And Judy’s number is: 234








- A selection of woodenware just after it’s received its first coat of mineral oil and beeswax to seal the wood. If you own woodenware, you should periodically recoat it with a food-safe coating.
- Sabrina and Marcus mix it up.
- One of my wife’s Grandmothers acquired this in the 1940’s it’s evidently a carved iron ore.
- Oldies Marketplace, in Newburyport, MA. A phenomenally fantastic place to browse for hours!
- One of my recent series of schooner carvings. In this one, she’s just before the gale, reefing topsails and preparing for a blow. It’s a shadowbox-style carving, but from a distance, people have assumed it’s an oil painting. I’m extremely pleased with it, but not too sure of my carving of the reefed topsails…always room for improvement.
- A large cherry bowl is in the process of being carved here. Last year, I found a supplier for wide, thick cherry planks, and it stimulated a flurry of bowl-making. Hand carving a bowl is kind of a sensuous process, as the wood is removed, it reveals patterns in the grain that you enhance as you finish with a hand rubbed finish.
- “Dad! This looks nothing like a mouse!”
- Most of these tools are over a hundred years old, and I am merely their current custodian. They are specialty veiner tools that I needed for doing detail work on my recent ship portraits.
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The marketplace looks fun, but the fighting kitties and handsome Marcus…๐ป
The Marketplace is exceptional! I’ve never seen one like it.
Someone gave me a cat playground like that and my cats were scared of it…because it wobbled. I gave it away and the new cat family loves it. They must have strengthened it a bit.
This is their second one; some of them are not well-built.
I, too, love old tools. I have my dad’s hammer and my grandpa’s hand-hewn axe head..both over 100 years old.
Where did you find that photo of me and my bro as kids? oh, wait, those are cats… My bad.
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