I originally published this tutorial online in 1997 on the New England Wood Carvers website and recently I have noticed versions of it missing the attribution. The tutorial was removed around the time I turned the site over to the person who maintained it after me. Since the original posting, golfball carving came into vogue and this technique works with those as well. It's added here for the benefit of anyone to use. Cut a 1.25" long piece of 1x1 in half diagonally for your blank. Use a coping or bandsaw to first remove the corners then to make two stop cuts to divide the face into thirds. From now on we will use only the carving knife. Take your knife and cut up to the stop cuts: First from the bottom of what will be the nose to the eyebrows, Second from the mouth area up to the nose. Now remove a chip from the forehead and the chin. Remove a chip from either side of the nose to define the eyebrow. Remove a chip from either side of the mouth to define the top ...
The completed carousel unicorn as displayed in the Arts League of Lowell 's gallery for it's 2024 show "Fantasy and Allegory. 2024 Laminated Recycled Eastern White Pine sculpture, polychromed with polyurethane finish. Pole Eastern White Pine sculpture, polychromed with polyurethane finish. Cast iron base.
Today was the first snow of the season. It's light and won't last the afternoon, but I still found time to go outside and listen to the sound of the flakes sliding down the pine needles. Boreas was a labor of love from the first pencil line until the last stroke of the paintbrush. The wood is eastern white pine, rescued from a discard pile at a nearby lumberyard. It is painted in a wash of white acrylic, finished with a clear acrylic finish, then washed with a light blue acrylic, then another coat of finish. Boreas, the god of the North Wind, is hanging near my desk and will be my companion for the season. Nov 2023. Eastern White Pine, polychromed with acrylics. Water based acrylic finish,
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