Wooden intarsia seahorse artwork, built from lacewood, cherry, mahogany, maple, walnut, mulberry, bloodwood, purpleheart, and ebony. The frame was made from reclaimed furniture: either black stinkwood or muninga (unclear which). The mulberry and cherry were milled myself from downed neighborhood trees. The frame wood came from a couple antique chairs purchased by my mother-in-law in Cape Town, S. Africa in the 1970s. My final project of 2018 is now complete!
It is finished! Wow, this was a long series of posts (on IG). Hopefully one or two of you enjoyed it as much as I did making it. Here are a bunch of shots in various lighting. Built from mahogany, sapele, lacewood, maple, purpleheart, bloodwood, padauk, cherry, ebony, aspen, walnut, and 150 year old white oak. My initial inspiration for this was a painting/sculpture I did on canvas and MagicSculpt, which I sold years ago. I missed it and wanted to recreate something like it. … I cut the intarsia background on a scrollsaw, lumber was all milled on my table saw & planer, arms were cut with bandsaw, Dremel (with absolutely critical shaping burrs), 106 knife, and a handful of chisels and gouges. Octopus finished with Clear Gloss and frame with Simple Finish. CA glue was used in the intarsia and TBII in the frame and backer.