Carved wood house number plaque
#1
I have been carving a house number plate / plaque for a friend of mine. The wood is some sort of mahogany, it used to be a bar top at a pub , so many a drunken fella will have been slumped upon it over the years I expect. Its nice wood and turned lovely.

This is the chucnk of bar top I had , its been joined so the widest bit I can get is about 11 inches
[Image: Micenumberlathe001.jpg]

I marked out the maximum size circle with a compass
[Image: Micenumberlathe003.jpg]

Then bandsawed the rough shape out
[Image: Micenumberlathe004.jpg]

I trued it up on the wood lathe and skimmed the front surface , I could small beer as the shavings came off !
[Image: Micenumberlathe005.jpg]

I have turned a sort of round bead around the edge , this will be carved to look like a rope wrapped around the outside of the plaque
[Image: Micenumberlathe008.jpg]

A square block of scrap wood is attached to the back so it can be held in the vice for carving
[Image: Micenumberlathe009.jpg]

This is the design on tracing paper with carbon paper behind it to trace the design onto the wood , I have altered the numeral 1 so that the incised 'V' type carving will look better as the serifs were too long for this style to work
[Image: Carvednumberchesterlathe001.jpg]

Once the design is maked the numerals are cut quite deep along the middle of the figures, this is so the wood will split and chip out at the cut rather than splitting right across and over the oppisite side border line
[Image: Carvednumberchesterlathe007.jpg]

The straight cuts use a straight chisel but the curved ones use various curved gouges to match the line
[Image: Carvednumberchesterlathe008.jpg]

I have been asked about the tools, this chisel / gouge is an J.B Addis , the 10 prize medals markings indicate it will be from the 1890's so will have passed through a few hands no doubt, I have some that will be older than this but still cut as good as ever
[Image: Carvednumberchesterlathe010.jpg]

This is the J.B addis over Sheffield markings that are just visible, a few of the old carving tools have several names stamped on them where they have been handed down to the next generation of carvers
[Image: Carvednumberchesterlathe011.jpg]

This is the selection of tools used to do the lettering , the one at the end closest to the camera is a V tool or parting tool, its an advantage to have all odd handles as once you have a few chisels lying on the bench its quicker to locate the one you want when they all look different
[Image: Carvednumberchesterlathe025.jpg]

This is a close up of the V tool blade, it will cut a vee shaped groove or can be tilted to cut on one adge to go around a raised section
[Image: Carvednumberchesterlathe027.jpg]

The numbers are now just carefully carved away sticking to the lines, because of the centre cuts the wood flakes out at the cuts
[Image: Carvednumberchesterlathe012.jpg]

This is it after carving out then fine tuning so the centre lines look even and the outer lines are uniform
[Image: Carvednumberchesterlathe022.jpg]

This piece of wood with cuts in it shows the various tools that have been used and the cuts they make
[Image: Carvednumberchesterlathe029.jpg]

Next the rope pattern was marked out , this was not as easy as it looks and took some time to sus out how to do it so it was right
[Image: Carvednumberchesterlathe032.jpg]

A smaller V tool is then used to make the initial cuts between the bands of rope
[Image: Carvednumberchesterlathe033.jpg]

Then it was acse of just carving away wood from one side of each section or rope with various curved gouges until it started to look like rope
[Image: Carvednumberchesterlathe034.jpg]

Once the basic shape of the rope was right from the carving gouges I then refined things with files and then Abranet wrapped around a stick of wood ( Abranet is a sort of metal sheet abrasive mesh that comes in various grades ) its good stuff and does not clog like sand paper
[Image: Carvednumberchesterlathe035.jpg]

This is after the sanding is finished , as you can imagine , its no five minute job and a dremel type sander is used to get into bits that are hard to reach
[Image: Carvednumberchesterlathe047.jpg]

I then gave it a coat of sanding sealer , then two coats of spray laquer , as you can see the colour really comes out with some finish applied. The other reason for the laquer was bacause I wanted to apply gold leaf to the numbers so they would stand out
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This is the finished thing , I did take photos of the gold leaf getting done but my memory card packed in so they were lost. its the first time I tried it and I think I could do a better job the next time as learnt a few tips from trial and error. You paint where you want the gold to stick with size ( like pva glue ) then once tacky stick small bits of gold sheet over the glued areas , then brush in and rub off excess then burnish with a soft cloth , then laquer the whole thing again.
[Image: numberplaquegoldleaf009.jpg]

Its turned out nice and should be easy enough to see from the road I would think
[Image: numberplaquegoldleaf002.jpg]

Hope this has been of interest

Cheers Mick.
Micktoon, proud to be a member of MetalworkingFun since Sep 2012.
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#2
well dun mickThumbsup
krv3000, proud to be a member of MetalworkingFun Forum since Feb 2012.
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#3
Mick,

That's some really nice mahogany you have to work with. Drool

Nice job on the carving.

Ed
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#4
Beautiful work Mick
I'd like to see a piece of metal look as elegant.
Free advice is worth exactly what you payed for it.
Greg
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#5
Nice project Mick. And thanks for taking the time to document it. The mahogany really showed its colors with the lacquer finish. Did you put a coat over the leaf as well?

Tom
[Image: TomsTechLogo-Profile.png]
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#6
Top job Mick - well done
Hunting American dentists since 2015.
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#7
Very nice, a time consuming job!!

(Love that green cabinet with the drawers in the early pics. )
sasquatch, proud to be a member of MetalworkingFun since Jul 2012.
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#8
That's almost too beautiful to put it outside the house!

Any other owners of No.81's that see it may want it....badly. ;)
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#9
Thanks for the comments lads Smiley-eatdrink004

TomG , yes I did give it anothe coat of laquer over the leaf too, mainly as when cleaning back the edges of the leaf it had marked the laquer around the edges of the numbers, in therory the leaf does not need covered.

Sasquatch , Those are great drawers all getting deeper toward the bottom big draw, I got them from the scrayard a few years back for £5 so real bargain too.

Pixman , I am hoping it might be able to be mounted inside a porch if possible as you could be right some other 81 dweller might take a fancy to it Jawdrop I would hate to have to 'just' knock another one up in a spare moment lol.

cheers Mick.
Micktoon, proud to be a member of MetalworkingFun since Sep 2012.
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#10
That is stunning work Mick
John
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