Chip Carving: The Top Online Handbook: Find The Best Wood Carving Tools, Guides, Tutorials, and More!
Chip Carving: The Top Online Handbook: Find The Best Wood Carving Tools, Guides, Tutorials, and More!
Chip Carving: The Top Online Handbook: Find The Best Wood Carving Tools, Guides, Tutorials, and More!
Find the best wood carving tools, guides, tutorials, and more!
Inspecting the profile of the blade with a magnifying glass could be necessary if the knife has
been used before or if it wasn’t sharpened already when bought. The blade should have no
bevels (the horizontal or vertical slope that looks similar to an edge).
2. Stab Knife – Effectively utilized as a specialty tool for making aesthetic markings.
3. Wood – There’s a number of woods to choose from, but for beginners I’d suggest
basswood since it is the easiest to work with.
To add, basswood is the most ideal wood to begin carving with so go grab a 8″ X 10″ panel
to begin by clicking the button below.
I prefer diamond sharpening stones since they are the most diverse with wood carving tools,
this is the one I use:
The 400 grit stone is to help remove the bevels so use this first then use the 1200 grit for
polishing.
Lastly, as far as sharpening goes, complete with a leather strop and honing compound. Be
sure to hone the blade to the tip as this is to remove any small chips, a magnifying glass is
helpful in this situation to be able to see if there are any left.
During the process, be mindful not to break the blade otherwise you must restart all over.
Gripping Positions
Grip positioning is very essential for chip carving. Although there are many determining
factors that can help carve a clean pattern, which I will discuss further into this guide, but here
is the main priority before ever even starting a project:
If your grip is off, then your cut is off. If your cut is off, your pattern is off. And if your pattern is
off, well you see where I’m going with this.
So let’s start with how to hold the primary knife, there are 2 ways:
BEST WOOD CARVING TOOLS HOW TO DESIGNS
• Grip the back part of the handle with your fingers and rest the thumb on the flat facet
that’s on the front side of the handle just under the blade.
Keep thumb on the handle, NOT on the wood otherwise cutting yourself can become
very easy to do!
• The alternative way positions the fingers around the front of the handle and the thumb
rests on the back part of the blade.
The stab knife is meant for making aesthetic “stabs” into the wood not necessarily meant for
chipping out material.
• Puncture the wood with the knife holding it perpendicular to the work piece. Begin to tilt
the handle forward while the blade holds the same position. This technique helps create
this cut:
BEST WOOD CARVING TOOLS HOW TO DESIGNS
• Three Corner Chip – If you couldn’t already tell from the name this is a three part cut
which gives you a triangle shaped chip. ***PICTURE***
Set the wood on your lap to make it easier to turn the work piece and achieve optimal angles.
If the wood is too big set it on a table. The two primary knife grips explained earlier are utilized
for this technique.
1. Plunge Cut – Start by piercing straight down into the wood with the point of your primary
knife at a 65-degree angle. Once the point of your knife reaches the desired depth, slide
the blade out of the work piece.
2. Slicing Cut – Turn your work piece to a sufficient angle. Start the point of the knife
BEST WOOD
where CARVING
your last cutTOOLS
HOW TO
left off, start shallow with the cut on the baseline and go deeper to
DESIGNS
reach the point of depth the plunge cut created then draw the blade out slowly.
• Slicing Cut – Finish by doing another slicing cut. Begin where the second cut left off
while making the shallow cut down to the point of depth and slide the blade out. The
material should pop out with it.
Do not pry out material if your cut does not bring it out, you will run the risk of breaking
off the tip of your blade. Instead try cutting it again, except go deeper with the cut.
• Straight Lines – Keep a firm grip of the item you are carving while making these cuts to
provide stability. When finishing a stop cut, tip the knife up so your blade doesn’t surpass
the designated mark.
Something that has helped me with cutting clean straight lines is to look ahead of the
blade and anticipate where it should go, NOT looking at the blade.
• Curved Lines – The blade is consistently kept at a 65-degree angle and because of this
the wider the shapes makes for a deeper cut.
Sand it down
Rough surfaces for chip carving are very annoying, you’ll soon find out, since it can cause
hesitation with your cuts and is also impossible to draw straight lines on. I use a 32 grit
sandpaper which also is useful for taking pencil sketches out when the project is finished.
This method is best with smaller patterns and also good to use on oddly shaped woods, as
opposed to a regular square shape.
Print a copy out of the design so you can use graphite paper to trace it onto the wood.
Center the pattern to your preference then tape it onto the edge from one side. Next you will
slide the graphite paper underneath the printed copy.
Be sure to use a ruler or a different straight edged object and a hard pencil to maintain
accuracy while marking along the edge.
Once cutting is complete just erase the traced lines, using sandpaper helps.
Practically all of chip carving is geometrical patterns which makes graphing an ideal and
popular method.
Mark the grid to the board with a small t-square, a ruler, and a hard pencil. Keep in mind that
the size of each square unit determines the size of the final design.
Your completed project will only be as precise as your pencil marking so take your time and
be patient while creating the grid.
F.A.Q.
What sharpening stone should I use to shave the bevels off the primary knife?
I use the Smith’s TRI-6 Arkansas. It has 3 stones which rotate around pretty easily. Comes
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withWOOD CARVING
400 grit, TOOLS
600 grit, and
HOW TO
1200 grit stones that offer any needs your knives will need from
DESIGNS
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