shellac on curly maple, yellow birch, and bird's-eye maple
34" x 53" x 1"
34" x 53" x 1"


Scarifier
Gripped Beyond
In addition to the cast urethane cabinet that I wrote about for that show, I really like what he did with this wavy ash cabinet. Unfigured ash can be a boring choice for fine furniture but by adding the waves he has essentially created figured lumber and by adding the color he has found a great way to highlight the grain.
Here is a close-up. It is a technique that is both spectacular and distinctive.
I also met Bonnie Birshoff of the J.M. Syron and Bishoff duo and was very impressed by their tamo and polymer clay veneered cabinet.
This was my first encounter with tamo. It is a Japanese ash that can have spectacular figure similar to the highest quality quilted maple. Of course, I immediately wondered how I could get a hold of some of this as solid lumber, rather than veneer, but a quick Internet search indicates that money would have to be no object. Veneer like this could cost more than $7/sq foot so a board, 1 inch thick, if you could find it in the US (and I really doubt it) would likely cost more than $50/board ft. To get it I'm sure you would have to go to a Japanese mill and outbid the veneer buyers. I might as well stick with my local hardwoods, still, this is amazing stuff.
After bleaching it a couple of times I still wasn't happy with the results so I did another search on how to bleach wood with lye and hydrogen peroxide and was able to find this excellent article by Jeff Jewitt. The mistake I was making was waiting too long to add the hydrogen peroxide after applying the lye. It needs to be done at the same time or very soon after.
It is still a long way from being finished but I needed to put it together in order to see how it is going. I'm trying to get each of the blue pieces to be a different color.
I think this is going to be the preferred orientation.