Beautiful piece.
WOW !!!
How did you do that? Is it a surface inlay or does it go all the way through.
Very nice, I really like the form
Very nice work, looks great.
Nice wood, great platter, and I love the inlay. Definitely not just another platter.
Brian
Sawdust Formation Engineer
in charge of Blade Dulling
Beautiful...love the inlay
This begs the question of what "not just another platter" would look like...
Gorgeous work!
Of all the laws Brandolini's may be the most universally true.
Deep thought for the day:
Your bandsaw weighs more when you leave the spring compressed instead of relieving the tension.
That's beautifully done. I really like the finish and color. The transition between the rim to the bottom is sharply done. Nice work.
USMC '97-'01
Beautiful work Willem! Exceptionally clean inlay and the natural contrast between woods used is striking! The only thing I would like to see changed is for you to upload the image to SMC so that it stays part of this thread. Anything happens to your Photobucket account (and it has happened to many), we lose the image and your thread is rendered useless. Please consider it.
Steve
“You never know what you got til it's gone!”
Please don’t let that happen!
Become a financial Contributor today!
What a lovely piece!
Incredible piece and is praiseworthy!
Many thanks for all the complements. Previous question, the inlay was done with double bevel marquetry, using a scroll saw. The inlay thickness is 3/32".
Picture uploaded.
DSCN1324 Resized.jpg
Thank you Willem!
Steve
“You never know what you got til it's gone!”
Please don’t let that happen!
Become a financial Contributor today!
Very very nice!
It reminds me of a hard edge sumi-e painting.
RD