Archie Woodworth
Elite Cafe Member
Had an interesting call today ... new customer wants me to engrave letters onto some ivory piano keys. Anyone have experience engraving ivory? Any special techniques necessary? Thanks in advance.
True.Correct in that scrim is not an exclusive method, it is however the more typical way, not sure how old that posted work is but in today's world many states have outlawed the sale of ivory in an attempt to save the elephants in Africa (made it more lucrative for the black market), this tends to make locating inexpensive material to practice on very difficult.
I'm one that tends to cut a practice design on like material before I commit to the final piece.
he said cow BONE, not horn. Camel bone is also a substitute to practice on and is available from most knifemakers supply.Cow horn is stringy has a grain base to tip
The ivory paper micarta is my preferred ivory substitute for now if I'm making a using knife, and if I'm not using mammoth. I've done some small test cuts with a graver, and I think it would engrave nicely. For higher end stuff (safe queens) mammoth or walrus still rule. I have some nice American Holly wood that's go a lot of potential as well, but haven't used it on a knife yet. Giraffe bone is nice and dense as well, but I've not used it.let us not forget ivory "flavored" micarta. knifemakers use it all the time.
I’ve done quite a bit of it, including on piano keys, which are pretty thin. I use a carbide point and black oil paint.Had an interesting call today ... new customer wants me to engrave letters onto some ivory piano keys. Anyone have experience engraving ivory? Any special techniques necessary? Thanks in advance.
Yes. It’s a duck call I carved a few years ago. I typically inlay ivory or antler and scrimshaw them. I have not tried a graver on ivory. I suspect it would work fine but you wouldn’t need any power because it’s so soft, relatively speaking.Hoolihan,
Is that top picture a duck call? Rolling Thunder Game Calls is located in our town and the owner lives across the field from me. They've got a pretty nice set-up and do fancy ones on special order, but I don't know what all that entails.