Friday, December 3, 2010

Bad at this

I really couldn't be worse at updating this thing could I?

But when things are just going along it bores me to post about it and I assume it bores everyone else too.  Maybe I am wrong and I should post everything that happens. Either way here is a summary of the last 3 months. Sold some stuff, made some stuff, finished a customer's gun stock. Had problems welding the brass butt plate, got mad and had a machine shop do it for an extortionate  amount- thus killing any profit margin.

The only thing of note is that I finished an engraved copper bracelet and gave it to my daughter for her 12th birthday. Frog. I will be working on various silver and copper jewelry over the next month. Maybe, if you are real lucky and stuff, I will take a picture and post it. Don't hold your breath.

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Thunderbird hunts Orca and the Art Walk

It is finished and I think I like the painted version. I liked  plain wood as well. I started painting it during the Shady Cove Art Walk a few weekends ago, and finished it tonight.  (If you want a wall panel without paint, just look a couple posts down. It will look about like that.) I had a nice old couple insist I should not paint it, and more importantly the Hawaiian Ice guy, but it just was not designed to be plain wood; so in this case I decided to go with my original idea. Of course, had they offered to buy it I would have sold it unpainted.

I have some Port Orford Cedar left, I am thinking of making a long story panel, or a three parter. Maybe morning, noon and evening suns or something-- done in just lightly stained wood.














The show was a blast, but it was too hot! 103 on Saturday and 99 on Sunday. No way I am going to do that again- the wood just can't take it. Too bad :(   On another positive note, it was our 17th anniversary. We had a lot of fun hanging out  in our 1960 Shasta trailer, selling art by the river. I sure do like my wife.







I may do the Sisters Harvest Faire in October- it sounds like a lot of fun. I dig these outdoor festivals.

More photos coming soon!

Many of you have asked for more photos to be available online- both new stuff and old stuff- I am going to attempt to set up a scrolling account through Flickr or DeviantArt. We shall see how it goes...

I finished painting the Thunderbird wall panel. I will add it to the feed if I can figure it out.


EDIT: I have managed to get Flickr working. Most of the slideshow is grabbed out of facebook so not much new. Tonight I will go crazy, including pictures of the wall panel. I need to experiement with the copper dagger as far as photos go, the ones I have taken so far do not look good at all.

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Dragonfly Sun Mask: mark II and new wall panel

This is the finished product, finally. It took me a while to finish because a) I got busy working on other things due to the fact that b) I spilled the off white paint I mixed to just the right tone, and I was worried I wouldn't be able to match the whites if there wasn't enough to finish left in the bottom of the jar. Finally I gave up the avoidance technique, and tried to salvage the approximately two tablespoons of paint that was left. I added a little water and hoped the thin paint would cover adequately. For once I was lucky. It would have added hours of time to have to repaint all of the white to match tones. Because this mask does not include salmon with abalone eyes around the rim, I decided to do a little more elaborate painting on the frog. I think it would have been to busy and cluttered had I done that on "Mark I."



















On to the wall panel. Typically when I have done wall panels in teh past, I have attempted to tell a story. In this one, not so much. It just struck me one day that it was quite interesting that a Thunderbird likes to snack on Killer Whales the way they like to snack on seals. I am really liking this one. I am not sure if I am going to paint it yet or leave it natural wood. I think I will just live with it for a few more days before I decide.
I finished the copper dagger. My opinion of it is "meh." I started the turtle bowl too. I will post pics next time.

Thursday, June 24, 2010

Murals!

I am working on some tennis backboard murals for our city parks, with the delightful help of the local Campfire USA kids. The backboards themselves are in pretty bad shape, and required quite a bit of prep work. They are 10'x6' and the wood is cracking and peeling off. Not the best surface, but what the heck.
This is the first of three.










And.. after the initial stages:




I decided to go with a killer whale design on this one. I drew out the basic picture then did a "paint by color code" chart for the kids. They whipped out the initial painting pretty quick.











Here is the "finished" product.













I then spent some time cleaning it up, adding a little detail, and covering it with a nice layer of spar varnish, what with the tennis balls to be smacked against it.

Here it is finished. It has yet to be mounted at the tennis courts.
Next mural will be a frog eating a bug.

Thursday, April 1, 2010

I have been busy

But not in a "busy doing art" kind of way, but a "work/get girls ready for Taiwan/ sleep" kind of way. There, that is my excuse. I have made little progress in the last month.
Here are a couple pictures- The Dragonfly is about half painted. THe dark blob in the lower corner is Olive the Lab, she must be in all photos.



Rather than just mention the copper dagger here is a picture of the blade. Note the patina. Secret formula. :)



I will be by myself for almost three weeks while my family is overseas. I have big plans for finishing my current projects and starting a couple new ones.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Yes I have been working

But not too much to show for it yet. I was able to get some red cedar bark for the many beaked hamatsa, I will be glad to see it completed. I broke the jaw on the upper beak at the show though, bummer.

I should have the copper dagger and the dragonfly finished within another week or so, I will post pics then.

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Ready as I am going to get

So, no copper dagger. Just ran out of time. The blade is finished, but the handle requires too much work to finish at the show. Oh well.
The dragonfly sun mask is ready to be painted, but I will do that at the show. Thanks to Bayley and Channing for helping me sand!
The many beaked Hamatsa raven is painted. All it requires is a little touch up, and the hair and cedar bark. Oh yeah, and the little skulls dangling. I will carve those up at the show, out of alder probably, and attach them to the hair.


No turtle bowl. Oh well, I will just do that with the dagger when I get home.
Instead of the turtle bowl, I will be doing a panel sculpture of Thunderbird attacking lunch, in this case a killer whale, while the sun looks on. I will be using a technique by one of my favorite deceased artists, and a good friend of my Uncle's, Lelooska. He did a fantastic small sculpture about 15 years ago called "Puffins on a Rock." I am going to copy his use of wavy water in that piece, to an extent.

Sunday, February 21, 2010

with white paint.

Notice the sad, neglected Colnago.

1 day left

And I have a hell of a lot of painting to do.

Bird, assembled, pre-paint:




Dragonfly sun mask, partially sanded:




Probably another 12 hours to go.

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Progress, but...

I only have 4 days of carving and one day of painting to go. So why am I typing this instead of working feverishly? Because that's how I roll. Let's see... Here is what I still need to do:

For Hamatsa many beaked raven:
1. sand and surface- 4 hours
2. pin and install rope pulls for all moving beaks- 4 hours
3. paint- 4 hours
4. Hair and cedar bark- 2 hours
14 hours minimum!


For Dragonfly sun:
1. cut out and install 12 to 16 pieces of abalone shell- 4 hours
2. finish carving main head- 2 hours
3. finish carving backboard- 4 hours
4. sand and surface- 2 hours
5. paint- 3 hours
15 hours minimum! GAAHH!
Bad cellphone pic of offending party in process:


For copper dagger:
1. cut out and install 3 abalone inlays- 2 hours
2. finish carving head- 4 hours
3. surface and finish head- 2 hours
4. assemble blade, head, handle- 2 hours
11 hours!

Turtle bowl: I am going to work on and finish this piece at the show, so all I need to do is get it prepped.
1. shape bowl- 1 hr
2. fit pins for tail and head- 2 hrs
3 hrs.

grand total work time: 43 hours.
I will be lucky to finish. I need to sleep and work full time in there somewhere.

Thursday, February 4, 2010

Big Bird (in progress)

It has six beaks, 5 of which are articulated. The main beak and the top beak will operate together, while the two rear and the bottom beaks will work together on a separate drawstring. I am seriously debating having the two small birds face forward, flanking the larger top bird, face the top bird to the rear, and make a crooked beak to replace it facing forward.... if that makes any sense. In this picture you can only just see the head of one of the smaller birds facing towards the rear.
The main bird will also have ears. If you have never seen a mask like this that probably sounds odd, but trust me it works. I can't get my hands on any good cedar bark so I will probably have to use horse hair, rope and raffia to finish it off.
The top bird will probably also have his own set of ears. I am concerned the lower beak might be a little overpoweringly large, but what the hell. The little guy sitting in front is actually the main bird's tongue.

I have also decided what I will work on during the show: A loggerhead tortoise bowl with a lid. The lid will have hitchhikers, perhaps dogfish woman and an octopus.

After this show, I plan one more mostly N.W. Coast style piece. It is something I have been wanting to do for a while. It is a very large sun mask, about six feet in diameter. It will be amusing. I don't want to give it away just yet. It is not traditional, but it still fits the N.W. Coast "playbook" for lack of a better term. After that, I plan to do a couple surreal/abstract pieces.

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Like always, it's down to the wire

Just like old times, it's a last minute rush!

I have my first major show in 14 years coming up, February 22-26th. I had plans for about 12 pieces. It is down to six. It would have been nine, but three pieces already sold. They will be a nice six, if my equipment does not fail me. (My restored 1926 bandsaw has been experiencing some age related issues lately...)

The pieces include e a fully articulated many-beaked hamatsa raven (not a crooked beak- this one is fairly non-standard, perhaps even "un-authentic" to some). It has six independently moving beaks, and is about 50" long, 30" high. I am running behind on it though; it is a fairly complicated mechanical piece, so I expect I will be working on it down to the wire.

I was going to do a pipe using my last piece of petrified ivory mastodon tusk, but the remnants I have left are just not quite big enough to do the whole thing and the bowl (note- this type of ivory is legally obtainable, and should in no way be confused with elephant ivory). The cost for petrified ivory is high, so I am going to use the scrap I have for the handle of a copper dagger. The copper dagger blade is 14" long, and pounded out on an anvil. I then "carve" it into shape. It is in the aging process now, using a proprietary method involving turkey shit and beer. The knife handle will be a shark with a hitchhiking octopus.

I am also making a smaller version of the dragonfly sun mask (my avatar). Rather than a 6' diameter monstrosity, it will be a much smaller 24" inches wide, 27" high. I am using port orford cedar for the backboard, and incense cedar for the mask portion.

I hope to have time for one more major piece: a moon transformation mask. I have not idea what I will do here yet. But I have about 3 weeks to do it all.
So in total:
Small bowl: completed
Wise old woman: completed
many beaked hamatsa: in progress
copper dagger: in progress
dragonfly sun mask: just started
moon transformation mask: not started

Last, I need something to work on during the show. I have no idea yet what that will be.