Hi, kids. There was an unlooked for delay when my last shipment of bone scales got lost somewhere in transit. The vendor I have been dealing with is great, and replaced the shipment for free, and that kind of trust and service is awesome in any company.
The inlaying went well, actually very very well. Maybe it was a reward for rescuing a little lost dog recently, or for having to wait so long for the bone to come, or just because sometimes things just go well. It is a gift I don’t like to analyze too much
Standards chiseling and careful wood removal is all it takes. The last shot is the glue up using the giant rubber bands I made from a bike inner tube. Next step tomorrow is to shape the rest of the tiller, making it much narrower as it sweeps back toward the butt, and then I will be capping the butt with more bone, as well as decorative bone inlay around the tickler inlet area.
You may or may not notice that the brittleness of the black walnut did sort of decide in some ways the shape of the bone pieces. I had wanted to have it curve in quicker after getting past the lock area, but the splintery areas had to be removed, and so I ended up having it the way it is now. This is not to say it is necessarily a bad thing, but the materials and how they acted did partially dictate the final design. This is something to keep in mind for next time.
The glueup is 2 part epoxy, and the use of those big homemade rubber bands. They work great.
Finally, you can see Davenport standing by as usual. She loves having her picture taken, and so here she is. You can also barely see the Xmas tree is still up. I was shooting for keeping it up until May or June, but others think otherwise, so it will go down maybe in March or possibly April. Ho ho ho.
Be seeing you (quick, what TV show was that phrase from?),
Dane