Sunday, November 13, 2011

Alpha and Omega Cross

Our Church is having an auction to raise money for one of the missions.  Pam wanted to donate something so I carved this cross.  It is pretty obvious why it is called the Alpha and Omega cross when you see the picture.  Reference is Revelations 22:13 NIV " I am the Alpha and the Omega, the First and the Last, the Beginning and the End."

The base cross is walnut one of my favorite woods to carve but also very expensive and hard to find in suitable (knot free) pieces.  The middle cross is poplar and the top cross is again walnut with a brass accent.  The cross is 17" tall.  Look for a future post of how I proportion these crosses.

Alpha and Omega Cross



Hope all is well with you.

Go carve something!

Bruce

Wooden Crosses with Family Ties

Here are three crosses I recently carved.  The crosses are made from redwood and cedar.  The family ties come in from where I got the redwood and the cedar.  That is a bit of a story so here goes.

My father was an infinitely curious man.  He had quite a few hobby's over his lifetime (as have I which is why my mother was always proclaiming  "you are just like your father").  Very early in their marriage he turned to one of those hobby's to help make extra money.  He would work during the summer vacation (he was a teacher) as a carpenter.  For many years he pursued that at a lumberyard in Corpus called Priest Lumber.  They sold a lot of redwood patio furniture and my father was one of the carpenters they employed to make the furniture.  He at some point made a wooden file box from redwood 1/2 inch thick and 12 inches wide.  You would be hard pressed to find redwood of this size and type today.  Knot free and and after over 60 years still warp free.  However the box had seen its better days so I decided to cut it up and make a keep sake for family members from it.  So that is where the base crosses came from.

On one of the crosses I used cedar salvaged from a small cedar chest that had belonged to my mother as well as an old piece of costume jewelery that she had for as long as I can remember I believe she got it in 1965 when we visited my fathers mother in California.

One of the crosses was kept simple and I added a forged iron cross to it and finished it in a manner similar to the way my father finished untold thousands of plaster pieces over the years (but that is another hobby and another story).  High gloss lacquer.

The other has a middle cross made of poplar and a small top cross of turquoseite (commonly sold for affordable turquoise jewelry it however is not real turquoise).  Turquoise was a particular favorite of my mother.  The poplar was used because of the color variation from cream to green I found in that piece.

Cross 1


Cross 2


Cross 3



Hope all is well with you.

Go carve something!

Bruce

Thanksgiving Pilgrim Candle Holders

A friend asked me to come up with some thanksgiving candle holders made out of the antique spools I like to carve.  These make Ideal candle holders and for the most part they are made of maple and carve well.  There are some minor splintering problems on some due to age.

I merged a number of ideas into these pilgrims sticking to a pretty traditional theme and colors.  These were carved using a method called intaglio.  The figures are carved down but the background is left alone.



These old spools have a hole at the top that make them perfect candle holders.  Quite a nifty re-purposing if I do say so my self.

Hope all is well with you.

Go carve something!

Bruce