Friday, April 17, 2015
'Oranges and lemons said the bells of St. Clements.'
An orange and lemon tree? I couldn't decide wheter to do oranges or lemons, sooo... It came out really well I think, especially if you consider that the table top is only chipboard. There was also a nice moment of serendipity here; A lovely craquelure effect which arrived by accident due to using water based paints for the pictures and polyurethane varnish. The paintwork must have still been slightly damp. A rare occasion when hurry actually did something good!
Tuesday, April 14, 2015
The bells of St. Clements
Oranges and lemons on the same tree? Yes for sure, on a table. This came out amazingly well considering the table top is made from chipboard. I also got an amazing touch of serendipity here, using watercolour paints for the fruit and a polyurethane varnish I got some wonderful accidental craquelure! Next time I might even do it on purpose...
Friday, March 27, 2015
Lapland inspirations
My stay in Lapland, building log cabins from 'kelo' pine logs was inspiring. 24 hour sun, nature struggling to survive and adapting, quiet, emptiness. Magnificent.
Blazing hot day and a faceful of sawdust. Heaven! Below, Osmo holds court at lunch.
I love working with the Kelo pine, it's actually dead wood, dry and filled with pitch, easy to work except for cracks. The pine tree grows in a spiral. The beautiful silver-grey colour comes from the fact that the pine tree dies,but stays standing, maybe for 50 years or more. The bark falls off and the wood surface weathers. The tree does not rot because lapland is a dry climate with very short growing seasons. Also it is not a windy place, so the trees stand like old fingers scraping at the sky.
I tried to make some kelo furniture which would fit into a modern home, so I reversed the wood, making a nice clean pale finish on the outside, and kept the natural surface inside, and making a little window into nature just using a 'puukko', a traditional Finnish hand-made knife, carbon steel, deadly sharp.
Of course I had to have a go at chainsaw sculpting. I finished these with a sanding wheel on an angle grinder. I was especially please with the wolf cub.
And the finished article, with features, grey preserving wax and a home in the garden.
Not often you have to beware of reindeer on a building site!
Blazing hot day and a faceful of sawdust. Heaven! Below, Osmo holds court at lunch.
I love working with the Kelo pine, it's actually dead wood, dry and filled with pitch, easy to work except for cracks. The pine tree grows in a spiral. The beautiful silver-grey colour comes from the fact that the pine tree dies,but stays standing, maybe for 50 years or more. The bark falls off and the wood surface weathers. The tree does not rot because lapland is a dry climate with very short growing seasons. Also it is not a windy place, so the trees stand like old fingers scraping at the sky.
I tried to make some kelo furniture which would fit into a modern home, so I reversed the wood, making a nice clean pale finish on the outside, and kept the natural surface inside, and making a little window into nature just using a 'puukko', a traditional Finnish hand-made knife, carbon steel, deadly sharp.
Raw materials:
And the finished article, with features, grey preserving wax and a home in the garden.
Tuesday, March 24, 2015
Water features
Finnish slate and granite are wonderful for water features. Here are two I did for my family members. Not a lot of carpentry involved, but plenty of creativity. The whole structure is built on large blocks of carved expanded polystyrene. The stones are fixed with, well I won't tell all my secrets!
The first one was massive, several tonnes of slate and a 2m drop, so the next one was an excercise in miniature, a trickling stream rather than a mountain torrent. I found the beautiful 'strutsin muna' (ostrich egg) on a beach. I had hunted for a nice round stone for days, and finally found a beauty. Thank you to the ice-age! I drilled it and fitted the pump underneath. The pump has two pipes, the other one to the head of the little stream.
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