L. Johnson approved this submission. Note: I hereby certify this badge bit complete. You may find you want to shape the handle more later on. The nice thing about wooden spoons is they're easy to adjust!
I've made enough spoons in my day that I can't really make a completely "beginner" spoon, but here's a quick one I made from a dogwood log from my neighbor. It's a cooking or serving sized spoon.
I've read that dogwood is prone to cracking when it dries, so I'm trying to dry the finished spoon slowly inside of a bag, which has worked well to avoid cracks in other crack-prone woods in the past.
So I started the ladle first, but I didn't remove the core so predictably it split. Since I won't use a split ladle, I also did a spoon. I learned to remove the core and that curly willow is really hard to split.
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There is madness to my method.
"Life finds a way"- Ian Malcolm
"We're all mad here" - The Cheshire Cat
My submission for the first timer spoon PEP BB. I chose birch as my material, because it is readily available to me. I invested in a cheap set of carving knives - would recomment to invest a little more and get a good hook knife and a good sloyd knife. I learned to charpen those knives though. It was a lot of fun to carve the spoon and it got me hooked: I'm setting up to be able to carve more.
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The chose birch log with the axe used
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The billet is cut
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The roughed out spoon ready for carving
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I bought a carving set for the purpose. I suggest investing a bit more and getting a better set than what I got. I learned how to sharpen knives though.
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The finished spoon
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Profile view of the spoon
a new permaculture fledgling that needs to learn lots
This is the third spoon I ever made, but the first big spoon.
I used olive wood. The hardest part was where the handle meets the cup, if that description makes sense.
I don't know yet how thin I can go or how much power I can use before it would break, so that middle part is still quite thick, I find.
It will take many more spoons to find my confidence and take away more wood. Luckily my olive wood supply is kind of endless :D
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The selected piece of green olive wood for this spoon.
My first spoon is made out of fresh trimmed apple I found. It was fine to carve wet and I put it down for over aweek to let it dry. I did not enjoy the finish carving of the dry wood. I sanded the spoon down to 220 grit by hand.
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apple wood I started with
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the tools I used to get it this far
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the apple after it was split with the hatchet and peeled
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working on my spoon again now that it's dry
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finished spoon
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note shadow for bowl depth
"The winter will ask what we did all summer" - Henry David Thoreau
Here is my submission for the Roundwood - Sand - Spoon BB.
Minimum requirements:
- useful size and shape
- smooth
- something you might actually use
- made with hand tools only
To get certified for this BB, post three pics.
Attachment 1 - Your chunk of wood that you are starting with
Attachment 2 - Progress about half way through, with the hand tools you have decided to use for this
Attachment 3 - Final product
I was very excited to use juniper for the pink coloration. I thought that this would be a lot easier than it was and I learned a lot. I've never carved a spoon before. There was a knot in the wood that was hard to work with so I tried to use an ember to burn the the bowl of the spoon but, in doing so, incurred some burn damage in the handle even though I thought I protected the spoon with wet clay. I used a mallet, an axe, a knife, a spoon carving knife, 3 grits of sandpaper, a pencil, and flax oil.
I spent at least 5 hrs on this spanning 3 different days because it was so demanding on my hands. I'm very happy with how the spoon came out and I'm looking forward to making a much better second spoon!
Second attempt. Not totally happy with the shape, but makes a functional sugar spoon:
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Stick.
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Begun.
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Midway.
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Final form with all tools.
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In use.
They say time's the great healer, and that's true. It's just not a very good anaesthetist, is the problem,
Whose lunar deity is not male is destined to be dominated by his wife. -- Old Hindu proverb