I'd wanted to learn to make snowshoes for some time but never got around to it. Before I set out to make actual sized and wearable snowshoes I started by making half scale versions to learn the process. Here is the process I used as I learn about steam bending
wood. Im using oak since
Ash is hard to come by here. I shaped and thined the oak stick in the areas where the bends are otherwise it will break and I have broken many until I got a pattern that works.
The form I made.
The high tech steam creator (since one cant buy steam, premade)
The steam chamber is PVC
After a hour of steam It can be coaxed around the form.
and the nose bent
After a day or two its dry
enough to hold the shape and crossbars are added and its sanded because the steam raises hell with the wood
Then I lace the heel and toe with
deer skin and varnish everything.
Since the prototypes are half scale and cant be worn and I didnt want to waste the effort so I turned them into
art pieces. The first batch will have deerskin leather centers with artwork. I had a lot of tanned deer and elk hides and this seemed like a good use for them
Again, these are half scale.
Then I thought, since this is the 21st century I
should make electric snowshoes so I bought a small light and cord set and fashioned up a lamp but I wanted a lamp that I could customize or change with the seasons. For the lampshade I printed oak and birch skin on legal sized paper on my printer. For the frame I steam bent small strips of oak.
Then I thought about adding a background that appears only when the light is on. (with oak)
Then birch
Then I went kind of nuts because its easy to change the skins.
The sky is the limit for options in regards to silhouettes but then I had another thought on how to customize behind the bark only when the light is on.
Then I went kind of nuts.
Now Im thinking 2 snowshoes
side by side to create a shelf or other ideas for how to use these half sized shoes.
Each time I cut a piece of wood to make a snowshoe I have a piece of drop/scrap that I had been setting aside. Then I had a thought and placed the drop in the steamer box with the snowshoe wood and bent that piece of drop around a 25 pound plate from my weight set to form a wooden hoop. Since I am filling the center section of some of the snowshoes with leather and artwork I ink onto the leather (like this)
I thought, why not cut some tanned deerskin leather into circles and lace them onto the wooden hoops. So I did.
Then while attending one of the many gun shows I attend each year, I ran into a NA businessman who had a booth where he was selling all manner of
native crafts. We spoke and I told him about the snowshoe wall
art and lamps and the hoops. He was interested. He said he was also in the market for scale versions of birchbark canoes and stone point arrows so I spent last week in the shop and yesterday made my initial delivery of 2 lamps, 2 snowshoes and leather wall art,, a bunch of leather hoops, arrows and canoes.