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Carving Spoons

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This manual provides an introduction to the fascinating world of carved spoons. Carving basics are covered, including selecting tools and materials, transferring patterns, sanding, and finishing. Two progressive projects introduce basic and intermediate carving techniques. An additional 45 patterns provide dozens of mix-and-match designs. Introductions to the history of Welsh and Scandinavian spoon carving provide a rich context for this historical craft.

82 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1997

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Shirley Adler

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Serge Pierro.
Author 1 book49 followers
December 8, 2018
With the burgeoning renaissance of spoon carving currently taking place, it should come as no surprise that books of recent times are starting to be looked at again, and sometimes in a new light. "Carving Spoons" is one such book. Although it tends to focus on Welsh Love Spoons, there is other information pertinent to regular spoon carving.

The history of Welsh Love Spoons was quite interesting and was perhaps the highlight of the book. The Chapters focused on spoon carving and specifically the Welsh variety.

The Carving your first spoon chapter had some odd recommendations that now seem dated, as today's carver focuses on cutting blanks with an axe and not a band saw. Though there is nothing inherently wrong with using a band saw, it does take a bit away from the whole "by hand" methodology that carvers seem to favor today. There was also the use of drilling a hole in the bowl of the spoon to a predetermined depth as a reference as to how low to carve the inside of the bowl. I had never seen this before, and although it is interesting, I don't think that this would be recommended today.

Published in 2003, the information is solid, with a large variety of top view patterns for those looking for some inspiration. But, 15 years later the techniques and general advice seem a bit dated and not of the level of depth that has become expected in this day in age. Topics such as finishing seem to be far too general and not slanted towards actual spoon usage, but towards displaying the spoons, which makes some sense as the book is focused on the aspects of Welsh Love Spoon carving.

The book has some excellent photos and instruction, but you should consider this as a supplement to other books and not a primary tome. If the subject matter is of interest to you, then this would be a book worth reading, if only for the patterns themselves. If you are more interested in spoon carving in general, then there are better books on the subject.
Profile Image for Felicity Fields.
452 reviews2 followers
November 14, 2020
I'm brand-new to woodcarving and still in the "read everything about it" stage. This book had excellent "how to" pictures of the carving process, patterns for several decorative spoons, and a short but interesting intro to the different styles

If one already had some experience carving, this book would be excellent. As a raw beginner, I found the explanations lacking in which took to use or how to do a particular cut.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews

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