Woodcarving Illustrated Issue 74 Winter/Spring 2016


Book Description

FEATURES And The Winner Is... Announcing the first winners in the 2016 People’s Choice Contest Miniature Masterpieces By Kathleen Ryan Extraordinary Renaissance carving depict religious scenes in minuscule relief Soapstone Artisty By Kathleen Ryan Three sculptors share their tips No Fear at 94 By Dean Otteson Nonagenarian Tony Giuffrida fills retirement with creative carving Heavenly Pews By Kathleen Ryan Cindy Chinn combined carving, glass, and light to create angelic art. PATTERNS Leopard Pattern Pattern by Gordon and Marsha Stiller Reference photo, description, and detailed pattern help you carve a lifelike leopard Carving a Cricifix By Cindy Chinn Tips for carving a religious icon TOOLS Universal Bench Hook By Andrew DiPace Get a grip on carving projects with uneven edges PROJECTS Folk Art Peacock By Vernon DePauw Colorful quilt-inspired design is perfect for Mardi Gras Carving a North Woods Animal Puzzle By Nancy Borson Embellish puzzle pieces with relief carving techniques Casual Caricature Rabbit By Leah Goddard and Floyd Rhadigan This easy Easter bunny will be welcome in any basket Soapstone Whale By Julie Kee Use your woodcarving skills to create this stunning stone sea creature Big Bad Whale By Barbara Millikan Fierce carved wolf is a perfect accessory for days that really bite Yorkie Dog Caricature By sandy Smith A pocket-sized pooch that’s quick to make Carving a Brook Trout By Charles Weiss Use a combination of hand and power tools to shape this realistic fish Building Noah’s Ark By Betty Padden Carve and paint this popular childhood toy TECHNIQUES Inlaid Bunny Box By roger F Wolford Use liquid inlay to add intricate designs to a remade box Adding Arms to a Carving By Oren Quist Control the grain direction for stronger arms that are easier to carve Tips for Personalizing a Toolbox By Rev. Jim Paulson Ideas to carve, paint, and decorate your toolbox




Woodcarving Illustrated Issue 76 Summer/Fall 2016


Book Description

PATTERNS Carving a Halloween Sign By Vernon DePauw Use a few simple tools to create a folk-art sign Jack o’Phantom By Floyd Rhadigan Easy carved “folds” make this silly spook look like it’s floating On-the-Go Carving Desk By Tom Noller Quick and easy plywood box protects your tools and contains your chips FEATURES Depth-Defying Art By Kathleen Ryan Rick Harney’s portraits are so much less than they appear Change of Heart By Toni Fitzgerald Brian Paul Kolakowski found his third calling in wood A Tough Nut to Crack By Kathleen Ryan Russian artist Arkady Tsesarsky turns ugly nuts into ivory-like miniature marvels Winning Wonders Meet the winners of the third 2016 People’s Choice Contest PROJECTS Realistic Lighthouse By Bob Hershey The natural shape of cottonwood bark makes it perfect for this project Building a Whimsical Bank By Bill Powell Forget bark: Use basswood blanks and shallow relief techniques to make a village worth visiting Sweet Treats By Jack Proseilo These easy-to-carve trinkets look good enough to eat Carving a Crone By Suzy Fueshko Use a delicate touch with your tools to create this haunting carving Make a Majestic Bison By Jim Willis Use hand tool to re-create this American icon Wise Wizard Practice Piece By Mike Pounders Pick a feature and exaggerate it to enhance your skills and customize your carving Learning to Carve Soap By Barbara Millikan Good clean fun can be the beginning of a lifelong passion for carving Carving a Caricature Woodsman By Jim Feather Turn the head to give your carving movement and personality Carving a Train-in-Station Like a ball-in cage, this captive locomotive slides on its rails




Woodcarving Illustrated Issue 75 Spring/Summer 2016


Book Description

PATTERNS Carve an Easy Outhouse By Gary Fenton Rickety outhouse is fun to carve, easy to customize TECHNIQUES Carving Feminine Features By Harold Enlow Master the subtle differences that allow you to carve an attractive female face FEATURES Captured Motion By Alan J Garbers Gerry Quotzkuyva's Katsina carvings are like forbidden snapshots of the traditional dances The international Woodcarvers Congress: Half a Century of Carving Excellence By Kathleen Ryan A look at the long history of the country,s oldest carving show Summer School By Mindy Kinsey Take a fun & educational vacation at a carving school or roundup And the Winner Is More winners in the 2016 People's Choice Contest! PROJECTS Spring Surprise By Desiree Hajny Realistic baby bunny is "born" from (wooden) goose egg Rowdy the Cowboy By Dale Green Hitch up your belt and get ready to carve this iconic Old West caricature Carve a Tea light Holder in 60 Minutes By Marty Leenhouts New high-density carves like a dream and can be finished like wood Quick and Easy Brown Trout Pin By Eugene Carey The Secret? Woodburn the details Carving a Dog Whistle By Sandy Smith Project is a clever play on a classic design Classic Carver's Puzzle By David Stewart Create your own version of E.J Tangerman's classic whittler's puzzle Lazing Around with the Laid- Back Frog By Jack Proseilo Carve the frog and base pieces separately and add all the accessories you want Carving a Whimsey-filled Love Spoon By Shirley Adler Challenging pattern features three traditional carving designs Heart -in- Hand Walking stick By Shawn Cipa Decorative stick has a folk-art design and a motto to live by Carving &Painting Noah's Ark Figures By Betty Padden Master the techniques of layered blanks and add-ons to carve quick and sturdy Ark inhabitants




Woodcarving Illustrated Issue 88 Fall 2019


Book Description

Carve autumn-inspired earrings, a structural mobius strip, a loyal Golden Retriever walking stick topper, Halloween ornaments and caricatures, and more! This 88th issue of Woodcarving Illustrated magazine includes 9 unique projects, plus 12 additional Halloween-themed projects, all with ready-to-use patterns and step-by-step instructions that are perfect for all skill levels! From whittling a simple witch pin for beginners to a detailed Dracula, mummy, and a beaver named Bartholomew, there’s something for every carver to learn, practice, and enjoy. Also featured is an incredible mission to recover centuries-old sunken wood that’s been repurposed into works of art – see the designs and how the historical wood responded! Read about the best new Dockyard miniature carving tools, gain access to special offers and online extras – like bonus patterns and action videos – practice hand exercises to increase your strength, and so much more!




Woodcarving Illustrated Issue 78 Spring 2017


Book Description

The Spring 2017 issue of the world's best how-to magazine for woodcarvers is packed with patterns, techniques, tips, and projects for all skill levels. Meet the father/daughter team of Nairi & Larisa Safaryan, and see how they use an indescribable technique to create utterly unique art. Randall Stoner, a lifelong fan of fantasy novels, captures his favorite tales in wood. Ralph Beam shows how to build your own carver's frame that leaves both hands free for carving. A clever geometrical design and careful carving turn Bill Johnson's flat plate into a chip-carved optical illusion. Other projects include a textured panda cub, a folk art chess set, a comical elephant hanging hook, and a keepsake rose made from scrap wood. Discover new techniques for lino print blocks, low-relief portraits, coloring book patterns, and much more!




Woodcarving Illustrated Issue 89 Winter 2019


Book Description

Tis the season for DIY gifts and decorations! Carve Norbert the Elf, nativity scene ornaments, a Santa in disguise as a firefighter, a walnut scoop, and more! This 89th issue of Woodcarving Illustrated magazine includes 15 projects, all with ready-to-use patterns and step-by-step instructions that are perfect for any and all skill levels! From whittling a simple chimney Santa for beginners to a detailed rosette appliqué, there’s something for every carver to learn, practice, and enjoy. Also featured is the mission of WOO, a workshop founded by and created for female woodworkers and carvers in Baltimore, Maryland. Read about whether you should add a lathe to your workspace, gain access to special offers and online extras – like bonus patterns and action videos – and so much more!




Woodcarving Illustrated


Book Description

A good illustration is worth a thousand wood chips! Here at last is a woodcarving book that lays the projects out chip-by-chip, with drawing-after-drawing to teach the craft in the most accurate way possible. With this book beginners don't have to guess how to position the knife or where to chip away. Clearly, explicitly, taking an many drawings as necessary - sometimes up to 50 for one project - the authors guide you through each project to the completion of handsome, useful, realistic finished pieces. The ten projects are actually ten lessons for building skill in carving techniques and developing confidence and proficiency in this age-old craft.




A Beekeeper's Diary


Book Description

Do you want to be a beekeeper and need help on how to start? Charlotte Ekker Wiggins has written the definitive guide to beginning beekeeping. This diary will guide you on how to start, troubleshoot and successfully develop basic beekeeping skills and practices.The information in this easy to use guide, with handy check lists and tips, will answer your beginning beekeeping questions including: How to naturally feed your honey bees.Best beekeeping equipment. Where to set up your hives. How to get honey bees.How to manage pests and diseases.Plus much more! This diary continues to be used in Charlotte's beekeeping classes. It is approved for use with Great Plains Master Beekeeping Program classes.




Democratizing Innovation


Book Description

The process of user-centered innovation: how it can benefit both users and manufacturers and how its emergence will bring changes in business models and in public policy. Innovation is rapidly becoming democratized. Users, aided by improvements in computer and communications technology, increasingly can develop their own new products and services. These innovating users—both individuals and firms—often freely share their innovations with others, creating user-innovation communities and a rich intellectual commons. In Democratizing Innovation, Eric von Hippel looks closely at this emerging system of user-centered innovation. He explains why and when users find it profitable to develop new products and services for themselves, and why it often pays users to reveal their innovations freely for the use of all.The trend toward democratized innovation can be seen in software and information products—most notably in the free and open-source software movement—but also in physical products. Von Hippel's many examples of user innovation in action range from surgical equipment to surfboards to software security features. He shows that product and service development is concentrated among "lead users," who are ahead on marketplace trends and whose innovations are often commercially attractive. Von Hippel argues that manufacturers should redesign their innovation processes and that they should systematically seek out innovations developed by users. He points to businesses—the custom semiconductor industry is one example—that have learned to assist user-innovators by providing them with toolkits for developing new products. User innovation has a positive impact on social welfare, and von Hippel proposes that government policies, including R&D subsidies and tax credits, should be realigned to eliminate biases against it. The goal of a democratized user-centered innovation system, says von Hippel, is well worth striving for. An electronic version of this book is available under a Creative Commons license.




Art Worlds


Book Description