Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Getting ready for the Irish Festival.

August 1, 2010

I found three of these cut off corners at Sackett Brick & Fireplace here in Kalamazoo. They were free so I took them home. They are naturals for a Celtic Triquetra. Drawing a Triquetra freehand is challenging for me, so I downloaded an image from Wikipedia, printed it and cut it out for a pattern.




Here are the three Triquetras. Each a little different.


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I also carved a Triskele into a roughly hewn (broken) rock.


I only completed these four pieces but knew I'd have the opportunity to carve more once I got to the festival.

Monday, June 14, 2010

It's time to get started.


ComFest 2010 in downtown Columbus and the Irish Festival in Dublin, OH will be happening soon and it's time to get started on some pieces to sell.

But I need some stone to carve.

This is the scrap stone pile at Lang Stone in downtown Columbus near German Village/Brewery district. It's mostly Indiana Limestone that will be ground up to make cement. At $50/ton it's a great source of stone for carving small festival pieces. I bought $10 worth - 200lbs - 15 pieces.

Now back to Kalamazoo to do some carving.

Monday, May 10, 2010

October 2009 - Birthday Present for a Friend

I've always been amazed how good stone sculptors can carve hard stone so that it appears to be soft draping fabric.


For example:

So, of course I had to try to incorporate this effect into one of my things.




I had a small figure in mind that was draped in some kind of monk-like robe. Over several months I started on it several times and but it wasn't coming even close to the above.


A rough start:








I just couldn't get the fabric to fold:



I had made the mistake of making the "fold" too soft at the top. A fold needs to bunch along a rounded line and then fall from that bunched fabric. Not a very good description I'm afraid.

This is the way it turned out:

Granted the first example above (some Medieval artist) was done in marble with a lot more skill, talent and polishing. This stone I used in this piece doesn't really lend itself to polishing and my fabric folds need "refinement". But it's meant to be garden art so it should look old from the beginning, right?

Sunday, February 8, 2009

Flying Finger of Fate's fate.

Remember the Fickle Finger of Fate sculture that I started right before going to the Irish Festival?

When I took it to the Irish Festival, it was knocked over, the finger broke off and was lost. I decided to rework the remaining stone into a dragon. Here's a side by side before and after (the dragon is looking up). The finger is missing in the dragon and I've drilled a hole through the head and started on some teeth.


It broke in half! Too much rework can take it's toll - even on stone. So now I have three pieces instead of one.
The Fickle Finger of Fate's fate is not to be a dragon.


Tuesday, July 29, 2008

The Irish Festival in Dublin, OH

These are the items that I am taking to the Irish Festival in Dublin, OH; August 1-3, 2008.

I call this a "Celtic War Knot". The Celts would throw this (2lbs) at the enemy while shouting "Try to find the end" - it sounds more threatening in Galic. Any enemy not struck and killed would immediately sit down to try to figure it out. They would become confused by the shape and could then easily be overcome. (OK, I made this up...) .

The War Knot still needs some refining and sanding - here it is for now.


Garden Art? - A "Forest of Life"? Several different "Tree of Life" scrap Indiana Limestone reliefs with a Celtic Knot and a couple of Shamrocks. ($15- $45)

Saturday, July 5, 2008

Saturday, June 28, 2008 - Comfest - Columbus, OH

My stone carving instructor invited me to Comfest in Columbus, OH. Part of his business is to sell carvings at various events in the Columbus area.

His carving booth is shown below. Notice there are two sides to the booth.



The left side is the "demonstration" side where he sets up carving benches and makes things. People watch the carving and ask questions. I arrived early on Saturday and those are my pieces in front of the booth. "The Fickle Finger of Fate", "The Endless Knot", "The Flower of Life", "The Giant Ear" and a stepping stone piece that I made the day before.



The right side of the booth has finished pieces for sale.



Of course it rained a little but the beer tent people were still happy.



We stayed across the street in the left side of the tarp covered booth. Of course the tarp leaked.



After several hours the rain stopped.



Then things picked up.



Somebody bought "The Endless Knot".

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Fickle Finger of Fate

I picked up this long skinny piece of scrap limestone from a friend. At first it didn't seem to be usable. Then I found an abstract version of the flying finger of fate in it.

Here's the layout. The verticle lines are on the "Golden Ratio" line segments (see Wikipedia). This will make the curves "pleasing to the eye"...see also "The Golden Ratio - The Story of PHI. The Worlds Most Astonishing Number" a book by Mario Livio.





I used the angle grinder to rough it out.



Then I knocked off the excess stuff.



After a little refinement with the tooth chisel I'm starting to worry about breaking the finger off.



I have to admit I used a power tool to remove most of the material around the finger. Then rasp, rasp, rasp until to this point.


More rasping and a little sanding and this is it so far. Several of my friends don't see the finger from the pictures. Do you?

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Endless Knot

According to Wikipedia:

"The Endless knot or Eternal knot (Sanskrit: Shrivatsa; Tibetan "Dpal be'u") is a symbolic knot found in Tibet and Mongolia. The motif is used in Tibetan Buddhism, and may also be found in Chinese art as one of the Eight auspicious symbols."

I hope I don't offend anyone (or any god) by what I do to this thing...

This stone is large enough for two designs so I'll layout half, carve it, layout the other half, carve that one, then cut the stone in two...at least that was the plan.

Below I've decide what needs to get cut out and have started hacking.






Below, I've kind of traced out the overs and unders with the chisel just in case I make a mistake.

It's difficult to tell but I've deepened the sketchy lines to make the design pop out.



This design was almost done and I started to think about a design to carve in the other half when the awful realization hit me that I could spend a lot of time carving two designs and then screw up one or both when trying to cut the stone in two.

So I decide to cut it in two pieces now using a common circular saw with a masonry blade...maybe not the best choice.

Lessons Learned:
1. Do the cutting outside.
2. Close all doors and windows if near to the house, the dust blows in the windows.
3. Wear protective clothing, breathing mask, full face mask and hat - see Darth Vader in first post.
4. Don't try to cut all the way through the stone in one pass.
5. Don't expect to be able to see the cut line, it will be covered by dust within seconds. Stop and clear it off.
6. Warn the neighbors, they may think the limestone dust cloud created is smoke and call the fire department.



So I cut it in half and I did screw up the other half so I'm glad I didn't carve that side. I used the toothed chisel again on the borders to make the design pop out.

Here's the finished product and also with the "Flower of Life" from the previous post below.





Flower of Life

According to Wikipedia:

"The Flower of Life (commonly abbreviated as FOL) is the modern name given to a geometrical figure composed of multiple evenly-spaced, overlapping circles, that are arranged so that they form a flower-like pattern with a sixfold symmetry like a hexagon. The center of each circle is on the circumference of six surrounding circles of the same diameter..."



Starting to lay out the design - see the picture at they right of my 99 cent compase? This could get complicated!

Here is the layout of the design. Now I need to decide what parts get removed.


I suppose I could have done a negative - where the design is removed - but I decided to do a positive - the parts in between get removed. As I started to remove material the pencil lines started to disappear. Since the design took a rather long time to recreate, I decided to use a diamond tipped Dremel to scratch the design into the stone.

Progress?



Whoops! So the border is screwed up...what to do?


Cover it up with a tooth chizel of course. Here's the final.