Monday, February 27, 2012

The Shop Is As Dirty As A Smithy. Must Be Making Purfling



Reducing Purfling to Thickness
Purfling is an 3-layered inlay that runs parallel to the edge of the violin.  While theories about about its acoustic properties, I believe it started out as a decorative component of the instrument.  Purfling provides a visual focus, reinforcing the outline of the body, and is a test of the skill and artistry of the maker.  This will become much clearer in future post when I actually purfle the cello.  But today is not about artistry, rather the skill involved in reducing wood into exceedingly thin sheets suitable for purfling.

 
Purfling Ready For Use
Purfling is made of three thin sheets of wood black-white-black like an ice cream sandwich.  They are glued up and sliced into thin strips which are inserted -on edge- into a groove cut into the instrument.  Many people are fascinated to learn that the black lines are not painted on.

I am making fresh purfling for the new crop of cellos out of some lovely fresh white poplar and pearwood dyed black.  (Pearwood is naturally a mocha color so it takes the black stain very well, using an ancient 3-step process I learned many years ago in Germany.)
Stradivari used these woods in his purfling and I like the historical touch even though it is not essential.  And they sure are pretty, especially the beautiful poplar I got from Dave at B&B Rare Woods in Golden, Colorado.  If you ever need some beautiful veneers, he's your man. 

Thicknessing the Pearwood
I suspect Dave must find it odd that I want the opposite of what every one of their other customers wants.  The plainest wood, with absolutely no figure or flame.  The photo shows why- I have to thin it up much more after it arrives.  This is pretty tricky as the wood becomes so thin that it can tear like paper. 


I scrape and plane down the black from about 30 thousandths of an inch (.030") to 18 thousandths.  For the sake of comparison, an average business card is 11 thousandths.  This job fills the shop with black shavings and makes such a tremendous mess that I will be finding this detritus for months around the shop.  It is as messy as a blacksmith's shop.


Checking the Thickness

Last time I did this job I splurged and bought a nice Starrett micrometer designed for this kind of work.  It gets a lot of use when I am doing this job and apart from making the job a lot easier, it is a beautiful piece of precision American engineering.  It gives me a good feeling to admire the hand work of others.  It is also gratifying to see proof of what we can accomplish in the country.

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Titian Helps Me Start a Cello Scroll



As a young maker, my penchant for picking up another task before completely finishing the current one would trouble me.  "This is silly.  A serious artist should finish each task in order."

This tiresome and pestilential belief was finally banished from my studio after learning that Titian would lay paintings aside for months if he felt like it.  Taking the time to deliberate, to reconsider, to take a break and get refreshed is what makes the difference between art and commerce. 

This, I tell myself, is why it is perfectly appropriate for me to pick up that lovely slab of maple that will become the neck and scroll of my cello.  

A dainty neck and scroll hide wi
At 20 x 6.5 x 2.5 inches and nearly 7 pounds, it is almost a menacing presence in the shop, and requires careful handling.  Delicate instrument parts could easily be crushed, and the razor sharp edges of scroll blocks have given me more than one cut.


Artifact from a different world
Generally I prepare sets of wood for instruments ahead of time.  Cleaning off the rough exterior reveals the beauty of the flame and lets me fine-tune the alignment of the grain for tone as well as stability. 

Dating each piece is useful and sometimes surprising how long it has been and how much the world has changed.  No Google either.


Scroll and neck template
The next step is to trace the template onto the scroll block.  Stradivari used templates of heavy paper, so that is good enough for me.

See-through Mylar at the head allows me to choose the grain that will look best on the pegbox and scroll.



After being sawn out
Most of the block is not used on this cello but will yield a violin and perhaps a viola scroll.   

After cleaning up the saw marks, the widths of the head and neck are marked and the final shape begins to emerge.  But that will be an entry for another day.

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Like the first day of school

Backs for 2 more cellos with a layout template and jointing plane.
Some days I take a break and this is one of them.  The demands of fussing about arching have tired me mentally, so I am preparing wood which for a few new cellos and doing a some center joints.  A few months ago I poked around the attic over my studio, where my wood is frozen every winter and baked every summer, and brought a few sets of wood down into the heated area to let it sit.     Today I am deciding how the raw wood will be prepared for making into an instrument.  I will fuss a good bit with each piece, trying to align the grain, flame, and split for best tone and visual beauty.  I started thinking about the layout last night and changed my mind several times before making my final choices this morning.

I love this job- it is like the first day of school, full of excitement and promise, with pleasant memories chiming in.  Memories of a 1997 purchasing trip; jet-lagged and driving a rented car to Bavaria while big BMWs passed me at 100+ MPH on the Autobahn.  Clambering over huge piles of wood to sift and select what I wanted...anxiety of its safe arrival, stacking and storing it.  All these years later finding these old friends and dreaming about what a beautiful instrument it will make.  Beats working.

The decisive physicality of this work- a joint is either right or it is not- will be a nice counterpoint to my recent occupations.  What Hazlitt called the "inefficacy and slow progress of intellectual compared to mechanical excellence."   Time for some mechanical excellence.   


This cello back has been through summer heat, winter cold, and a small flood since being purchased in 1997.






Monday, February 13, 2012

Refining an arching is like playing in tune.

The tools used to refine an arching.
Refining an arching seems like such a simple thing, using templates as guides to blend the curves into an organic whole.  But is tougher than it seems.  Like playing in tune, there are a multitude of ways to fail, and only one way get it right.  I believe arching is one of the 3 keys to great tone and consequently give a great deal of attention to do it as well as I possibly can.

Visitors who see this process often kid me about the wax on - wax off scene from The Karate Kid, but they are not far from the truth.  Finding that one right shape takes thousands and thousands of cuts with progressively finer tools; chunks with gouges, then shavings with small planes, finally using scrapers to a finish.  It takes many hours of work, and part of the process is pausing to rest and check it over with fresh eyes before moving on to the next step.  The time passes quickly though, and I find myself in a meditative trance about how I hope to sculpt the sound of this piece of wood.  

No two pieces of wood are alike, even out of the same tree, and the art of this task is to feel the wood under the thousands of cuts and understand what kind of sound will best work with the nature of this piece of wood.  The backs are of maple, and some pieces of maple are like granite, or ice, or hard rubber, or hard cheese, or Bakelite.  Sometimes the wood feels stringy like a carrot, grainy like sandy soil, as crisp and tender as an apple or silky and smooth.   The wood speaks and I try to listen, and the most successful instruments invariably seem to be the ones that give me a great deal of difficulty before I find a satisfactory solution.  This, I believe is a pretty widespread phenomenon in the arts, and one of the more annoying aspects of the life.


















































































































































































Saturday, February 4, 2012

The Beauty of Violin Archings

My harpoon.   Normal gouge and pencil show scale.
Carving an arching from a solid piece of maple starts out as a very physical job.  I have always enjoyed the challenge of removing wood in large chunks of wood with a big gouge, and the thrill of danger adds to the experience.  The gouge is mounted on a heavy 20 inch handle of solid steel, the weight and momentum helping me do the work.  And an awareness of the damage that 6 pounds of steel ending in a razor-sharp edge could do in a careless moment to the instrument - or me- is a constant companion.

"Call me Ishmael" always pops into my head when I unpack this harpoon from its resting place.  It has no other use than in rough arching and I like to fancy Queequeg hefting it and considering it thoughtfully.   It dwarfs every other carving tool in my shop and I love using it, despite its ungainly square handle.  It was meant to be a temporary experiment, replaced with a rounded handle, but I grew fond of its oddness.

I never start quickly with this tool, starting with tentative nibbling at the maple.  Soon enough I find myself in tune with it once again, and am able to make large bold cuts of great precision and delicacy.  This is deeply satisfying. 

Making a blank slab of hard wood into an instrument that will sing for hundreds of years to come is a delightful idea, yet to me something more elemental is happening at this stage of the work.  There is an earthy relish to hewing away confidently at the untamed material, outlining the shape which later will be refined into the flowing grace of a beautiful arching.  Before I wish it, the moment comes when I must switch to a smaller gouge and small planes to refine the shapes which have been sketched out.

Regular arching gouge and palm plane to refine arch.