How I Carve Wooden Spoons
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How I carve wooden spoons https://www.emmetvandriesche.com/blog/archives/04-2017 There are many ways to go about carving spoons. Some people use clamps and gouges at a workbench. Some people use shaving horses and spokeshaves. Some use spoon mules, some use bandsaws or twa cams (although fewer know how to pronounce it than use it) or -- gasp-- even sandpaper. This is just my way of carving wooden spoons. It is guided by a desire to make spoons quickly so that I can sell them for an affordable price, and by the imperative that they must work exceptionally well. I am not drawn to ornamentation for its own sake. I am delighted by design elements that are organic and playful while existing for some functional reason. I use just a handful of simple tools, which will be introduced as they come on the scene. For me, a spoon always starts as a log which must be split. I never whack the back of my carving axe with another hatchet or sledge, since this can deform the eye over time (I keep a couple beater hatchets around where I do precisely this, however). Instead I use a simple club I made from a chunk of tree trunk by sawing around the circumference and splitting off the extra wood to made a crude handle. This will be visible in the background of some of the next photos. When I've split off a piece of wood that has enough room for my spoon within it, I turn it around to see if I can orient the curves of the spoon to correspond with natural curves in the grain. You can see in this photo on the right that there is a significant twist and curve to this piece. I then use the axe to cut the crank into the top face of the log. This is generally a shorter leg for the bowl and a longer shallower grade to define the top of the handle, although exactly how these play out has a lot to do with the needs of the piece of wood and whether I'm trying to take advantage of any changes between the heartwood and sapwood (see earlier Instagram posts about doing this with cherry and sumac). By doing this before anything else, I can make sure this is going to work before putting any more time into this particular chunk of wood. If it doesn't work out because my axe slips and cuts deeper into the bowl than I want or I go too deep and find I don't have enough depth, I can walk away just a minute into the process. This angle (the crank) is critical to the function of the spoon, so anything that messes with it is a deal breaker. Having established the top plane of the spoon, I saw off the excess at top and bottom and make two stop cuts into the neck from either side, being extra careful not to go too far on the back side. These stop cuts are also at least a quarter inch up from my actual line to give me some insurance against an errant tap of the axe creating a stress fracture within the wood. Now I use the axe and that club I mentioned before (see it?) to gently split the excess wood off the side of the handle. I prefer handles that taper to the neck because if you orient them correctly in the log, the wood splits and cuts cleanly down to the neck without running into it. But sometimes this is not the case and you need to cut sharply down to the stop cut with the axe to remove the waste. This takes longer but allows you to deal with less than ideal grain orientation. With the sides trimmed roughly, it is time to cut the back face of the spoon, generally leaving it a little deeper at the narrowest point of the neck. That deepest point of the crank is the place where the grain flow changes direction. All cuts flow away from it, towards the tip and towards the handle, with very few exceptions. At this point I could switch to the knife, except that I have the luxury of a spoon mule, a device that clamps the spoon handle and allows me to do further smoothing with a drawknife. This saves a few minutes, but most importantly, it makes this hogging out of bulk material easy and fun. Please also admire my very technical sheath to protect my drawknife edge. I do leave my axe buried in my carving stump, but it is important to keep all knife edges covered when not in use. This is both for safety and because nothing trashes an edge faster than a knock against anything metal or ceramic. Some people use the mule for a whole lot of shaping, but I tend to just do all four sides of the handle and the back of the bowl, and only for cooking spoons. Eating spoons are so small I haven't found the need to use the mule. It is also easy to remove too much with the drawknife, with limits your options for facets down the road, so I try not to overdo it. I mostly just want smooth curves. Note that the bevel on the drawknife is down, which allows me to pull out of curves more easily, and that the blade of the knife is slightly askew to the cut. Now I move to the knives. I used to keep my knives and other stuff in a cool galvanized box, but gradually I realized that it was only a matter of time until I bashed up a knife edge on the box which was always underfoot. I switched to a simple artist's box which has a top tray for my knives and burnishers and a bottom section for my sharpening rig. I sharpen my knives with loose sandpaper wrapped tightly around a chunk of wood (actually a block from my daughters' building blocks). By keeping my elbows in tight to my body I can isolate the motion enough to get consistent sharpening. I don't strop but rather go up to 3000 grit which I have found to be sufficient for easy carving and a good knife finish. Every couple of spoons, I give the blade a quick swipe on that highest grit to clean up the blade. Because spoons are curved in all three dimensions, the only way to accurately predict what those curves will be in the end is to isolate them and address them one plane at a time. The first task of the knife, therefore, is to cut the circumference of the spoon in a straight up and down line. It is also easy to over-carve the handle, because it is so much easier than the bowl that you return to it again and again to get that dopamine hit. Before you know it you have carved it too far and still need to do the bowl. So I always start on the bowl and get that trimmed to the line before I let myself move to the handle. Almost all of my cuts are one of two types: the push cut, where all the force is coming from the thumb of the hand holding the spoon, and the pull cut, where one end of the spoon is pressed into my sternum with the hand holding it out past the blade, and by keeping my elbows in, the motion of the blade is limited so it cannot cut me. Both the spoon and the knife turn around and pivot but the blade is always limited in its motion by either the extension of my thumb or by the pivot distance of my wrist. Occasionally I will plant my knife hand on my thigh and pull the spoon away for a planing cut, but generally speaking all of my cuts fall into one of these two camps. I know there are eleven named grips (or something like that) and some people like to know all their names and use them a lot. That is not me. I sailed for seven years on sailing ships and know more knots that you even knew existed, but there are four knots that do basically everything I want, and I don't feel the need to get fancy. Same with knife cuts. At this stage, I use a pencil to correct the symmetry and curves. It is tricky to see what change will bring a curve into sweetness and align the two sides, and I find the pencil helps me keep from having mission creep as I do this. Once I'm happy with the shape, I clean up the surfaces on the back of the handle and bowl made by the drawknife (depending on the type of wood, its freshness and the state of your drawknife blade, you can sometimes skip this step and leave the surfaces as is). Before bringing the back of the bowl to its final form, I carve the swoop of the bowl rim, since this determines exactly where the lines of the back will fall. Rather than carve the entire top face of the bowl to this curve, I prefer to carve a shallow bevel. This is much easier, but it does mean that as I refine the silhouette of the bowl I need to keep refining this curve, since it will change as the silhouette changes.