Saturday, April 28, 2012





The completed corbels.

Mahogany corbels

Here are some images of a pair of corbels which I carved recently. The timber used was Utile, a type of mahogany which is very dense and hard. Chisels had to be honed regularly to ensure a consistently clean cut.
The blocks were made up of a number of lengths of utile which were laminated together. The basic shape was cut out on the bandsaw and the design on the front face was raised by routing away the waste on either side. Each piece was then handcarved and sanded.





The corbels will support a mahogany mantlepiece.

Monday, February 27, 2012

Here are some of the pieces that I teach beginners to carve.
 Each design  generally takes 3 hours to complete. 
Tackling these projects gives the students a good introduction to basic carving techniques using the gouge, v-tool and flat chisels along with the carver's mallet.
The timber I use for beginners is Lime.
 It is close grained, will take detail and has a fairly consistent colour. It's also a relatively soft timber which, with sharp, honed chisels, cuts and finishes cleanly.

Thursday, January 20, 2011

 I carve all sorts of subjects.
They range from decorative to figurative to abstract.
Here are some more.


Torsion
Carved from the root of an elm tree.
The surface is textured with a riffler ( a type of rasp ).
The piece is sealed with a number of coats of danish oil and is mounted on a spalted sycamore base.
Snailshell
Carved from a piece of yew.
Sealed with a number of coats of danish oil and finished with beeswax.

Monday, January 17, 2011

I carve wood. 
The hand tools I use are woodcarving chisels and a woodcarvers mallet.
On anything but the smallest of carvings I swing the mallet, to hit the chisel handle, to direct the cutting edge, to shape the wood.
That's where the title of this blog comes from.
Here are some images of my work.


Black Heron
Carved from Sycamore, stained black, sealed with danish oil and finished with beeswax.
Mounted on a steel support.
The base is a turned spalted beech sphere on a turned mahogany platform.