Cut some round balls in half for an upcoming video experiment!
I have been wanting to try a short starter with a flat head, as opposed to a ball. It should fit in my shooting pouch better. Today I made one from a piece of oak, a hardwood dowel, a piece of brass tubing, and a brass rod. All joints are glued and pinned.
View attachment 213001
For stain I used Fiebing's medium brown leather dye, then I finished it with two coats of Watco Danish oil. Tomorrow I'll rub on some Sno-Seal and call it good.
I know that around the St. Louis and at Pall Mall, Tennessee (Alvin York Match) we need half balls marked in the center to measure the distance from center of the X target in the Over-the-Log matches. Not sure What Mark is intending to do with his half balls. I do know that a number of my club's members getting ready for a local X match were making sure that they had their half balls to get the correct score for their shots.
Looks like a whistle. Not poking fun at ya. Great design looks.Made a 70 gr powder measure for a fellow member that gifted a side plate to me.
Made a 70 gr powder measure for a fellow member that gifted a side plate to me.
Beautiful, any particular reason for the square head?I have been wanting to try a short starter with a flat head, as opposed to a ball. It should fit in my shooting pouch better. Today I made one from a piece of oak, a hardwood dowel, a piece of brass tubing, and a brass rod. All joints are glued and pinned.
View attachment 213001
For stain I used Fiebing's medium brown leather dye, then I finished it with two coats of Watco Danish oil. Tomorrow I'll rub on some Sno-Seal and call it good.
Beautiful, any particular reason for the square head?
Good shooting1 What distance ?Got a little range time in…..this target is a total of ten shots….five high right, four at the bullseye, one…uh…flinch, jerk, didn’t squeeze…I dunno. All in all, I was happy!View attachment 87272
I also went to range an indoor one close to house 3 miles half freeway , quick. good staff unlike some opther places I have been , polite not intrusive never an issue. Not the greatest lighting for my old eye,Finished making a Powder Horn, which I am pleased with
Pathfinder, Your varying line weights look solid color. Where mine have close scribe lines but still some white showing between the inked line (hatching). Your scrimshaw solid areas look like brush stroke fonts. Mine never look so sharp and perfect fill. Maybe the photo is not close enough to pick up the individual scribe lines. It looks great. Are you using a blade, point, graver?Hi Tim, thanks and yes I scribed everything on that horn. It was a long job! Not sure what you mean by “ solid fill” ?
I think I follow your question (a picture might be helpful though); To get a broader coloration or to graduate ink darkness I will scratch the surface and carefully stipple the area with my pen nib tip. A small smearing of the ink can also create nice graduation and then rub it back with a small 3M pad if I want it to fade out. My graver is just a nail stuck into a dowel, which I file to get a burr to engrave with, If your lines are not taking the ink maybe you need to scratch deeper. Also, any ink that 'floods the banks" can be scraped away with a sharp blade and regain a crisp edge.Pathfinder, Your varying line weights look solid color. Where mine have close scribe lines but still some white showing between the inked line (hatching). Your scrimshaw solid areas look like brush stroke fonts. Mine never look so sharp and perfect fill. Maybe the photo is not close enough to pick up the individual scribe lines. It looks great. Are you using a blade, point, graver?
Yep...going out shortly to put together a video using round balls cut in half. The results should be interesting.
Yep...going out shortly to put together a video using round balls cut in half. The results should be interesting.
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