islandturner
Member
My first offering here...
Up in Alaska last summer, I bought this piece of fossilized mamouth ivory. (The shiny areas are thin CA, poured into the cracks.)
It's about 4" long -- the pen that follows was made from the piece on the upper right. I chose the El Toro in sterling silver from Lee Valley Tools because it requires quite a small piece for the grip.
The dark wood is African Blackwood.
It's interesting that the ivory looks like wood. The stains and blotches are natural -- they became visible during the final turning and sanding. The wood grain appearance is from the layers of ivory. I guess as the animal grew, the tusts expanded in layers, much like a tree trunk. The long cracks were there and filled with CA before turning. The ivory was easier to turn than antler, but was slow; it would have been expensive to have it fly apart. Drilling it was the scariest part -- it took a couple of evenings, moving up in size with several bits, and filling cracks with CA as I went.
I gave this one to my wife, and she seems to like it. While it's a bit of an oddball looking fountain pen kit, it's comfortable to write with when the cap is screwed onto the pen body.
Thanks all....
Steve
Up in Alaska last summer, I bought this piece of fossilized mamouth ivory. (The shiny areas are thin CA, poured into the cracks.)

It's about 4" long -- the pen that follows was made from the piece on the upper right. I chose the El Toro in sterling silver from Lee Valley Tools because it requires quite a small piece for the grip.

The dark wood is African Blackwood.
It's interesting that the ivory looks like wood. The stains and blotches are natural -- they became visible during the final turning and sanding. The wood grain appearance is from the layers of ivory. I guess as the animal grew, the tusts expanded in layers, much like a tree trunk. The long cracks were there and filled with CA before turning. The ivory was easier to turn than antler, but was slow; it would have been expensive to have it fly apart. Drilling it was the scariest part -- it took a couple of evenings, moving up in size with several bits, and filling cracks with CA as I went.
I gave this one to my wife, and she seems to like it. While it's a bit of an oddball looking fountain pen kit, it's comfortable to write with when the cap is screwed onto the pen body.
Thanks all....
Steve
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