Dark Fox and Running Turtle, as Native Americans whittle-carved in Butternut wood are presented in this photographic gallery. Dark Fox is holding a spear while Running Turtle is holding a medicine staff and is wearing a blanket/robe like a shell covers a turtle. A picture is worth a thousand words and this gallery will speak for itself through these photographic image Read the rest of this entry »
Archive for June, 2025
A-B-C,s of Face Study
The A-B-C’s of face study for carving and other art endeavors is to be observant of the A-B-C’s on the human face. Study the random photo of four faces to see the A in the face on the side and bottom area under the nose. Look for the sideways B area of the eye brows and the eyes (glasses frame that area.) Look for the C curves of the ears, tip of nose, nostrils, chin, corners of the mouth and the cheek bone. Now you know the A-B-C”s of face study. Yogi Berra said, “You can observe a lots just by watching.” BEE OBSERVANT. For more, visit A-B-C,s Face Study
Dark Fox with a Spear and Running Turtle with a Medicine staff are eight-inch-tall carvings in Butternut wood carved in the Whittle-Carving style of using only knives in the carving process. The photographic journey will present the progressive development of the Whittle-Carving of each Native American figure with brief descriptive notations of the process.
“Woodcarving is the journey more than the destination,” which means it is the process of doing the carving project that gives the greatest enjoyment rather than the finished carving as the destination. During this journey there are tried and true signposts that give direction to the process of the journey. The two carving projects that are the backdrop focus of this discussion are two Indians, “Whittle-Carved” using knives to shape and detail Butternut wood blocks eight inches tall, two and three quarter inch thick and three and half inch wide.