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BONE GALLERIES
The
few remaining bone carvings I still have from my years as a
professional carver. Most pieces were done in beef bone with
some
whale bone. Design elements of these earlier days can be seen
in
my current stone designs. In New Zealand, wearing
bone
pendants is very much a cultural thing, the local art form having it's
beginings in the Maori culture.
A
surprisingly
durable material, it takes detail nicely. The bulk
of my
designs are originals that reflect traditional art forms of NZ, many
having their roots in the land, forest, and
sea.
There are three carved whales teeth included. The mounted
winged
dragon along with the celtic style dragon are made from whale bone.
It
was always
interesting how pieces effect different people and when
purchasing, it was invariably the first piece that "caught"
the
attention which sold. Although there are many "qualities" of
bone
carving to be found it is one "art form" where the look has
little to do with anything, it is the "FEEL" of the work that
is
the important factor, something only the owner truly
understands.
Very personal.
Click
the images for bigger versions.


BONE
CARVING TIPS
THE BONE:
This day and age there is a scarcity of the New
Zealand
traditional bone for carving...... jawbone from the Sperm Whale, and
that at least is a pleasing thing with todays supplies being that from
stranded whales only, dead ones I might add. It is an
intersting
bone to carve, quite grainy really and not always usefull for really
fine work, however for most carvers that is irrelavent, it has "mana".
Carvings
these
days are done out of beef bone and similar, the leg bones
primarily, the older and bigger the beast the thicker the bone. This is
the easiest way I have found of preparing it:
#
Take your fresh leg bone remove the ends far enough down to avoid the
honeycomb texture bone inside.
#
Extract the marrow.
#
Place the bones in a pot of water with a generous dollop of dishwashing
liquid (to break down the fat).
#
Simmer gently until the meat scraps on the outside are cooked and
remove easily.
#
Drain, cool and scrape clean, remove any honeycomb bone left inside,
leave to dry, then cut to size.
What
you are
aiming for with this is to remove any fat and meat without destroying
the "life" in the bone, and still have it come up white. Most
of
the problems arise from fat getting into the structure of the bone so
don't let it get there in the first instance......... Bone that is worn
a lot will eventually absorb body oils giving it the yellow translucent
look, my view is that it's better yours than of some cattlebeast.
THE CARVING:
At best I can only give a few suggestions and
guidelines so this is how I go about it....
#
Bone in hand I draw my design on the bone as accurately as I can.
#
Then cut it out with a very fine bladed coping saw, you can get blades
from jeweller supplies.
#
I
support the bone on a small wooden extension out from my work bench
this way I can hold the bone steady on both sides of the cut.

The fine blades can break easily unless the the bone is well supported.
To remove interior cutouts, drill a hole and thread the blade through.
What you are aiming for is to remove as much bone as possible to save
having to grind it off later, and give yourself a fairly accurate form
to carve to, so the more skillfull at this point the easier it is later.
Now you have defined your shape it is simply a matter of
shaping................ sounds easy doesn't it. basically you remove
the stuff that obviously shouldn't be there, working all over the piece
to retain a sense of form. You can use gravers, files, Dremels, drills,
grinding stones, whatever works for you. High speed rotary
tools
are the go these days and certainly speed things. When you
have
ground, carved or removed as much bone as possible then it is down to
various grades of sandpaper, I usually finish with 100 grit and found
garnet paper was just fine. I cut it in to strips about 2cm
wide
which made it reasonably flexible and you wasted little.
Final Polish: I
used a cotton buff wheel and a stick of jewellers metal
polish......... must be the white version otherwise it will stain the
bone.
Not a lot to it really....
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