Filed under: chess

Now you see it, now you don't

I was going to talk about the "bad breath" wood this time but upon reflection I have decided that topic stinks!  So in brief, the wood is Russian Olive and it stinks in so many ways. First it's a messy and dirty tree with nasty thorns.  Second it is a water sucker, and Third, it smells like cat pee when you work it.  It does have one redeeming quality however, it is pretty nice looking when all finished up.  Here is a website that has many pictures of stuff made from it. Some pretty cool stuff.

You will want to keep your distance from all the woodworkers however, as they will now and forever smell of cat pee.  Not a good marketing strategy I think.  Ok, so they don't smell like cat pee any more, but they did.  Give me scrub oak...it smells of a whiskey barrel.

The video here attached shows how Game On is beginning to take shape.  With much effort, tedium and persistence, a design gradually becomes a tangible piece of...well...Art.  There is not another one like it that I have ever seen or heard of and it is doubtful it will ever be mass produced.  What you see here are the stages of a piece that excite me.  You start off with some graphite and a lot of eraser marks on a few pieces of paper.  Then you gather the raw material, from the forest in this case.  Some of it you mill into planks that are then "Stickered" and left to air dry for months (slow is better me thinks) or kiln dry for days.  Then you make the parts to make other parts to make other parts to eventually combine the parts to make the sum of the parts and voila! you now have something that looks like part of your original sketch, and it is good.  Sometimes very good.  Sometimes not so good, which is very bad but in this case it was very good.

At these times, I often think of the line in Young Frankenstein where Gene Wilder (aka Dr. "roll in da hay" Fronkensteen) says, "It's  a-l-i-v-e!"

So...now you are beginning to "see it" where as before you did not.

This is Dan Rieple, Believe it.

 

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One on One - the core and the veneers are joined

You will now see the oyster veneer skin laminated to the core (which was made weeks prior) in the mold which was made especially for this shape.  The underside skin of spalted scrub oak veneer is being laminated at the same time but we didn't film it.  The adhesive, urea resin, is somewhat toxic in the resinous state but is quite inert once it has cured.  It gets very hard, not unlike epoxy, and adheres very well to wood.  A piece of high pressure laminate (Formica) is used as a hard flat face to push the veneer down flat.

One thing that is not noticeable with the mold but adds a nice subtle aspect, is that it is not only a volute like curve , but also has a mild helical turn so that it flairs open slightly at the front.  Just a detail that adds a bit more movement to the piece. 

 

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Oyster Veneer - bringing the 17th century into the 21st

Oyster Veneering was a technique used to embelish exquisite furnishings in the 17th Century. The name was given due to the resemblance of cross cut wafers to a whole oyster shell. It is a labor intensive procedure even with our modern methods but the finished product is well worth the time and effort.

In this video, you will see the process I use in the fabrication of the oyster pieces being joined together to create the veneer. The wafers start off at 3/16" thick and sanded to 1/16" once the wafer oysters are all joined together.

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N.B. No live oysters we eaten or harmed in anyway during the making of this film.

 

"Game On" the Piece and the Process

You may have seen my latest creation which I named "Game On". My sweet and most devoted fan, Susie, has made a series of videos that might be of interest. What a fantastic job she has done putting this together. I am always amazed at the things she figures out how to do and in such a short amount of time.

There are numerous clips so we won't put them all up at one time but here a couple to start things off. 

If you have't seen the album of photos, you can check that out on the Facebook Page.

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