putting in fine silver and brass wire. I think I have almost 10ft of silver and 2 feet of brass in it right now. Excuse the crappy pics....
Attachment 274850
Attachment 274851
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putting in fine silver and brass wire. I think I have almost 10ft of silver and 2 feet of brass in it right now. Excuse the crappy pics....
Attachment 274850
Attachment 274851
It's amazing how fast you use up the wire. I've had a couple times I would run out and wait for an order before I could finish a project.
I buy fine silver in 6"X6" sheets .012 thick and cut strips off with a pair of scissors. Only economical way I have found to do silver.
So how or what holds the wire in the groove that you cut into the wood ?
I have ground a assortment of smallish screwdrivers into stabbing tools. The tighter the corner the smaller the tool. The ribbon is + or - 1/16" or so and driven into the groove after the groove has been all stabbed in. Then with a wet sponge soak the area down with water and the wood swells up around the ribbon permanently. I wire and entire area before I wet the wood down. Believe it or not but silver is easier to put in than brass. Brass work hardens while you are cutting it off the sheet. I have to anneal it before I can even put it into the wood.
Thanks for the explanation , I find it amazing that just the swelling of the wood holds it .
Thank you that makes sense . I really don't have the artistic abilities to do the wire inlay Ive been a metal worker most of my life but I'm more of a straight line artist ! Lol , but it's good to have the knowledge . If I get bored maybe I'll try it on a piece of pine or scrap wood .
This example is one of my favorites , so much going on.Attachment 274999
[QUOTE=RU shooter;5080332]Thank you that makes sense . I really don't have the artistic abilities to do the wire inlay Ive been a metal worker most of my life but I'm more of a straight line artist ! Lol , but it's good to have the knowledge . If I get bored maybe I'll try it on a piece of pine or scrap wood .[/QUO
Straight lines are your enemy in scroll work, regardless of if it is wire inlay or engraving. If there is a flat spot in your curve, and the design doesn't flow, start over! When I was being taught engraving, I did drawings of designs for a month before I was allowed to cut metal.