Sigh

posted: Sat 9th Jun, 2007, categories: Uncategorized

So disgusted with today’s efforts.  So close, and yet so far.  I’m going to have to resaw all but a few pieces and start again.  Very discouraging.  Details tomorrow when I have the heart document them.

In other news, I had 2 visitors find my website via a Google search.  One poor soul from Rio de Janeiro (hi there!) was looking for "how to make cavities for inlay." Given that routing is my very worst skill (and I admit, competition is tough for that spot), mine is the last place they should be looking for help.  Now, if they’d searched on "how NOT to make cavities for inlay," they would’ve been exactly in the right place! emoticon

Project #6 begins

posted: Tue 5th Jun, 2007, categories: Uncategorized, Tools, Shell, & Supplies

Saturday I got out all my wood for project #6. I decided to make it all out of wood, and I’m hoping that’ll turn out to be a cool idea instead of a lame one. When I pulled my wood stock out of the box where it’s been neatly stored in the garage, I found that a piece of ebony had just up and split. I’m thinking our famed “dry heat” is probably the culprit, because it got to the yellowheart, too. It split in my hand when I picked it up. You can see that it’s intact in the first photo. I brought the rest into the house, where we’re running the swamp cooler 24/7 now (it was 106 today!), and that should keep it adequately hydrated to avoid more splitting. It makes my guitars happy, anyway.
Wood.
The ebony wasn't the only victim of dryness.

The split piece was just the size I needed for all the yellow pieces anyway, so it was no hardship. I got my patterns glued on with white glue and watered my plants, washed our long-neglected bicycles so we could use them, and fixed a broken lawn chair while I waited for it to dry. I originally had planned to put this into the same ebony stock I did the last one in, but since all the wood stock is 1/8”, that would’ve been a little too thin. So I picked up a length of 1/2” cocobolo to use as a ground, and cut off an appropriate length with my circular saw.
On the left is the cocobolo ground I'll inlay the rest.

Having rushed into sawing and sanding and who knows what else before glue was dry in the past, skirting the edge of heatstroke from being out in the hot garage that long, and having a birthday doings to go to, I let them be for the night, planning to saw the next day.

Everything was set for sawing.
Stacked and ready to saw.

I discovered immediately that I wouldn’t be able to saw the small pieces out of the very long and unwieldy pieces of wood I had, so I had to cut them down. That process was a bit sketchy, as my saws were only 3” deep, and while they could cut across with no problem, trying to salvage large stretches of wood along the grain by sawing in that direction wasn’t very successful.
Pieces are too big for direct sawing; I have to cut them down to size first.

The sawing was pretty easy, although some pieces gave me trouble, or maybe the blade was getting too warm, as it seemed to bind. I don’t know if it was me or the wood grain. It was interesting to see the different properties of the wood. Ebony and padauk produce more sawdust than the other woods. So much so that I had to put the vacuum on and keep it on the padauk just to see what I was doing; the usual blower from the aquarium pump just wasn’t cutting it.

Of course, that added a new level of difficulty, as I sucked nearly finished pieces into the shop vac because I got too close. So I had to dig them out of it. Fortunately, that was pretty easily done. And hey, there’s the pencil I was looking for! P6030092

I got most of it done, but I was getting tired, and decided to leave the most complicated pieces for the next time. Getting the fingers to line up with the space I’ve cut in piece #3 will be tricky, as will the face bits. I also need to redo the center of the sun. I’d had this idea to split it into 2 parts, also orange and yellow, in a vague kind of yin/yang symbol, but as you can see, my sawing wasn’t up to snuff and there’s a gap. I think I’ll just do a plain circle this time. I’m looking forward to working on it this coming weekend. It’s challenging, but I still find it satisfying on so many levels.
Saved the hardest for last, and need to redo the center.

Plans

posted: Sat 2nd Jun, 2007, categories: Uncategorized

It’s Saturday morning, the day is mine, and there will, at the very least, be gluing today.  I think there’s a very strong possibility that I will do this entire design in wood–no shell.  This will solve the balance problem I was concerned about with doing both, but not having them well-integrated in the design.  Should be interesting.  Because the wood itself is so thick compared to shell, I don’t think I’ll be doing it in the headstock veneer as I’d intended, but I picked up a nice thick piece of cocobolo that’ll probably work.  We shall see.