Thank you so much for posting. I just made my son's friend very happy. I made a machine with the basketball Internet but I use your video to make the ball. I want you to know that you managed to put a smile on a teenager's face. That's what I have to do nowadays
@@SymanWoodcarving I once stabbed myself with the tool you held in the intro. It hit the exact same spot on my finger that was currently healing from a previous injury. Also, I'm planning to make a wooden animal as a product for my school to sell (It's for a Mock Job {A pretend job to teach about workplaces.}). It looks kind of like an Amiibo because it has a small disc that holds the animal in place while it's in a pose. Any tips on how to do this?
Thank for this video. Was asked to carve some wooden balls and spoons for a children's bare-foot-obstacle-course. The course has to been navigated with the spoon in hand while keeping the ball on the spoon the whole time. Spoons, I make all the time but a round ball was my first. Went the geometric route instead of the cylinder and i think the cylinder is easier to keep track of where you are (as in how much is there still to cut away). The technique for feeling the high-points and knocking them down works very well. Made three knife-handles with it by starting with a rectangular piece; holding it in your hand like you would use it as a handle; noticing the sharp corners and everything that didn't feel comfortable to my hand and cut that bit off; rinse repeat. After a few thousand fittings and cuttings, ended up with knife-handles that perfectly fit my left hand.
Thanks 🤙🏽from Santa Barbara California🌴🌊 received my Helvie knives in the mail last night so I’m browsing the Internet for projects today,.. exciting times!
Thank you for sharing you knowledge and technique for carving a sphere. I had an old newel post the needed repair, and was missing the small ball on top. I couldn't find anyone that sells oak balls in the craft stores, or woodworking supply shops, so I decided to make my own, but I don't have a lathe. Using for advice I carved on, and it matches the others beautifully.
And we could have done a topo map of the earth if only we had a cnc machine, and a satellite survey..... BUT we still wouldn't have learned to make a sphere by hand. Now we havea good start on it. Thanks for that. I'm a beginner to hand carving who has some of the high tech in the shop. I really enjoy my knives and chisels, and there's absolutely no temptation to fire up a machine while I'm carving. I really enjoy the process, and learning the tricks (like this one) to making a carving look real. It's a very satisfying hobby, and I'm really hooked. I find myself doing even the prep work by hand like cutting out the blanks and flattening the back of a hanging piece. I do a lot of largish fridge magnets right now, and block sand the backs lately where the 1st couple went on the belt sander. Thanks for the video, I'm going to so a piece with spherical elements in it now, just to try my hand at the technique.
I'll definitely make a video on this soon, but quickly: I use a leather strop and honing compund very regularly whilst carving, and use waterstones at 1000 and 8000 grit when the blades are getting dull
@@SymanWoodcarving How do you keep a consistent angle while sharpening? I never can tell if I'm applying the blade to the stone/strop at the same angle each time.
Thank you! I've just started wood carving, and I don't have a lathe. I want to make a ball and cup toy as a part of my project to slow down and entertain myself the old fashioned way this fall and Christmas 😃.
Thanks for uploading this video. How would you go about getting a completely smooth finish on the sphere? Would you use sandpaper or just keep going with the knife/chisel
I'd get it at smooth as I could with the chisel, and then switch to sandpaper. Start with something like 100 grit and then work up the grits taking out the scratches
Thank you! I had a dream last night that asked this question. It was part of my mind trying to figure out how to make a really nice stave (also know as a pen/nib holder.) I would like to make my own fancy stave for my pen & ink and calligraphy efforts someday.
Thank you so much for showing that. Although I will be using a dremel to do it. I had tried a couple of years ago and gave up. I gave up too soon, if I had kept going the way I was going with it, I would have had a ball :) I couldn't find anything at time on it other then using a lathe which I don't have. Thanks again!
Awesome! I've been researching jigs for power tools for the last couple days, as I don't have a lathe and desperately need to create a wooden tes... sphere for my project. This is by far the simplest way I can go about it, and while watching the video I realised I also have a chisel :D I'm about half way through the cylinder now!
I must say, that was very interesting. Thank you for the tips. I've done a bunch of ball in cage puzzle type carvings, but all of them I had to just do by eye.
Hey i have a question. I just made mine and on the ingrain it is still super flat and i dont know how to make it any more round than it already is. Do you have any advice?
nice tutorial! I'm wondering, how often do you strop your tools during a carving like this? I ask because they're clearly sharp, and I can't see that happening without stropping at least every 40-45 minutes since you are using two tools.
@@SymanWoodcarving I bought a chisel set (1" to 1/4") from Amazon. They struggle to shave wood from soft maple wood (slightly less hard than hard maple). Do chisels need to be sharpened when you buy them new? I wasn't looking for carving sculptures out of softwood but your video inspired me to try some woodcarving for that purpose.
They do need to be sharpened yes, it's rare that they come ready to go (especially those amazon ones). Side note: although it is soft, basswood is technically a hardwood by structure.
@@SymanWoodcarving - I am working on soft maple. yes my chisels are not razor sharp. but I can't even get them to cut with a big mallet. the maple is that hard. let's say the chisels are as sharp as they can be, are you suggesting you can slice small chunks simply with hand pressure on wood such as maple, cherry, mahogany, rosewood etc.?
Can you show what you carved, it looked adorable I used butternut wood that was given to me by a man that carved birds. Is that a good type of wood. It seems to be but it gets kind of furry
Sandpaper would be good! Make sure not to skip any grits and once you get up to around 200 grit start wetting the surface to raise the grain between grits to get the best finish
Thanks a lot for replying, then which material do you suggest which is affordable when it comes to pricing? Want to start my business relating to unique show pieces
Find local hardwoods that are readily available in your area. For the size of spheres that are easily hand carved, the wood required will not be cost prohibitive, rather the time taken to hand carve them
Take it to the next level with this Marvelous book; Woodcarving Magic by Bjarne Jespersen. Amazon has it. I'm talkin 5levels of spheres within spheres. It is truly amazing, with great step by step guides. I mention this because you probably have experience that is similar to our Swedish fiend in the book. I promise, just look at the cover art, I've gotten to level 3. Many hours. Genesis
That's definitely a challenge! I would suggest maybe using a dremel/rotary tool with carving burrs, and clamping the piece securely. You can also put a carvers screw into the bottom of the piece to make it easier to secure in place. It is likely easier to get one handed precision with a power carver than knives and chisels
Hell yes to the no lathe action! This is wondrously helpful and exactly what I was looking for for a project. Thank you!
Thank you so much for posting. I just made my son's friend very happy. I made a machine with the basketball Internet but I use your video to make the ball.
I want you to know that you managed to put a smile on a teenager's face. That's what I have to do nowadays
This is the single most useful carving tutorial I've seen, thank you!
Thank you for tutorial! This makes me feel less intimidated about carving!
Awesome to hear!
@@SymanWoodcarving I once stabbed myself with the tool you held in the intro. It hit the exact same spot on my finger that was currently healing from a previous injury. Also, I'm planning to make a wooden animal as a product for my school to sell (It's for a Mock Job {A pretend job to teach about workplaces.}). It looks kind of like an Amiibo because it has a small disc that holds the animal in place while it's in a pose. Any tips on how to do this?
Thank for this video. Was asked to carve some wooden balls and spoons for a children's bare-foot-obstacle-course. The course has to been navigated with the spoon in hand while keeping the ball on the spoon the whole time.
Spoons, I make all the time but a round ball was my first. Went the geometric route instead of the cylinder and i think the cylinder is easier to keep track of where you are (as in how much is there still to cut away).
The technique for feeling the high-points and knocking them down works very well. Made three knife-handles with it by starting with a rectangular piece; holding it in your hand like you would use it as a handle; noticing the sharp corners and everything that didn't feel comfortable to my hand and cut that bit off; rinse repeat. After a few thousand fittings and cuttings, ended up with knife-handles that perfectly fit my left hand.
Thank you! It is really satisfying for me to use knife/chisel as opposed to lathe. Something relaxing about it.
Thanks 🤙🏽from Santa Barbara California🌴🌊 received my Helvie knives in the mail last night so I’m browsing the Internet for projects today,.. exciting times!
I’ve watched three of your videos now and I’m sold on trying a chisel!
Thank you for sharing you knowledge and technique for carving a sphere. I had an old newel post the needed repair, and was missing the small ball on top. I couldn't find anyone that sells oak balls in the craft stores, or woodworking supply shops, so I decided to make my own, but I don't have a lathe. Using for advice I carved on, and it matches the others beautifully.
Thank you for that! Fundamentals so important and often overlooked. I also loved that you explained your process!
And we could have done a topo map of the earth if only we had a cnc machine, and a satellite survey.....
BUT we still wouldn't have learned to make a sphere by hand. Now we havea good start on it.
Thanks for that. I'm a beginner to hand carving who has some of the high tech in the shop. I really enjoy my knives and chisels, and there's absolutely no temptation to fire up a machine while I'm carving. I really enjoy the process, and learning the tricks (like this one) to making a carving look real. It's a very satisfying hobby, and I'm really hooked.
I find myself doing even the prep work by hand like cutting out the blanks and flattening the back of a hanging piece. I do a lot of largish fridge magnets right now, and block sand the backs lately where the 1st couple went on the belt sander.
Thanks for the video, I'm going to so a piece with spherical elements in it now, just to try my hand at the technique.
This is awesome. The basic techniques are what help build on larger projects. Thank you.
This was so helpful! Thanks, I'm trying to make a vintage wooden doll. Will let you know how I get on
Awesome, thanks!
Thank you for such a simple yet effective explanation! Quick question - could you share how you sharpen your tools?
I'll definitely make a video on this soon, but quickly: I use a leather strop and honing compund very regularly whilst carving, and use waterstones at 1000 and 8000 grit when the blades are getting dull
@@SymanWoodcarving How do you keep a consistent angle while sharpening? I never can tell if I'm applying the blade to the stone/strop at the same angle each time.
@@halflingcarvings I just put out a video detailing my sharpening process, check it out for more detail!
So excited to start carving. Please post more tutorials! Maybe how to carve some more 3D objects like animals?
Will do!
Very nicely instructed.
And patient. Excellent job.
Thank you! I've just started wood carving, and I don't have a lathe. I want to make a ball and cup toy as a part of my project to slow down and entertain myself the old fashioned way this fall and Christmas 😃.
I want to make a table where the legs protrude through the top and are roughly rounded on top. This was helpful. Thanks.
Thanks for uploading this video. How would you go about getting a completely smooth finish on the sphere? Would you use sandpaper or just keep going with the knife/chisel
I'd get it at smooth as I could with the chisel, and then switch to sandpaper. Start with something like 100 grit and then work up the grits taking out the scratches
Thanks for Tips . Amazing Work by you always
So glad I found your channel. Thanks.
Thank you! I had a dream last night that asked this question. It was part of my mind trying to figure out how to make a really nice stave (also know as a pen/nib holder.) I would like to make my own fancy stave for my pen & ink and calligraphy efforts someday.
Great video. Your Instagram page has inspired me to start having a go. Sharpening video is very informative too!
well, that was fantastic
Going to give it a go then?
Thank you so much for showing that. Although I will be using a dremel to do it. I had tried a couple of years ago and gave up. I gave up too soon, if I had kept going the way I was going with it, I would have had a ball :) I couldn't find anything at time on it other then using a lathe which I don't have. Thanks again!
Awesome! I've been researching jigs for power tools for the last couple days, as I don't have a lathe and desperately need to create a wooden tes... sphere for my project. This is by far the simplest way I can go about it, and while watching the video I realised I also have a chisel :D I'm about half way through the cylinder now!
I must say, that was very interesting. Thank you for the tips. I've done a bunch of ball in cage puzzle type carvings, but all of them I had to just do by eye.
im working on a horse leg! well only its bones so this will be very helpful! thank you. I subscribed :))
this e cuts are sooooooooo smooth
Hey i have a question. I just made mine and on the ingrain it is still super flat and i dont know how to make it any more round than it already is. Do you have any advice?
nice tutorial! I'm wondering, how often do you strop your tools during a carving like this? I ask because they're clearly sharp, and I can't see that happening without stropping at least every 40-45 minutes since you are using two tools.
Thank you so much for the content you bring out. It's an inspiration :)
Glad to help! Hoping to be bringing more regular content out starting soon
I would love to see you do an amorphous shape out of wood :) you got all the skills necessary to do it idk seems like a cool idea
man this guy is good
Love it thank u❤❤❤
awesome video man! i enjoyed it :)
21.45 , thanks enjoyed your video 👍
can you apply these techniques on hardwood such as maple? If not, what tools are needed?
Definitely, and I do so more often that I use basswood to be honest. I tend to lean more towards the chisel for the harder woods
@@SymanWoodcarving I bought a chisel set (1" to 1/4") from Amazon. They struggle to shave wood from soft maple wood (slightly less hard than hard maple). Do chisels need to be sharpened when you buy them new?
I wasn't looking for carving sculptures out of softwood but your video inspired me to try some woodcarving for that purpose.
They do need to be sharpened yes, it's rare that they come ready to go (especially those amazon ones).
Side note: although it is soft, basswood is technically a hardwood by structure.
@@SymanWoodcarving - I am working on soft maple. yes my chisels are not razor sharp. but I can't even get them to cut with a big mallet. the maple is that hard. let's say the chisels are as sharp as they can be, are you suggesting you can slice small chunks simply with hand pressure on wood such as maple, cherry, mahogany, rosewood etc.?
Can you show what you carved, it looked adorable
I used butternut wood that was given to me by a man that carved birds. Is that a good type of wood. It seems to be but it gets kind of furry
Would sand paper be a good thing to use to make it smoother or would you recommend otherwise?
Sandpaper would be good! Make sure not to skip any grits and once you get up to around 200 grit start wetting the surface to raise the grain between grits to get the best finish
@@SymanWoodcarving Thanks so much! Keep up the good work!
Good on ya
Impressive! What’s this wood called again?
Basswood
nice its very helpfull
I’m a new sub. Any advice or videos on carving a plaque
can spheres be made out of MDF?
I guess they could with enough tenacity, but I wouldn't recommend mdf as a carving material
Thanks a lot for replying, then which material do you suggest which is affordable when it comes to pricing? Want to start my business relating to unique show pieces
Find local hardwoods that are readily available in your area. For the size of spheres that are easily hand carved, the wood required will not be cost prohibitive, rather the time taken to hand carve them
Why not a small plane to take the corners down?
Nice.
cool man went clounbuses to woodcraft store learn how turn circle on lath. think what did knife and chisel way easer and less scarry then that.
Take it to the next level with this Marvelous book; Woodcarving Magic by Bjarne Jespersen. Amazon has it. I'm talkin 5levels of spheres within spheres. It is truly amazing, with great step by step guides. I mention this because you probably have experience that is similar to our Swedish fiend in the book. I promise, just look at the cover art, I've gotten to level 3. Many hours.
Genesis
good
Super
“This could be a head body a tail” me making a bong 😄
Wanna make a little wooden Jackolantern
now i must make a large one (abt the size of a bball)
Make that bigger and you’ll have a pumpkin for fall or a Melon for summer craft
Desculpa,mas pra mim você fez do jeito mais difícil.rsrsrs.
My dad always said ,"blade always away from body, unless you like to sit in the ER for 6 hours"
There are many exceptions
My challenge : carve 3cm realistic bird miniature with one hand
* Miniature craving suggestions for one hand person's... Please
That's definitely a challenge! I would suggest maybe using a dremel/rotary tool with carving burrs, and clamping the piece securely. You can also put a carvers screw into the bottom of the piece to make it easier to secure in place. It is likely easier to get one handed precision with a power carver than knives and chisels
@@SymanWoodcarving thanks for reply ..
You call that a knife?..
Lol very good
I came down here just to find this comment. Thank you!
I literally thought that in my head and then look down and see this
Thousands of lifetime projects with Woodglut plans.