Thanks for the tip. It really does make a diferencia. Here is one for you: If you show a piece, or part of a piece before and after the sanding the comparison is easier to grasp. Keep making these videos, I'm new at this and I do find them helpful.
I do exactly the same technique but instead of using the dremel in off mode, I use a pin vise ( for those that don't know what a pin vise is) it's a hand held drill that holds small drill bits mainly for modeling crafts. It holds the dremel bits and works very well for this application. They are decently priced for under $10.
I TOTALLY agree with you.....I have been doing woodworking for years and finishing (sanding and whatever other tricks you can use) is the key to a professional look! Thanks so much for all your tips, tricks, and tutorials......I learn something new just about every time I watch your videos! Sharing knowledge is a wonderful thing.
Thank you so much for your videos! I am a DIY lover especially wood carving but a lot of my project disappointed me when it comes to carving small things. This video helps me a lot to improve myself. Thank you!
This is good!I see too few people using a Foredom unit. A rock carver introduced me to one about 30 years ago. I bought it, wore it out and bought another. It's a tool I've used that's made wood, bone, antler, brass, aluminum, steel and stone carving much faster. I've made little leather and cloth polishing wheels for those hard to reach places on intricate jewelry and knives. I even make knives to carve wood smeary metals with (I still like to go old school sometimes). Thanks for the vid!
Have to say that I have learnt more from this channel than anything else. My carving is getting better by the day and I am getting more bold with the projects I am doing. Thanks Matt for the inspiration and keep it going 😊
I am new to carving with dremel and have arthritis so hand- sanding is tricky. I use 2 small soft sandpaper discs back to back to sand straight lines. The tip below for using Emery boards sounds good too!
Oh my gosh man. I love how you humbly offer up your tips and experience. I recently bought a Dremel 3000. I'll have to work up to the foredom. I think it should be great for me to learn my art on. It's so amazing that you provide links for the tools you use. You are so helpful! Sincerely!
Fordom SR 18000rpm 1/6 hp All I've read is this is the go-to tool. snap on handles. Industrial square connect. Will get soon. I have a Drema (cheapest one they made at the time) for about 2yrs and it served/s me very well. but want to really focus on selling.
I discovered your channel recently as I'm looking to get more serious into power carving. Love all the tips. For this work I would use a shallow gouge. That is perfect for cleaning up these things. I would use the power carving mostly to do the rough carving.
Thank you, Glenn! That is awesome! I'm sure you are going to love it! I would start out with basswood then maybe move to some prettier hard wood depending on the project!
I Thank you for all your teachings. I'm very new at this. I started a positive carving on a log and i didn't have the flat bur you recommended so now I'm really deep an my lines are not straight. How can can I fix this? Also the log slants so my carving looks as if its running up the log not centered. How to fix this as well?
You're an inspiration to me. Celtic knots are intricate and three dimensional, so very hard to do. But I think you've done a great job there. Quality, always takes time.
May I share a tip with you? Get a damp cloth and dampen the wood. Let it dry for a few minutes and the fibres will rise. Sand and repeat the process (x10) or untill you get the desired result.
This guy is the best person for tutorials on wood carving. Love this youtuber. I'll be following these tutorials starting with the one with the heart in it . Eventually, I want to make a spear like arrow head and a wooden flute. Is it possible to make a flute? with this tool?
Thank you Jared! That’s means a lot buddy. Of course man, you could do that easily with this tool, also, some hand tools combined with flex shaft carving will make it a little easier as well.
Just subscribed. A great tip indeed. Just getting into sanding myself, I've learned a lot from Jonas Olsen who uses sanding for accomplishing almost all his carving. I use a turbo Carver that helps eliminate a lot of sanding
Great finishing tips Matt! I have a question for you about finishing. What about using those "Dremel" type flap sanding bits and the sanding drum bits? I would really like to know as I move forward with the hobby.
Another way to clean up and refine shapes is to use razor sharp traditional gouges. This does not negate using power carving burrs etc, it's just often quicker than sanding, and produces really crisp well-defined shapes and edges etc where needed. The finish left by sharp gouges is far cleaner and may contrast with the rest of the power carving, but it can all be blended together with a very quick fine grit sanding : )
@@CorneliusCreations Thanks! That's great to hear. I've been carving for 35 years, using just hand tools for years, and then chainsaws and arbortech stuff to rough out larger carvings. Then i got into power carving, and struggled with how to combine power carving with traditional methods. One of the big challenges with power carving (as you are addressing here) is finishing. But wow!...theres so much more you can do with power carving, and much quicker (except the finishing!!) Incidentally, i used to do A LOT of celtic knotwork stuff, and found that hand tools (chisels and gouges) suited this work best, was often quicker and gave a crisp clean finish. A very important skill in using hand tools, though, is learning how to sharpen and keep them razor sharp..it makes ALL the difference. Thanks for helping keep woodcarving alive!! : )
lol my friend invest in some diamond rotary burs . they will cut your sanding time more then over half of the time . i do alot of rotary carving nothing big even though i have carved a couple walking sticks . mostly wood spirits on a really small scale . but i know from doing it that i would go nuts if i had to sand all that . invest in diamond rotary bits you wont regret it .
All i have is a dremel 200. I cant afford 370 for a flex shaft lol. I figured i would try my hand at power carving since i dont have a wood carving knife set or chisels yet. I figured i would try this as a hobby then maybe sell my work lol.
I’ve been learning so much from you. I’m a beginner, I retired and was looking for a hobby, I enjoyed working with wood. But, didn’t know how to start. How do I go to your links to get some designs from you.
My shop teacher taught us to wet our woodwork, let it dry overnight, then sand it. We would do this for a couple days before adding any stain to our woodwork. Have you heard of this method or do you use this method as well? PS......SANDING MAKES ALL WOODWORK PROJECTS BEAUTIFUL!!
I know this is for rotary work but you should cross over and get some drill stock and hammer out some blades or simply spend 40-50 bucks on 2 or 3 chisels and combine your tools. the ribbons you are finishing would be a great example where a simple DYS flat chisel would save you much time in shaping.... Just did a free hand skull out of a log with a trim router and 1/2 round bit... kinda dangerous but worked out well. I liked so much I'll be getting into the rotary stuff soon as I can.. Love your work !!
and diamond, or even regular jewelry files. Many shapes and sizes can be found in one cheap kit and nearly all of them have fine points and diameters that will fit where sandpapers wont. Diamond burrs work great too, but most have a pretty short shank and reach
I also just remembered that Excel blade company makes some hobby knife size chisels & gouges that can be resharpened & might work great too. I just recently obtained a flex shaft tool/ about to begin some carving.
Question... if you were more careful in your carving, wouldn't you have less sanding to do at the end? I don't know cuz I don't really carve but I'm just wondering if that's possible and would save more time in the long run. I mean, there are sanding attachments for the dremel and such so.... you could even use one grit and just sand with that after ALL the carving is done? then switch to smaller grit and use dremel to sand with that so you still get into cracks? I don't know. maybe it would not work.
Great question bro! That is true but, there is on3 problem we run into. Sometimes the burrs and bits simply cannot fit into the small recessed areas. But you are right, any work that can be done with a burr SHOULD be done if it is faster than sanding and if it alleviates it.
@@CorneliusCreations yeah, I JUST got a dremel 3000 (never owned one and never carved wood really) so I was just looking up some vids on the tool and found some wood carving vids. I still don't exactly know what each bit in that box is for. I KIND of know but it's like... would it have killed Dremel to put a little fold-out card with the bit shapes, numbers AND USES all on that card? I'm sure it's down in the manual that has like 14 different languages but I cannot be bothered to search that. I just went on YT and found a tutorial about the 3000 and learned how to do the basic like put a new bit in, put a polishing thing on... etc. I broke my cutting wheel by lifting the tool out of the case with the wheel on. I turned the unit while lifting and the wheel caught between both edges of the plastic and CRACK.... man... luckily, they are not that costly. I cut and ground some screws.
I was a bit stuck for ideas on a border for something and designs online arent accurate or they are mixed with stuff that isnt celtic , I live in Ireland so I could just go do what you did lol I dont know how I didnt think of that before. I am surrounded by the real thing and I forgot in a way
It is so easy to get confused when looking for inspiration for a new design. Especially when you surrounded by them. It's almost like being to familiar with them. Just start with a basic design and start adding to it using your imagination. Work on it long enough and it will start coming to you. I am glad the video inspired you!
love your work man, but a quick question what type of wood where you using in the video ? and do you find some types are better or easier to work with for power carving ?
I did paint and body work for 12 years and later airbrushing work, both requiring sanding, especially paint and body work. The most unfun part of the job is sanding. No way around it though. If the sanding isn't good it will show in the end results. Which leads to unhappy customers...which leads to a loss of money.
Thanks for the tips!! Do you use gloves when you sand? Seems like your fingertips would be like hamburger meat with all that sanding! Another winner! Thanks again!!
There is a better way to do this. Get the scotch brite pads made for woodworking .these pads are brown not the green ones. The green ones will make your wood green. And the brown ones come in different grids just like sandpaper.cut in to one inch square and put it on a mandrel made for a dremel or rotary tool then buff the wood. This is much faster. Test the wood to make sure it does not take away too much wood
@@CorneliusCreations every time you're just about to tell us what you want to say you stay talking about other stuff. I guess you need to extend viewing time as much as possible.
Thanks for the tip. It really does make a diferencia.
Here is one for you: If you show a piece, or part of a piece before and after the sanding the comparison is easier to grasp.
Keep making these videos, I'm new at this and I do find them helpful.
I do exactly the same technique but instead of using the dremel in off mode, I use a pin vise ( for those that don't know what a pin vise is) it's a hand held drill that holds small drill bits mainly for modeling crafts. It holds the dremel bits and works very well for this application. They are decently priced for under $10.
I TOTALLY agree with you.....I have been doing woodworking for years and finishing (sanding and whatever other tricks you can use) is the key to a professional look! Thanks so much for all your tips, tricks, and tutorials......I learn something new just about every time I watch your videos! Sharing knowledge is a wonderful thing.
Hey Kerry! Thank you for the comment sir! Nice to meet a friend in the craft! So glad the videos are helping you.
Thank you so much for your videos! I am a DIY lover especially wood carving but a lot of my project disappointed me when it comes to carving small things. This video helps me a lot to improve myself. Thank you!
So glad it helped you!
This is good!I see too few people using a Foredom unit. A rock carver introduced me to one about 30 years ago. I bought it, wore it out and bought another. It's a tool I've used that's made wood, bone, antler, brass, aluminum, steel and stone carving much faster. I've made little leather and cloth polishing wheels for those hard to reach places on intricate jewelry and knives. I even make knives to carve wood smeary metals with (I still like to go old school sometimes).
Thanks for the vid!
That is awesome! Sounds like I could be learning from you! Thank you for your comment, Luke!
Have to say that I have learnt more from this channel than anything else. My carving is getting better by the day and I am getting more bold with the projects I am doing. Thanks Matt for the inspiration and keep it going 😊
So glad to hear that you are enjoying the videos! Thank you for the kind words!
It's one of those things that nobody likes to do but you're right, sanding makes all the difference. Nice looking Celtic Cross.
Thank you Mark!
I am new to carving with dremel and have arthritis so hand- sanding is tricky. I use 2 small soft sandpaper discs back to back to sand straight lines. The tip below for using Emery boards sounds good too!
Oh my gosh man. I love how you humbly offer up your tips and experience. I recently bought a Dremel 3000. I'll have to work up to the foredom. I think it should be great for me to learn my art on. It's so amazing that you provide links for the tools you use. You are so helpful! Sincerely!
That will be perfect for you to learn on! So glad the videos are helping you man!
Fordom SR 18000rpm 1/6 hp All I've read is this is the go-to tool. snap on handles. Industrial square connect. Will get soon.
I have a Drema (cheapest one they made at the time) for about 2yrs and it served/s me very well. but want to really focus on selling.
One step I would recommend would be to use fine files to clean up your edges before starting to sand. Love the design.
Good tip! Thank you!
I have been carving for a few years with no instructions so I think your videos is just what I need keep up the good work.
Awesome man! I’m glad this helped!
Now that is a project that must take a lot of patience and time, but it is very beautiful. Like to see when done
I will have to make a video over it soon!
I discovered your channel recently as I'm looking to get more serious into power carving. Love all the tips. For this work I would use a shallow gouge. That is perfect for cleaning up these things. I would use the power carving mostly to do the rough carving.
Great tip!
I love your videos, just started carving (74). What kind of wood do you use? Thanks again🙂😁🌼🌻
Thank you, Glenn! That is awesome! I'm sure you are going to love it! I would start out with basswood then maybe move to some prettier hard wood depending on the project!
Hi great videos what kind of stencil do you use with the sticky back and where can I get some keep up the awesome carving
I Thank you for all your teachings. I'm very new at this. I started a positive carving on a log and i didn't have the flat bur you recommended so now I'm really deep an my lines are not straight. How can can I fix this? Also the log slants so my carving looks as if its running up the log not centered. How to fix this as well?
As simple as this video may be its almost required as little tips and tricks like this may not have occured to you. Cool vid man.
Right on man! Thank you for the kind words!
Precioso trabajo casi de precisión milimétrica,impresionante resultado,un saludo y un like desde Naron(Galicia)
Gracias!
Mat, great videos. I've learned a lot from them. Just started power wood carving (60). What grits of sandpaper do you recommend?
You're an inspiration to me. Celtic knots are intricate and three dimensional, so very hard to do. But I think you've done a great job there. Quality, always takes time.
Thank you Joe!
Great helpful tips, Matt! Thanks as always...
Glad you enjoyed them!
Love the Celtic work!!!
May I share a tip with you?
Get a damp cloth and dampen the wood.
Let it dry for a few minutes and the fibres will rise.
Sand and repeat the process (x10) or untill you get the desired result.
Fantastic tip!!!
@@CorneliusCreations your welcome. My mate is a cabinet maker and timber framer.
m.sessile-oak.co.uk/
does the type of sandpaper make a difference ? :paper verses emery: for example.. thank you and God bless you and your family ... Lee
Really enjoyed this video man. Thinking about purchasing a Dremel today. This inspired me!
Right on man! Glad you are inspired!
This guy is the best person for tutorials on wood carving. Love this youtuber. I'll be following these tutorials starting with the one with the heart in it . Eventually, I want to make a spear like arrow head and a wooden flute.
Is it possible to make a flute? with this tool?
Thank you Jared! That’s means a lot buddy. Of course man, you could do that easily with this tool, also, some hand tools combined with flex shaft carving will make it a little easier as well.
*I love SANDPAPERS*
Just subscribed. A great tip indeed. Just getting into sanding myself, I've learned a lot from Jonas Olsen who uses sanding for accomplishing almost all his carving. I use a turbo Carver that helps eliminate a lot of sanding
Thank you man!
Great finishing tips Matt! I have a question for you about finishing. What about using those "Dremel" type flap sanding bits and the sanding drum bits? I would really like to know as I move forward with the hobby.
Those work great! You just have to be careful with them not to remove to much stock.
Another way to clean up and refine shapes is to use razor sharp traditional gouges. This does not negate using power carving burrs etc, it's just often quicker than sanding, and produces really crisp well-defined shapes and edges etc where needed. The finish left by sharp gouges is far cleaner and may contrast with the rest of the power carving, but it can all be blended together with a very quick fine grit sanding : )
Fantastic tip! I’ve been using more hand chisels as of late!
@@CorneliusCreations Thanks! That's great to hear. I've been carving for 35 years, using just hand tools for years, and then chainsaws and arbortech stuff to rough out larger carvings. Then i got into power carving, and struggled with how to combine power carving with traditional methods. One of the big challenges with power carving (as you are addressing here) is finishing. But wow!...theres so much more you can do with power carving, and much quicker (except the finishing!!) Incidentally, i used to do A LOT of celtic knotwork stuff, and found that hand tools (chisels and gouges) suited this work best, was often quicker and gave a crisp clean finish. A very important skill in using hand tools, though, is learning how to sharpen and keep them razor sharp..it makes ALL the difference. Thanks for helping keep woodcarving alive!! : )
That was cool man. I'm starting to work on some river stone carving project and that helped. Thank you.
Great to hear!
Very beautiful work. Even when not finished, it looks amazing.
Thank you sir!
lol my friend invest in some diamond rotary burs . they will cut your sanding time more then over half of the time . i do alot of rotary carving nothing big even though i have carved a couple walking sticks . mostly wood spirits on a really small scale . but i know from doing it that i would go nuts if i had to sand all that . invest in diamond rotary bits you wont regret it .
Thank you. Good info
Glad it was helpful!
All i have is a dremel 200. I cant afford 370 for a flex shaft lol. I figured i would try my hand at power carving since i dont have a wood carving knife set or chisels yet. I figured i would try this as a hobby then maybe sell my work lol.
I’ve been learning so much from you.
I’m a beginner, I retired and was looking for a hobby, I enjoyed working with wood. But, didn’t know how to start. How do I go to your links to get some designs from you.
Glad to help! Visit www.howtowoodcarve.com
Thank you💜💖💜
You are so welcome
On the stippled part hot do u get it lower than the celtic everytime i try to stipple it look on same plane as pattern or name
Thanks for good tip
Glad you enjoyed it!
He remindeds me of Scooter from Borderlands. Great knotwork there, great touch!
Thank you man!
Thanks for getting back to me.
No problem :)
My shop teacher taught us to wet our woodwork, let it dry overnight, then sand it. We would do this for a couple days before adding any stain to our woodwork. Have you heard of this method or do you use this method as well? PS......SANDING MAKES ALL WOODWORK PROJECTS BEAUTIFUL!!
I’ve heard of this before but only tried it a few times. Great tip!
You deserve way more subscribers
Thank you man!
I know this is for rotary work but you should cross over and get some drill stock and hammer out some blades or simply spend 40-50 bucks on 2 or 3 chisels and combine your tools. the ribbons you are finishing would be a great example where a simple DYS flat chisel would save you much time in shaping.... Just did a free hand skull out of a log with a trim router and 1/2 round bit... kinda dangerous but worked out well. I liked so much I'll be getting into the rotary stuff soon as I can.. Love your work !!
That is a great idea! Thank you for the valuable input! Would love to see your work!
Thanks for your tutorials 😊
Glad they are helping!!!
use a dimond burr to hand sand hold it in your fingers supirior edges
Just tried that. Works very well, game changer for me, actually. Thanks for the advice!
and diamond, or even regular jewelry files. Many shapes and sizes can be found in one cheap kit and nearly all of them have fine points and diameters that will fit where sandpapers wont.
Diamond burrs work great too, but most have a pretty short shank and reach
what kind of handles do you use and where can I get them?
Do you have a video on how you carved the wood you are showing the sanding on?
I sure don't :(
I wonder if nail files/boards would be ok to sand the details? Im not a carver but am interested in starting.
To some degree. That is a good idea!
Thanks for the video. Question: I would have expected to use needle files? rather than loose bits? I wonder why you don't use files?
I also just remembered that Excel blade company makes some hobby knife size chisels & gouges that can be resharpened & might work great too. I just recently obtained a flex shaft tool/ about to begin some carving.
Great question! You can get the same result multiple ways. Sometimes I do use files in conjunction with bits to do this work.
@@CorneliusCreations Thanks for the help.
Question... if you were more careful in your carving, wouldn't you have less sanding to do at the end? I don't know cuz I don't really carve but I'm just wondering if that's possible and would save more time in the long run. I mean, there are sanding attachments for the dremel and such so.... you could even use one grit and just sand with that after ALL the carving is done? then switch to smaller grit and use dremel to sand with that so you still get into cracks? I don't know. maybe it would not work.
Great question bro! That is true but, there is on3 problem we run into. Sometimes the burrs and bits simply cannot fit into the small recessed areas. But you are right, any work that can be done with a burr SHOULD be done if it is faster than sanding and if it alleviates it.
@@CorneliusCreations yeah, I JUST got a dremel 3000 (never owned one and never carved wood really) so I was just looking up some vids on the tool and found some wood carving vids. I still don't exactly know what each bit in that box is for. I KIND of know but it's like... would it have killed Dremel to put a little fold-out card with the bit shapes, numbers AND USES all on that card? I'm sure it's down in the manual that has like 14 different languages but I cannot be bothered to search that. I just went on YT and found a tutorial about the 3000 and learned how to do the basic like put a new bit in, put a polishing thing on... etc. I broke my cutting wheel by lifting the tool out of the case with the wheel on. I turned the unit while lifting and the wheel caught between both edges of the plastic and CRACK.... man... luckily, they are not that costly. I cut and ground some screws.
Try using Emory boards for sanding, you can trim them with scissors.
Great idea!
Amazing work as always. Thanks for sharing your experience and process, very helpful. Best wishes. (Edit) The links are helpful too!
Thank you! Glad you enjoyed it!
I am just starting out working on how to engrave. I'm having trouble to making it stand out. What's your best advice?
Send me some pics at howtowoodcarve.com and I will try to help you
I was a bit stuck for ideas on a border for something and designs online arent accurate or they are mixed with stuff that isnt celtic , I live in Ireland so I could just go do what you did lol I dont know how I didnt think of that before. I am surrounded by the real thing and I forgot in a way
It is so easy to get confused when looking for inspiration for a new design. Especially when you surrounded by them. It's almost like being to familiar with them. Just start with a basic design and start adding to it using your imagination. Work on it long enough and it will start coming to you. I am glad the video inspired you!
Thank you :) as a newbie to carving this is valuable to me
Glad it helped!
Is it good technique to sand with the rotary tool on a low speed setting or is it too much for the finish?
Depends on the bit
Cornelius Creations thank you for your time!! 👍🏼
love your work man, but a quick question what type of wood where you using in the video ? and do you find some types are better or easier to work with for power carving ?
Thank you! The wood I was using was hickory. But basswood is by farthest the easiest to work with and to begin with!
God is in the details ! Great Work and Thanks So Much!!
Glad you enjoyed it man!
Thanx 💯💪💥
Nice work need ,
Thank you!
What power tools you recommend?
Hey there! I have all my recommendations above this in the description
@@CorneliusCreations thanks
What is the mask you show in the video can you please give a link. Thanks for the great videos and instruction!
Did you find the mask? Ive looked all over for it.
@@TheJestersDoor Sorry I haven't.
Gorgeous work
Thank you Rosa!
Thank you for giving me a good technique.
So glad it helped my friend!
Thank you for these vids
Glad they are helping!
Nice new intro.
Thank you!
In other words. Make it feel good and it will probably look good.
There you go!
Do you use a power foot switch for control? Thank you for the great videos.
Jerry
Sure do, it’s a must have!!!
thanx
You are welcome!
I did paint and body work for 12 years and later airbrushing work, both requiring sanding, especially paint and body work. The most unfun part of the job is sanding. No way around it though. If the sanding isn't good it will show in the end results. Which leads to unhappy customers...which leads to a loss of money.
favoloso
Get a good set of rifflers and you won't bother with sandpaper much anymore.
Checking them out now. Thanks!
Thanks for the tips!! Do you use gloves when you sand? Seems like your fingertips would be like hamburger meat with all that sanding! Another winner! Thanks again!!
Thanks man! Sometimes I do, and yes, it fan wear on the hands a little 🤣😁
How about a sanding sponge?
That could work but sanding sponges leaves a lot of grit everywhere
Hi, can you share this celtic cross prints
Hey there! I do not have prints. I free handed it.
starts at 1:15
There is a better way to do this. Get the scotch brite pads made for woodworking .these pads are brown not the green ones. The green ones will make your wood green. And the brown ones come in different grids just like sandpaper.cut in to one inch square and put it on a mandrel made for a dremel or rotary tool then buff the wood. This is much faster. Test the wood to make sure it does not take away too much wood
I will try this tip out! Thank you!
*TL;DR:* Sanding with Sandpaper, being as precise as possible and pinch firmly with fingers. There, saved you 6 Mins.
❤❤❤❤
Skip to 1:15
👍
Almost stopped watching because that intro was so over the top. Jesus christ man lol
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❤hi
you look like powerbank
This seems pretty obvious
Parli troppo e poca illustrazione,perché non fai un video in silenzio e ci fai vedere il lavoro
"How to improve carving" but NO actual carving in this video... Way to go... NOT!!!
Many process go into carving my friend. Sand paper is equal to putting shoes on your feet in the morning when it comes to power carving.
nice vid But the music is real GAY
Talks to much
Either I have a talking problem or you have a listening problem. 🤔 🧐
@@CorneliusCreations every time you're just about to tell us what you want to say you stay talking about other stuff. I guess you need to extend viewing time as much as possible.