at THIS!
;
So, aside from doing a little pressure flaking and notching on some small points I had almost finished already, I have not knapped since August or September of last year. I have picked up some bifaces and half-finished points and theorized about how I should attack problem areas and finish them, and I have been watching knapping vids, but I have not actually beaten on rock...and I think stepping back and taking a break has helped.
I got both of these points to this stage in less than an hour, and I'm really pleased with my progress on them. That said, I've obviously got two problem with what I'm doing that need to be overcome somehow.
The first problem is creating nasty step fractures that I can't remove with an expanding flake from the near side. This may just be the way these two stones set up, but the steps were nearly identical on both points. If I can figure out how to avoid getting these steps when getting to this point, problem 2 is a moot issue. SInce I know I will not be able to avoid this first problem entirely...
Problem 2. I have no problems eliminating step fractures that are not parallel to the edge of the piece. I can even remove the steps that are parallel to the edge of the piece if they are near enough to the corners or base that I can attack them from there, but when I get a step that is parallel to the edge of the piece and have to attack it from the opposite edge...sending a flake well across the centerline, this keeps happening. On both of these points, I set up a relatively strong platform below centerline (on the smaller pt for sure) and had steady convexity from the platform to the step. On both strikes with indirect percussion, the flake eliminated the step fracture for the most part, but the pieces shock-snapped.
How do I fix this? Should my platform be lower below cenerline? Should I create a weaker platform? Should I give up some width and try to get closer to the step? What do you think the best strategy is to stop doing what I'm doing while eliminating the step while not compounding the problem? Heck, am I tying to go too thin? I know the enemy of good is better, but I really want to be able to make super thin points...and somewhat thin points have to come before super thin.
I'm happy with my progress, but my family is really tired of hearing me yell "doooooooh! %$^#!," and I'd really like to get a nice, larger point finished.
Thanks for any input and advice.