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Posted

Hi all,

This is the largest picture that I carved so far. It is for a friend and I tried to draw his ideas..... not that easy, but it turned out well and he liked it a lot! :biggrin:

tims_bild_sm.jpg

Because of the flash the vikings are a bit blurry. I left it all natural, no finish or or other color.

Gesa

post-130-1172603194_thumb.jpg

  • Moderator
Posted

That's terrific work, Gesa. Lots of precise work in that design, and no wonder he loves it. It's very personal. I think leaving it natural was a good idea, too, because you might lose the detail by coloring it. It's going to darken over time (especially if exposed to sunlight) but a caution- it needs some kind of sealer or wax.

I speak from experience. I had a "raw" carving that was 10 years old or so, and when I watered a plant, I accidentally got it wet when the plant dripped. I can't get the spots out, and it is "ruined". It was raw leather, not even very sun burnished. (For whatever reason sun will seal some leather to where water will bead and run off...go figure?) Leather Balm with Atom Wax, Carnuba Cream, something along those lines maybe? I would hate to see that piece get splashed and spotted down the road. Thanks for sharing , Gesa, your work is something we all enjoy admiring.

Johanna

  • Members
Posted

Wow! very beautiful! :lol:

  • Members
Posted

Thank you all for your kind words!

I told him that it would be better to seal it a bit, but he is also saddlemaker and decided to let it like that......ok hes only 21 years old and thinks it will not happen that water will hit it......we will see.

Gesa

  • Members
Posted
That's terrific work, Gesa. Lots of precise work in that design, and no wonder he loves it. It's very personal. I think leaving it natural was a good idea, too, because you might lose the detail by coloring it. It's going to darken over time (especially if exposed to sunlight) but a caution- it needs some kind of sealer or wax.

I speak from experience. I had a "raw" carving that was 10 years old or so, and when I watered a plant, I accidentally got it wet when the plant dripped. I can't get the spots out, and it is "ruined". It was raw leather, not even very sun burnished. (For whatever reason sun will seal some leather to where water will bead and run off...go figure?) Leather Balm with Atom Wax, Carnuba Cream, something along those lines maybe? I would hate to see that piece get splashed and spotted down the road. Thanks for sharing , Gesa, your work is something we all enjoy admiring.

Johanna

I was under the impression that you couldn't use carnauba cream on a carving because it would do strange things? Was I wrong?

  • Contributing Member
Posted

I ahve used it without any bad results... I like it because it gives it a matt finish instead of a gloss...

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