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Rosette with a lot of inlaywork, now ready

Posted: Mon Dec 08, 2014 8:46 am
by Herman
The next guitar (customized HD28) will have a rosette that my friend designed himself.
It has triangles that come from the logo of his former webdesigncompany of which he was owner.
At first I agreed to make him any rosette. Then he came with his design. But jee, what a lot of ini-mini-tinywork. But after a few drinks we agreed this will be it.

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Since inlaywork is the easiest in black ebony (you can coverup little flaws) I took some scrapparts of ebony and glued them together to a plate. Big enough to make a rosette. Then thicknessed to 2mm.
I'll post how this goes on.
Herman

Re: Rosette with a lot of inlaywork, little blog

Posted: Mon Dec 08, 2014 10:54 am
by Kevin in California
That will be a bunch of work Herman. Are you using MOP for those little "V's"?

Re: Rosette with a lot of inlaywork, little blog

Posted: Mon Dec 08, 2014 11:45 am
by Herman
Ya Kevin, that is what I thought. And yes, it is MOP. I ordered the pearl from China. Very cheap. They sent it already over the world including track/trace for 1.5 euro (=2$).

Re: Rosette with a lot of inlaywork, little blog

Posted: Mon Dec 08, 2014 12:03 pm
by John Parchem
Wow that is a lot of work to cut all of the pearl and the inlay. I wonder if you could do a bit less work by gluing down the "V"s and filling with some black filler. Black always seems to look the same under a finish no mater what material it is. For example I can not tell the difference between ebony binding and black fiber.

Re: Rosette with a lot of inlaywork, little blog

Posted: Mon Dec 08, 2014 12:29 pm
by Herman
That was my idea too John, but before that epiphany I already made the ebony plate. So I decided to proceed on the token path.
In the end a pure ebony rosette bottom will be good for the idea of exclusivity. (Hmm, whatever that is).

Re: Rosette with a lot of inlaywork, little blog

Posted: Mon Dec 08, 2014 3:18 pm
by Herman
Progression:
The ebonyplate from scrappieces
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Drawing triangles on the MOP. Nice 60 degrees allover
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After cutting the pieces out with my dremel grinderplate. Bunch of roughcuts after running out of cigars.
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Sticking them together with titebond. Dirt is from my workinghands.
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Beltsanding the sides to even shape.
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Isosceles triangles are the goal.
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After sanding they get a bath of hot water. Glue letting go. Bit of cleaning.
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Drying and there they are: Nice triangles of the same size. On some little flaws, but I will sand that properly before inlaying each piece.
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Re: Rosette with a lot of inlaywork, little blog

Posted: Mon Dec 08, 2014 3:53 pm
by John Link
This is going to be a stunning rosette.