Thursday, April 14, 2016

heart and leaf spoon


here is a spoon i made a few years ago for my step mother. it is made from a very old ocean spray trunk. such beautiful, strong wood! i think it is my favorite to carve. the hardness of the wood allows me to do finer detail and thinner body of the spoon. looking back at this i am amazed at what i was able to do with the leaf and heart stem of the spoon! the heart and leaf represent the love that gives new life. it is about five inches long.
UPDATE: after sitting for the past few years on display in the front hallway of the house where i was born, my parents took my suggestion and passed it on to cynthia's mother, who is going through some hard times. i am so happy when the beauty of these carvings can bring a little awe and joy to more people!







Wednesday, April 13, 2016

fig in thorn junction


when i was visiting some friends in thorn junction and working in their garden i found a piece of fig wood that just cried out to be made into a spoon. sometimes i just see the potential. this section of branch was in a compost bin where i was happily placing all the grass i pulled.
it had lots of rings, but i was told it was only a few years old. later i found out it had grown so many rings because it was in their greenhouse! the wood was soft, but stronger than i expected. i carved it in one sitting on a sunny morning. very rare for me to carve a spoon all at once like this! the sanding was done mostly during a song circle i attended that night with my host Jani. got all filled with good vibrations! i decided to give the spoon to the lovely couple who's tree the wood had come from. it is now honored to be used in their love-filled kitchen!






Sunday, April 3, 2016

avocado season


this is actually the second avocado spoon i have carved, but the first one i was not able to get a picture of. it is a softer wood with a beautiful texture to the grain. i enjoy carving it dry. this piece i found laying around the trailer where i was living for about a month this spring. someone who came to help out for a week on the farm liked the olive spoon i had recently finished and asked if she could commission one for her parents. YES! when people get excited about these spoons i respond. the shape of the handle came about largely due to the irregular way it was broken and cracked. it was more of a shard, not the half-branch section i often work from. the paddle on the end was at first going to be some kind of spiral, like a curling leaf, but i decided to leave the inside of the curve intact for strength. it turned out it gives a wonderful eyeful of the grain on the flat surface and evokes the fruit of the tree it was made from, which i emphasized intentionally. i think it is elegant in kind of a sturdy way. thanks Liz for your encouragement!





sister's spoon


visiting my sister at her home on the lost coast i was able to finally get a picture of the tiny spoon i made for her years ago. she uses it as a salt spoon just about every day. what a special thing to be present that way in her life through something i made. this spoon is from the same piece of yew wood that i carved all those other ones out of. what a beautiful wood! thank you tree for living and giving your life! thanks to the Creator for making it all possible.