Author Archive

1
Jan

GETTING STARTED ~ Again

   Posted by: woodbeecarver    in BEE Buzz

 

“The hardest part of any project is getting started,” is one of the Wood Bee Carver’s Rules used in his wood carving classes that originated in 1996 as part of a certificate presented to every class participant in subsequent carving classes until retirement from teaching at the end of 2019.  Besides being a souvenir for each student, it served as an introductory educational tool at the beginning of the class to review the philosophy of the Wood Bee Carver. The full statement is: The hardest part of any project is getting started, but once begun the creative juices flow,” which is discovered over and over again.

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27
Dec

CARVING an OLD-WORLD SANTA

   Posted by: woodbeecarver    in Carving Projects

Wood carving is always a partnership of imagination, skilled experience, challenge and whimsey to create an interpretation of a chosen subject.  It is the combined work of the head, heart and hands of the artist to create a fresh, contemporary and alive inanimate subject of art.

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25
Dec

CHRISTMAS 2023

   Posted by: woodbeecarver    in General

          

16
Dec

I’M BACK

   Posted by: woodbeecarver    in General

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The WOODBEECARVER blog has been under construction for a few days and it is now all fixed up with the generous help of my webmaster friend ED BLACK.  Ed encouraged me to launch this blog in 2008 and ever since has been the guiding force to keep it running with his technical genius and moving it to its next stage of existence.  The Half Pint Hobo carving in the photo is a most recent carving making this public debut announcement that this blog is up and running again with a shout saying, “I’M BACK.”

 

6
Nov

HALF PINT HOBOS

   Posted by: woodbeecarver    in Carving Projects, Hobos

 

 

HALF PINTS are three inch tall figures carved with the half inch scale equals one foot.  A six inch tall carving of a hobo would be to the scale of an inch equals a foot. These five Half Pint Hobos in this posting followed the basic design of previous hobos carved in the one inch scale. Half Pints are also characterized with having one monochrome coloring to emphasis that texture is color as seen in the facet surface texture of the carving process. Miniature carvings are typically categorized as no larger than fitting in a two inch cube.  Half Pints are slightly larger at three inch tall on a one inch square base making them just a little above being a true miniature.

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2
Oct

BUNKHOUSE BUCKAROOS

   Posted by: woodbeecarver    in Carving Projects

 

It has been said that “clothes make the man” and in the case of carving a western figure it is the outfit that immediately identifies the carving as that of a cowboy, cowpoke or buckaroo.  In this case where two cowpokes are being presented they are called “Bunkhouse Buckaroos” to add a little flare to their presentation.  Each were Whittle-Carved using only knives to shape a six-inch-tall by an inch and half square block of basswood.

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28
Aug

WHITTLE-CARVED Faces STUDY

   Posted by: woodbeecarver    in Tutorials

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27
Aug

OLD SALT and Half Pints

   Posted by: woodbeecarver    in Carving Projects

                  

A carving of a “Sea Captain” can also be called an “Old Salt” or a “Sea Man” (as a man of the sea) because their outfit is similar.  The carvings featured in this posting are a five inch Old Salt and four Half Pints, three inches tall, that are in the motif of an Old Salt or they both could be considered as Sea Captains.

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