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Everything posted by WayneG
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Thia is cut from rosewood hardwood flooring. Smooth on one side and crater like look on the other due to chipping while Forster biting the holes… started sanding the chip out areas to a point that was acceptable and bam thia is the show side… base is made from rosewood, mahogany and white oak. finished with tung oil and watco laquer love accidental design concepts that work!
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Thanks but it is being used. Something happens to it just make another!
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Thank you, finishing was a weakness that I have been working on!
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Cut this feather from the remains of a wooden boat mahogany, ebony from a luthier, and maple hardwood flooring and black walnut from a tree.finished with tung oil and poly. Complete with neoprene protective cover which is being repurposed. so much fun these staffs are
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ThanThaks, get ready to stop and have a lot of conversations and get a lot of WOW looks...
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King Of The Jungle, Lion Portrait (Video)
WayneG replied to artisanpirate's topic in Bragging Rights
stunning, well done- 2 replies
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- artisan pirate
- youtuber
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The owl eyes are cut from concave mahogany form, it’s base is Rosewood hardwood flooring. Finished with Tung oil and Poly. The owl in flight side profile is cut from rosewood hardwood flooring, It’s base is maple sandwiched by mahogany. Finished with Tung oil and Watco laquer. Started making sculptures, so much fun.
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adding paint gives you so many options...your doing fab at it!
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amazing work!!!!!!
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Thanks @heppnerguy been making hiking staffs now since mid November 2025. Great fun sadly started making them out of necessity due to 5 torn tendons in my Shoulders, two torn meniscus all which wont heal and a chronic low back problem...At least now I can take any of the 95 that I have made thus far with me on airplanes now
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Thanks for the compliment Heppnerguy and others! Making a second one with a slightly different design with long hair...
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Years ago I scrolled these as necklace pendants. decided to cut a sculpture of same Cut from mahogany form which I am repurposing. 40 year old African ebony as a front on the base. finished with Tung oil and Watco gloss
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Black walnut, white oak, ebony, mahogany and maple. weight is 1.4 lbs eyeballs from my kids stuffy which was destroyed by our puppy. Haha
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Thanks for the kind comments folks! this piece was super fun
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Way too long since I posted. Had a flood years ago and stopped woodworking all together. picked it up recently again Honduran mahogany with wenge inlay. Mounted in a second species of mahogany. the feather was cut from an old bi fold door and the base was cut from an old bed frame. reduce, re use and recycle is my motto.
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Thanks, the pattern was found on Pinterest
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made some guitar pics last year for my son and his teacher out of mahogany my son likes his and his teacher has asked me to make more with different speices, they are fun little projects that you can take with you on the go say watching your kids sporting practice / games etc.
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Found this link which some may want to see and read. Looking at getting back into the scrolling game and saw this review below as I am likely to buy the king 22 today. I previously had the Excelsior which was the same saw as the excalibur. Seems the Excelsior has been re-branded in canada to King like they were in the USA. have owned hegner, dewalt, excelsior thus far. https://scrollsawer.com/product-review-its-good-to-be-king/
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thanks, it is one cool piece for sure, its about 14x11
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its not an easy cut for sure, obviously depending on what wood you use and how thick it is. The one I posted was 3/4 red oak and the grain really made the piece what it is. I have people come to my place and spend a significant amount of time with it. While not seeming to be tough it is harder than it looks especially when you get to the really intricate few that are really really small parts as they get to the twister, also the two corner pieces top right and bottom left should NOT be saved till last. You should cut those prior to cutting everything on either side. I almost lost one but saved it. I ended up using tape to keep a lot of them together while cutting the rest of the piece as they seemed like they could break anytime. I would think that if the material you use is too thin it may not be strong enough
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I cut this and many more like it in the past, fun and very challenging. This one was cut from oak flooring
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thank you sir
