easier to carve, and be very, very careful,

sometimes tools slip and you can carve a gigantic gash in your hand.



:-6


thanks Val, I know of a cool store nearby that sells these supplies maybe they have a crash course or something.... I have ideas in my head so would have to work with them and a log hmmmmm I wonder I wonder.

Does anyone wood carve?

Posted: Wed Oct 11, 2006 10:41 am
by valerie
I'd give it a try, Minks, what have you got to lose, really? It might

turn into a sort of zen peaceful enjoyable hobby for you if nothing else!



:-6

Does anyone wood carve?

Posted: Wed Oct 11, 2006 10:48 am
by minks
valerie wrote: I'd give it a try, Minks, what have you got to lose, really? It might

turn into a sort of zen peaceful enjoyable hobby for you if nothing else!



:-6


yeah that is what I am hoping for... it does intrigue me....I just feel like I will be handing over this odd, crudely carved up log to my parents as a gift, and calling it garden art and they thinking I have digressed to preschool days giving my bad art away aahahahahahahaha

Does anyone wood carve?

Posted: Wed Oct 11, 2006 12:47 pm
by Patsy Warnick
Minks,

What did you have in mind for you carving? Like what design - large, small just curious. As Val stated be careful , and there are soft woods to use. And this is a great form of therapy - take all the frustration out..

I've made and have several crude/rough yard art - I took a real cool shovel and hung it on my gate - I love it, I also have a old rusty hay bailer in the yard - weird stuff - and I know I have weird / different taste. I like to think of it as unique, and something someone else won't have.

Good luck

Patsy

Does anyone wood carve?

Posted: Wed Oct 11, 2006 12:49 pm
by minks
Patsy Warnick wrote: Minks,

What did you have in mind for you carving? Like what design - large, small just curious. As Val stated be careful , and there are soft woods to use. And this is a great form of therapy - take all the frustration out..

I've made and have several crude/rough yard art - I took a real cool shovel and hung it on my gate - I love it, I also have a old rusty hay bailer in the yard - weird stuff - and I know I have weird / different taste. I like to think of it as unique, and something someone else won't have.

Good luck

Patsy


Well in actual fact I would like to take a stump and carve a couple wimsical faces into it some with flowy hair and a few leaves kind of a wood elf family photo idea.

Or a green man

Does anyone wood carve?

Posted: Wed Oct 11, 2006 12:57 pm
by Patsy Warnick
Maybe taking a log - chizzling some log away and using a wood burning techinque to enhance the figures - just a idea. None of this need to be perfect - I love the more rustic / crude art anyway, and then maybe use a log large enough or tall enough to place a plant on top without blocking the carved figures.

I'm sure your family will appreciate your art.

Patsy