Daniel Macina
Well-Known Member
Wow that looks amazing!
Its encouraging to know how long it takes people who know what they're doing to hand sand. The other day, when it took me an hour to get to 80 on one side I'm thinking what am I doing wrong. Sanding the tight spots is a pain and time consuming, It's good to know that that is just how it gets done. Thanks for the detailed WIP.
Looking good!I am either compelled to master this task or obsessed. Perhaps possessed. This is my own artwork. No more patterns being borrowed. Better?? No. 7 and No. 8. I think.
Ahhhh...grasshopper....you have found the secret to long shop hours....lol.Lastly, crank some 70-80’s rock and roll. Time will slow down and you get more done that way.
Ahhhh...grasshopper....you have found the secret to long shop hours....lol.
Dennis...that's coming along just beautifully!
Dennis, Tandy has a bunch of Craft tool stencils for stuff like feathers and general shapes that are very good. The sheath below is my tooling on their stencil. Here's a few things that might help. Feathers are supposed to be delicate....think, lots of light tooling versus small amounts of heavy tooling. Also there is a tool called a "Hair blade" that scribed razor thin lines that give a feather depth. So the steps are as follows. Stencil, cut in hard lines with swivel knife. Detail the quil with a background tool, cut in a few hard "Cuts" going out to the outside edge of the feather. Hair knife to detail in the lines of the feather. Edge and background the outside edges. The pear shaped detailed you used on the inside lines of the feather look too "hard" to me. Adding shading by mixing dye with denatured alcohol gives a nice shading as well.I am either compelled to master this task or obsessed. Perhaps possessed. This is my own artwork. No more patterns being borrowed. Better?? No. 7 and No. 8. I think.