I started getting interested in bone carving around
mid-November, after reading Te Hei Tiki by Douglas Austin, and being inspired. I learnt that the Hei Tiki I have, which was given to my grandfather around 1920, is a relatively rare Type II (one hand on hip, one hand across stomach), Shape C (straight lines touching neatly at 2 points only along each side, the head typically being worked in from both sides). Or, of course, it may be a 2 shilling knockoff.
Ordered Degreaser (for bones), Cobalt M42 HSS blanks for carving
tools, and Maire blanks for handles (which I don’t think will work, because
they’re too short).
Bone Carving by Jim Timings was already in my collection, and ordered
Bone Carving: A Skillbase of Techniques and Concepts by Stephen Myhre.
Purchased Stephan Gilberg’s Bone Carving Foundation and Masterclass Video series. Watched
a whole heap of videos, and read and read and read. Side trips included reading
Wood Carving books by Chris Pye, (most already in my collection) and purchasing a couple more on carving Wood Spirits and Green Men. Oooh - shiny - and being inspired by those.
I have two desks in my Studio – one for art, the other,
which I made, used for horizontal storage (ie, crap. Unfortunately, this table
has no overlaps, so you can’t clamp anything onto it.
I realised I needed a decent workbench – I paint and craft
standing up, and always get terrible back pain. Back to Google … came across
Patrick Sullivan, a retired physician, now a woodworker. Among his plans was
one for a mini-workbench. Oh yeah, that’ll do me!
I already had a suitable table top (can’t remember where it
came from), and once I’d printed the plan, got help with the messy math (yes,
let’s leave out some crucial dimensions), and bought a few extra tools, I was
set.
While hubby said it was too complicated, that was like a red flag to a bull: this woman can do
anything she sets her mind to! Of course, inevitably, I needed a wee bit of
help, as I only have one pair of slightly dodgy hands, and have problems with
heavy stuff.
Of course, to make a bench, I also needed tools … electric
tools! Bunnings supplied me with an Ozito Drill Press (OMG – so much fun!!!),
and an Ozito Band Saw (again, so much fun). Brand choice came down to cost –
they do the job at less than a third of other brands.
I also purchased a Flexi Shaft Grinder hand set and motor
(like a Dremel, but cheaper), some saw blades, clamps, woodworkers vice, a dust
extractor (the sort nail technicians use) and a drip tray (why a drip tray, I
hear you ask? Patience, Young Grasshopper).
The Mini Workbench was finally completed 27 December – work (and
pay) kept getting in the way.
In the meantime, I’d ordered some canon bones from the
Aussie Butcher, which were duly processed – dogs were internally grateful for
the marrow and scrapings, and of course the knobby ends. Next time, I will
leave the knobby bits with the butcher – they take up far too much room in the
freezer.
I followed a combination of Timings and Myhre’s instructions,
with a dash of Bill Bass, Forensic Scientist. I extracted the marrow, then the
bones were simmered in clean water for an hour, scraped clean, then re-simmered
with Sunlight Dishwash and Eco-Clean Degreaser for another hour. Because I hadn’t
realised how far the fat can spread thru the bone, it got a bit yucky. I think
they then got simmered for another hour in fresh water.
Now I’ve read some new instructions on one of the Facebook groups
I belong to – thanks to Энбулатов
Эдуард aka Edward of Bone Carving – so will try his method
next time I need some bone.
November and December passed in a flash, and I felt like I
hadn’t achieved much. But of course, I had. My bone blanks were prepared, I’d watched
some videos, drawn and cut out the basic Matau/fish hook pattern with the
bandsaw, finished the workbench, put some metal pegboard up on the wall, got 2
little drill bit stands (whose holes got re-drilled with the drill press), got
a sheet of vinyl for under the table, and generally got everything set up and
ready to go. 1kg of tumbled Paua also arrived – it has most of the calcium
removed from the outside of the shells, so is pretty much ready to go.
Cutting the bone blanks with first a hand saw, and then
later the bandsaw in the garage had created a dreadful smell, and an awful lot
of (toxic) bone dust. The smell spread thru the whole house, and was not
appreciated.
I knew that cutting the bone with the Flexi Shaft Grinder would
also create a lot of dust and smell. Many/most people use some sort of dust extraction
– a vacuum cleaner, an extraction fan, a Nail Technician’s fan. Pounamu carvers
do their carving under running water, as the crystalline structure creates even
more toxic dust. More reading, more videos, more questions (yay Facebook groups
and YouTube).
I built a DIY drip system: a 10l water bucket on a tower stand,
a guideline to point the airline, a drip tray and small plastic chopping board to
work on, and a 20l catchment bucket, all connected by 6mm aquarium airline with
valves. I used Selley’s Waterproof Storm Sealant to join it all together.
Today, Saturday, I finally spent some quality time working
on my Hei Matau, using my new gear. And nearly falling over backward from the
learning curve:
- The height of the bench is great – I can both stand at it and sit on a stool to work
· The water drip system needs work.
o
To fill the water bucket I need to stand on a
stool and pour the water in – it’s all a bit wobbly. The airline has a definite
curl, usually not going the way I want it to, and having only 1 valve means it’s
hard to move the bucket. So, a second valve needs to go in above the guideline,
so I can turn that one off, remove the airline, take down the bucket, refill
it, and return it to its tower.
o
I needed to find a way to control the curl, and
have the water drip where I wanted it – used a lovely candlestick to direct the
water flow, the bonus being that I can always stick some candles in to make it
even nicer!
o
There’s water spraying everywhere when I drill,
which probably means there’s also bone ‘dust’ flying. I need to make some sort
of enclosure around the drip tray to catch the spray. Perspex and ply perhaps?
Needs to be waterproof, so MDF won’t really work, unless I put some sort of
plastic covering on it.
o
The airline from the drip tray to catchment
bucket won’t drain voluntarily, I need to suck on it – oh yum. Maybe I need a
larger diameter tube (which would be a pain, because the stainless steel was hard
to drill thru), to move the outlet point, or … something else.
o
‘The tower’ is rather unstable – what could
possibly go wrong with having a 10l bucket full of water above my head?
· The vice: overall I’m very pleased with it, the
bamboo ‘cheeks’ (the wooden liners) and mousepad liner work really well. However
it’s probably too close (or too far) from the corner, and because I’m working
on such a small scale, hard to get a fret/coping saw in and cut straight. Not
sure what will happen here, time and use will tell.
· Dust Extraction: until the Nail Technician Dust
Extractor arrives (thanks to AliExpress), I’m using the spare vacuum cleaner hose
when drilling holes or sawing (if I don’t put the bone piece in the vice, it
just goes flying in a very exciting fashion). Trying to clamp a curved hose to
a flat surface with the clamps I have, in the space beside the vice, is a right
royal pain, especially when the clamp falls off, and everything starts heading
for my feet – or a dog’s head. Again, time, use, and the arrival of the extractor
will tell what happens next.
·
Tools & Safety:
Tools & Safety:
o
The ‘cheap’ second-hand wide/long bowed fret saw I bought
has a stuffed thread, and the original bolt has been replaced. Basically it won’t
grip an unpinned blade. I’ve already broken one blade trying to fit it, and
know why there’s so many in a pack. Good news is I have a proper Jewellers saw
coming from … somewhere?
o
The Flexi Shaft Grinder started smoking from the
handpiece after a bit of continuous use, and got VERY hot – too hot to hold. Oh
oh. Have I got a lemon? It’s made in China, so while it was cheap …. I may need
to wrap some fabric duct tape around it for insulation.
o
I can’t see me using most of the burrs, drills
etc that come with the grinder – just not useful. I used a couple of ‘normal’
drill bits to do the bigger holes, but chipped a flake of bone out of the back
of one piece. Gilberg talks about using a ‘dentist’s drill – 2.5mm – which I
may see if I can track some down.
o
Can’t decide whether I need to wear earmuffs and
safety glasses, as I already wear glasses, and the tools are not very loud – on
the other hand, with all that goop flying around … I definitely wear a face mask
tho, when I’m drilling something in the vice.
·
I spent most of my first session to-ing and
fro-ing from the studio to garage and back again, getting all the stuff I
needed, which had either migrated while making the workbench, or normally lived
in the garage.
·
I think my next purchase will be a Scroll Saw –
a companion to the band saw, but with different abilities, such as being able
to take the blade out, insert it thru the piece being worked, and start cutting
again. This decision is as a result of a very interesting conversation with Yuri Terenyi on Bone Carving. Of course, others prefer to work by hand.
I had a great time doing this, and am satisfied with what I
have produced so far. The two Matau already have quite different personalities.
2 comments:
Love hearing how you are trying new things. This is something that I love to see but no way would I EVER attempt it. I'm glad that you are doing it.
Hang in there and hoping that 2020 will be a super crafting year for you.
Hugs.
Sue, this is so cool! I love branching out and trying new things. These carvings are so cool!
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