i failed to follow my own advice. was going to try "western" style for the first time. didn't prepare a drawing.without a drawing, disaster soon follows !
no , this stuff must have been in the 400 series. it cut very easily. i took the foto, if you want to call it a foto, with a canon powershot. the camera is good, i'm a lousy photographer.
Actually, Monk, it looks pretty good to me, especially for a first try at western style without a drawing. Where did you get the Winchester knife, and was it exepensive?
I will say stainless is not the most fun to bright cut. A couple things to keep in mind, one, leave space between your backbone and the start of the bright cut (have a look at the bright cut tutorial I did a while back and you will see what I mean), and second avoid running your leaves in opposite directions, as you did in the beginning of your design. Your first attempt was much better than my first. Hopefully we will see some more. Good luck, Brian
i doubt that the great engravers of old had to draw what was already in their head, it was practiced there no doubt, but, they had cut such a peice, many times before. anyone would love to be the proud owner of such a nice folder.
Monk, I think it's great! If I saw that in a knife store, I'd ask to look it over! I anticipate such projects only getting better over time. As for pre-designing, I have found the approach of "vocabulary" very useful, where you have a set of elements you can combine like verbs, nouns and silence. If you think of these pieces as interchangeable, it allows you to approach design challenges based on the shape of the canvas. They can also be "sized to fit" -- which allows you to work on any size of project with the same level of fluency and comfort.
I hope this makes sense. It's hard for me because I have the design part pretty well down, but when it comes to steel, my work looks like a one-armed monkey got access to a screwdriver.
your sax work is so exceptional, if you're a bit shy with steel- i'm sure we all can forgive that. the only real difference is maybe color and , well a difference in surface hardness. you're right about the design elements. first i must learn the cuts, which really are far more simple than they first appear. that's a bit of practice. then comes the real challenge, at least for me- to learn an entire new "language" if you will, of designing in the western tradition. i think that will take quite a bit of time. i'm starting to pay way more attention to the western work of the forum members.