Individually Styled and
Crafted
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would give the right sense and be
carve-able. The photo to the right shows me doing some initial jointing
(making an edge straight) of one of the pieces of cherry. After
jointing an edge and face, cutting the width to size and planing to
thickness (planing is like jointing, but it uses a rotating wide
"knife" blade to thickness the wood and make the faces parallel), I
clamped all the pieces together with spacers between and readied them
for the kiln. At that point the moisture content of the wood was 7
percent. The photo to the left shows the clamped stacks for the candle
stand and the Cross stand ready to go. Next I concentrated on the base
pieces of the stands, the larger square boxes that actually contact the
floor. Here, again, I had to consider wood movement with changing
humidity, so I glued pieces of wood together like a butcher block so
that if
they changed moisture content they would
not break apart. Also, that kind of construction gives nice faces on
all four sides of the bases
and shows the end grain on the top face,
just as in the upright parts of the stands. I glued the wood together
for these bases using a very stiff glue called Unibond 800, which
forms a rock hard joint that will not "creep". Creep is
when a glue gives a little and allows the wood pieces to slightly
misalign, and is a characteristic of most carpenter type glues.
Normally, creep is not a big deal, but if you are trying to keep a
lamination nice and smooth, you don't want creep. Veneering is usually
done with something like Unibond 800 (which was specifically formulated
for veneer work) because if a piece of glued veneer shifts on it's
substrate (that's creep), it can open gaps between adjoining pieces of
veneer -- and that's bad! The photo to the right shows me applying the
Unibond 800 with a roller, and the photo to the left shows the
completed bases clamped up and sitting in the sun to cure. Finally, I
rough cut the stock for the Cross, and then I put everything into the
kiln to dry some more. It will take a week or so of sun to do the
trick, and I got a couple of sunny days last week, but it's been
raining for two days and is supposed to rain again, tomorrow, so I'm
not holding my breath! I guess good things are worth waiting for!
to dry wood for its intended locale is
so you can get rid of all the twisting and bowing before the wood goes
into the furniture), and used the horizontal drum sander to prepare the
faces for gluing. Using the same glue and technique as in laying up the
laminates for the bases, I glued the two uprights together. This was
actually quite a massive gluing, and it sounds easier to do than it
was. When gluing such broad surfaces, it is essential that each board
be flat with both faces 100% parallel, and that takes some time and
work. But the glue-up went well, and in the photo to the right you can
see one of the uprights clamped up. The temperature was 75 degrees in
the shop, and Unibond 800 requires a minimum clamp time of 3 hours at
that temperature, so I left the first upright clamped for 6 hours
before unclamping it so I could do the glue-up on the second upright.
If
you saw my shop you would say that I have
a LOT of clamps, but I have found that I can always use some more! One
thing I did to the second upright, which was the one for the
Processional Cross, was to cut a slot for the Cross staff to be planted
into. That slot was to be 1-1/2" square and 12" deep, right in the
center of the top of the stand and I did not have any tools to make
such an excavation. My solution was to cut the slot out of the boards
that would be laminated before doing the gluing. I used a 5/8" diameter
flat bottom straight cutting router bit in the router table to cut a
series of three grooves 12" long in the appropriate boards. Then,
during the glue-up all I had to do was align the slots. The photo to
the left shows the router table at work making the slots. Later, after
I glue up the parts I will show a photo of the finished slot for the
staff. Stay tuned!
through the blank, then rotate the blank
90 degrees, align it as well as I could and take another cut. I
repeated this for all four sides, then cut the center with a hand saw
(the radial arm saw cut left a 1-1/2" area in the center uncut). This
worked pretty well, and I had to use a low angle block plane to fine
tune only a little.
With the ends squared, I next cut the
tapers on the sides. To do this, I scribed lines for the cuts and used
the bandsaw to do the cutting, as shown in the photo to right. This was
successful in making rough tapers, but I needed to clean up the bandsaw
marks, so I turned to the jointer. Hefting the blanks onto the jointer
bed, I successively took shallow cuts from the faces, rotating the
blanks 90 degrees with each cut. After a short time, all the saw marks
were removed and the blanks were still square in cross section. The
photo to left shows the jointer in action. After the tapers were cut
and smoothed, I could cut the round overs on the edges of all the
parts. To do this I used a round over bit in my router table and made
quick work of the bulk removal. Later I will clean up everything with a
hand plane, scraper, and sandpaper. For now, I'm going for the rough
shapes.

bring out the grain - I could still see
the proportions. I was relieved to see that the proportions looked just
like the computer drawings I had made; a photo of the stand with the
pipe 'candle' is shown to right. I think that my problem
was that I was making both the candle stand and the Cross stand at the
same time, and the Cross stand is smaller and lighter than the
candle stand. The differences were very apparent when I was working
them together; for your benefit I took a shot with the two together so
you could see what I mean. That photo is to left, but bear in mind that
the staff and Cross are yet to be added, which will give the Cross
stand an entirely different look. Also, I mentioned earlier that I
would show a photo of the slot I made in the Cross base, to hold the
staff, and that shot is also to the left. Please ignore the dark marks
- they are burn marks from the router bit caused because I was moving
the stock slowly while cutting. These marks will easily be removed with
a few strokes of a block plane.

fish, as well. I think the effect was
pretty good, so I was ready to start on the real stand. The first step
in the
carving was to outline the 'waves' with a
1/2" bench chisel and then start to carve the step that will give the
wave depth. The photo to right shows this first outlining step. In that
photo, which was actually taken while working on the second side (the
design was to go around all four sides), you can see the finished work
on the first side and see exactly what I was doing. With the outlining
done, I used a #3 sweep gouge to cut back a bevel against the vertical
cut. With the bevel depth sufficient to really see the waves, I next
smoothed the face of each wave with a #7 sweep gouge, giving it a
little texture. The photo to the left shows that carving. By the end of
the day, I had used muscles I had not used in a long time, so I may
require a day or two at another project before I continue!

nicely, and the photo to the left shows
the finished carving. I used a series of gouges to do that, as briefly
discussed above, and you can clearly see the texture in the waves
produced by the #7 sweep gouge. However, the fish symbol does not stand
out as much as I would like. Now, the alter pieces at the
Church use copper accents, so I'm experimenting. The photo to right
shows my sample practice piece with the first two letters and part of
the fish painted in copper paint. You will have to enlarge the photo to
get the effect, and I think that might just be the accent needed to set
off the piece. I'll have to think about that. Anyway, next challenge is
carving the stand for the Processional Cross. That will get a Crown of
Thorns carving and the letters 'IHS'. And the wood for the cross itself
is still in the kiln - it's been quite cloudy and rainy on the east
coast, and the wood it thick. Both spell slow drying.



piece was to be a bit complex, so I set
to preparing the stock for the joinery. I trued and dimensioned the
parts using the jointer, planer, and radial arm saw, then drew the
joint pattern on the parts. Thickness marking gauges, which are guides
with sharp blades make crisp markings for these joints; a pencil line
is too thick to cut with a saw and get a tight joint - the idea is to
"split" the scored mark with a saw for an exact fit. The photo to the
right shows the finished
joint so you can see where I was headed. You can see the the horizontal
parts overlap each side of a cutout on the vertical part, sort of an
open mortise and tenon joint,
but cut at a miter to form an 'X'
pattern
in the center of the joint. Starting with the horizontal parts, I used
my tenoning jig on the table saw to cut a slot on the
end of each arm. I did not take a photo of this actual operation, but
the photo at left shows the use of the tenon jig for another project, so you can get the
idea of how it works. Since this was to
be a wide tenon, I cut only each cheek of the tenon. To remove the
waste between the cuts, I
drilled holes across the waste piece, as shown at right, so the bulk of
the waste would simply fall out. Then I used a chisel with a guide block to pare the bottom
of the tenon flat, as shown at left. This method was quicker than making
multiple cuts on the tenon jig, and I did not want to use
a dado blade to make the wide cut for a
number of technical reasons. Once the tenon was cut, I used
the compound sliding miter saw to cut a 45 degree angle on each side of
the tenon, as shown at right. That completed work on the arms, but now I had to work the
vertical piece. Using a Japanese crosscut saw I carefully cut the mating
sides of the joint on the vertical piece, as shown at left.
Then, using the drill press again I drilled out most
of the waste. Using a chisel I cleaned up the sides and cheeks
of the tenon and carefully fit the pieces together, paring as
necessary to get a
tight fit. Once the joint was done, I
cut all pieces exactly to length and chamfered the edges before
assembly. The photo to the right shows me chamfering
the edges with a 45 degree bevel bit in the router table. With the
chamfers cut, I used a plane to smooth all surfaces to a shimmering
finish and did light sanding before applying shellac polish to the
inside faces. Then I glue the joint together.
nice touch to the overall look. To cut
the butterfly mortises, I first cut the butterflies from walnut stock using the bandsaw,
as shown at right. With a chunk
of walnut fashioned into the bow tie
shape, I simply sliced off four half inch thick sections. Then I
cleaned up the bandsaw blade marks using a chisel. I then
scribed the shape of the butterflies on the Cross and then drilled out
the wasted to a depth of a little more than one-quarter inch. I
chiseled the mortises to the scribe line and made sure the bottoms were
flat, as shown at left. Then I fit the butterflies to make a Greek
Cross shape. The horizontal butterfly was the full bow tie shape, and
the vertical butterfly was simply the top and bottom pieces cut to fit
into the remaining mortise. The nails were installed similarly. Once
the glue was dry on the inserts, I carefully pared the inserts t
achieve an angular "chiseled" look, as shown at right. The final step
was to cut and fit the staff for the Cross. I used white oak and
relieved the sharp edges and finished it nicely so it would have a nice
feel for the person carrying it. I was intending to make the staff
something that could be assembled to the Cross once inside the Church
in Utah, saving on shipping a little bit, but I found that it was a
tough job to get the Cross to sit EXACTLY collinear with the staff. At
that point I knew I had to assemble and glue the two in the shop to get
them perfectly aligned. Here are all the finished pieces!




crate the pieces for safe shipment to
Utah. Would the shipper lose the crates or run a fork lift through
them? Would the finish scuff after 3000 miles of jolting along the highways? Would the
client like them as much in person as from the photos I sent? These
were some of the issues that swirled through my head as I constructed
the most substantial crates I could, balancing shipping costs against
safety. I wish I had taken the time to photograph the insides of the
crates, but the full day I spent making them was intense. It felt like
I was constructing caskets, and I was none too happy to lay the pieces to rest
within the custom fit cradles within the crates. No bubble wrap or
shipping peanuts here! In fact, the pieces fit so snuggly inside that
the folks in Utah may have choice words for me when they have to remove
them! But there will be no damage - I'm justifiably optimistic about
that. So here's a photo of the crated work, sitting in my shop while I
wait for my insurance company to write the rider to cover the work in
transit. Bon voyage, dear friends ... enjoy your new home, and one day
I will visit when you least expect it!