Title: Shaping a Simple Intarsia Rose
1Shaping a Simple Intarsia Rose
Home
- Presented By
- Norris Arts and Krafts
2Is this the best way ?
- No, it is the way we do it.. That does not make
it the best for you. Try several until you find
what you are comfortable with.
3We start by gluing the pattern to the board, we
use rubber cement
4We choose the grain and color selection to cut
5The piece we are working with is then cut out of
the pattern
6(No Transcript)
7The saw we use is the DeWalt with a 20 throat
8After the piece is cut, the pattern is peeled off
9The uncut part of the pattern is peeled and used
on the next piece
10The pattern is then transferred to the next piece
of the project
11Each piece is added to the project as cut
12Cutting continues
13Cutting continues
14Project completely cut out
15The glue residue is removed from the cut pieces
16Project with the glue removed
17Leaves are marked to lower them
18The leaves are cut or sanded to achieve the
desired thickness
19Leaf thickness has been reduced to add depth to
the project
20First flower petal is being shaped by sloping
from outside edge
21This shaping adds depth to the flower.
22Second Petal is shaped, again sloping from
outside edge
23The third piece is rounded to give outside curve
.
24This piece is rounded from the Left and only
slightly on the right
25Notice the third piece appears to tuck under the
piece to its right
26The fourth piece is marked so it will stay above
the third piece
27This piece cups outward on the bottom and inward
on the top
28The outward curved bottom forms the base of the
rose
29The inside curve on the top of the piece forms
the back petal
30The fifth petal is shaped again from the outside
to the inside
31Remember this petal is reversed from the first
petal
32The sixth petal forms the back of the rose center
33It is again formed from the outside sloping to
the inside
34The seventh petal is formed the same way
35The eighth petal follows suit
36The ninth piece if formed the same way, but
because of size
37A dremmel tool is used to form the slope
38Ninth petal in place
39The center of the rose is rounded over to fit the
petals around it
40The bottom petal is marked to fit against the
previous pieces
41It is then shaped to slope outwards from the
center
42It shapes with a short round over on the bottom
side to show a fall
43A flap sander is used for final sanding and to
soften edges
44Each piece is finish sanded
45Special care is used to soften the edges
46The flap sander works well to follow the contour
of the petals
47The finish sanding on the flower is completed
48A light pencil mark is made as a guide for wood
burning the veins
49The veins are wood burned to give more movement
to the leaf
50The rose is ready to glue
51The outline of the project is marked on the
backing board
52It is then cut out
53On the roses, we do not edge glue, we glue only
the backing
54A coat of glue shown on the backing
55The flower is placed onto the backing
56Care is taken to make sure each piece is down
firm on the backing
57After the glue is dry, the backing is trimmed and
beveled
58We use Bartley Gel Varnish to finish our products
59We find the paper rags are best for us they are
cheap and lint free
60We apply the varnish with a brush starting on the
edge
61The varnish is worked down into the rose to get
complete coverage
62We then wipe the gel off of the surface
63Low air pressure melts the varnish that collects
in cracks
64The rose is complete