Do any members have any experience using endgrain oriented wood for rosettes? I have some spalted maple cutoffs that I'm toying with.
Here is a piece that I've glued up a while back and I now am sort of concerned that trying to level it to the soundboard will be somewhat of a bad experiece. I don't think it will scrape too well.
I know that if it is inset just a tad below the soundboard then it would be easier to level the SB to the rosette.
Thanks in advance.
Kim
End Grain for Rosette
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End Grain for Rosette
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"Good enough, never is"
Kim Hillard
Burdickville, Michigan
Kim Hillard
Burdickville, Michigan
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Re: End Grain for Rosette
I flood the spalted stuff with CA. You can test it on some scrap first to make sue it does not stain. Then I have no issues leveling it. I think a rosette like that would look really good.
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Re: End Grain for Rosette
John, I like to use the CA as well for beefing up punky spalted wood. This piece had a case of bug holes that I filled with man made crushed turquoise. The more I looked at it the more I didn't like it so I've set it aside for something that will go better with the walnut back, sides and peghead veneer. Thanks for the tips
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"Good enough, never is"
Kim Hillard
Burdickville, Michigan
Kim Hillard
Burdickville, Michigan
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Re: End Grain for Rosette
That is really sharp. A real elegant look.
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Re: End Grain for Rosette
John, thanks and I agree. The new one is more of what I was hoping to obtain on my first build. The spalted one kept shouting "I'm a giraffe" over and over. The walnut rosette, although not end grain, is figured, old and hard, so sanding it was still not a breeze. I haven't started my top yet so I will have to be careful to route the rosette channel a bit deeper than the rosette so I can bring the top thickness down to meet the surface of the inlay.
Best Regards,
Kim
Best Regards,
Kim
"Good enough, never is"
Kim Hillard
Burdickville, Michigan
Kim Hillard
Burdickville, Michigan
Re: End Grain for Rosette
The turquoise fill lights my fire, actually. Provides a nice small scale detail by turning a "defect" into an asset.
John
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Re: End Grain for Rosette
John, I hear you on that subject.
"Good enough, never is"
Kim Hillard
Burdickville, Michigan
Kim Hillard
Burdickville, Michigan