Handprint Press

  • About Hand Print Press
  • Art
    • spoons & wood
    • stories: building, earth, arts
    • oven stories
    • music & more
    • Kiko’s gallery
    • food
  • Tech
    • oventek
    • stovetek
  • Bookstore
  • Workshops

Spoons

December 27, 2010

carved from green wood: roughed out with a hatchet and/or a northwestern style adze, then shaped and finished with crooked knives and a straight blades (click on the thumbnail for an uncropped view of the entire photo). Some of the detail work is done w/little burins. The bowls I carved with a crooked knife, straight blade, and a neat jig designed by Bill Coperthwaite (author of A Hand Made Life). Bill's spoon is the little yellow (birch) ladle with the scooped indents where the handle meets the bowl -- his addition to the tradition of spoon design. After I started carving spoons, a friend . . .

Read the Post

Leave a Comment · spoons & wood, the work of art

Teaching with Mud, Sand, and Straw

December 24, 2010

Working with mud, sand, and straw is a way to teach geology, engineering, physics, history, drawing, composition, and design. It is also a way to teach social skills, like cooperation. But more important than just what it teaches is how it teaches: Jon Young is a wilderness educator who takes kids into the woods, and teaches them to identify and track wildlife, among other things. He cites Microsoft research suggesting that tracks in the mud were an original source of writing, that alphabets are like birdprints, and that reading a set of tracks, from a brain science point of view, is the . . .

Read the Post

Leave a Comment · building tech, stories: building, earth, arts, Tech, the work of art

Low-Relief Mudwork

December 23, 2010

I cut these low-relief directly into wet mud smeared on sheetrock panels. After they are finished (and dry), I apply colored washes, which also make the surface more durable. Click on the thumbnail to see the entire image, uncropped. They range in size from about 16 x 24 inches to the big mural, which is about 8 x 20 feet. All were part of an installation/show at the Bush Barn Gallery in Salem, OR, in 2004. Note the wall made of temporary gallery wall panels that we assembled into a gateway, covered with cardboard, and then plastered with mud. The finger pattern was copied directly from a . . .

Read the Post

Leave a Comment · building tech, Kiko's gallery, Tech, the work of art

Newer Posts
Older Posts

Blog Categories

Categories

  • announcements, classes, opportunities (11)
  • Books (2)
  • Documents (3)
  • Tech (52)
    • building tech (13)
    • oventek (27)
    • stovetek (16)
  • the work of art (61)
    • food (5)
    • Kiko's gallery (8)
    • music & more (13)
    • oven stories (15)
    • spoons & wood (8)
    • stories: building, earth, arts (19)
  • Uncategorized (1)

recent comments

  • Ken Peek, Amazon on Make a Ray Jacobs Rocky Mountain Dulcimer
  • Sue M., Amazon on Make a Ray Jacobs Rocky Mountain Dulcimer
  • W. Todd Isaac, Amazon on Make a Ray Jacobs Rocky Mountain Dulcimer
  • Manya M., Amazon on Make a Ray Jacobs Rocky Mountain Dulcimer
  • Steve Murphy, Amazon on Make a Ray Jacobs Rocky Mountain Dulcimer

Search our site

Copyright © 2025 · Simply Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in