butchf18a Member Joined Dec 3, 2010 Messages 503 Location woodland, wa Dec 26, 2014 #1 Friend likes Tiger Lilies and humming birds, designed and inlayed marquetry for her love of each. Not your average weekend project. Attachments image.jpg 173.3 KB · Views: 374
Friend likes Tiger Lilies and humming birds, designed and inlayed marquetry for her love of each. Not your average weekend project.
D designer Member Joined Jan 23, 2011 Messages 380 Location Washington, Michigan Dec 26, 2014 #2 Wow. I can't even imagine what that took to accomplish..... Great work.
S Super Dave Member Joined May 4, 2009 Messages 867 Location Cape Coral FL Dec 26, 2014 #3 That is a beautiful work of art ! Dave
thewishman Member Joined Mar 9, 2006 Messages 8,210 Location Reynoldsburg, Ohio, USA. Dec 26, 2014 #4 That is a treasure.
R Rodnall Member Joined Sep 5, 2012 Messages 443 Location Miami, FL Dec 26, 2014 #5 Beautiful! Bye the way, my wife likes sunflowers. :biggrin:
Curly Member Joined Nov 20, 2010 Messages 4,976 Location RM of Aberdeen, SK. Dec 26, 2014 #6 Great marquetry. I admire your talent. Out of curiosity, what kind of scroll saw are you using?
Oldredbeard Member Joined Nov 17, 2014 Messages 61 Location Georgia Dec 26, 2014 #7 That's simply awesome, I know she will love it. I admire your talent sir.
butchf18a Member Joined Dec 3, 2010 Messages 503 Location woodland, wa Dec 26, 2014 #8 Curly said: Great marquetry. I admire your talent. Out of curiosity, what kind of scroll saw are you using? Click to expand... Curly, (And others) thank you for your kind reply. I use a home-made fret saw utilizing jewelers saw blades and the double-bevel technique. Sand shading to create shawdow effects. My sand of choice is not really sand, but Mt. St. Helens ash. Attachments image.jpg 80.9 KB · Views: 254
Curly said: Great marquetry. I admire your talent. Out of curiosity, what kind of scroll saw are you using? Click to expand... Curly, (And others) thank you for your kind reply. I use a home-made fret saw utilizing jewelers saw blades and the double-bevel technique. Sand shading to create shawdow effects. My sand of choice is not really sand, but Mt. St. Helens ash.
Jim15 Member Joined Dec 20, 2005 Messages 21,367 Location Hamilton, Ohio, USA. Dec 26, 2014 #9 Beautiful work.