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Project Completion - Gold+Chrysoprase into wood, (pic heavy)
swizz
post Mar 28 2010, 11:35 AM
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Live Edge Slab Table - Ute Cache
44L" x 21W" x 21H"

Dahhhh.... Just look at the pics and read this later if you're interested.
This table will be used primarily as ornate but also for fly tying and flyrod construction.
This project took me more hours than I care to admit. wacko.gif

'Ute Cache' - Certainly open to interpretation. I'm well aware that the history of Utes vs Settlers/Miners was a bit volatile, especially in my neck of the woods.... that's not what this piece is about.

The Slab (1.5" thick):
The slab top (Curly Sugar Maple) was purchased from a wood vendor in Ohio and shipped. It was rough, kiln dried, edged with its original bark, and a nice straight piece to work with. It's obvious flaws were four large knots, one of which was an elliptical hole filled with sap and bark.... this is what I envisioned as "The Eddy Pool". The other three knots each had large splits that ran through the slab.
The three 'typical' knot splits were filled (painstaking 1/16" layer at a time) with a crystal clear 2-part Polyamine Epoxy (very hard and crystal clear but slightly flexible after cure). I then painted the bottom of each split black. So.... when you look at the splits from the top of the table they are 3D. You can see all the way to the bottom of them with great detail, interesting effect that is virtually impossible to photograph. Another interesting feature of the table was the profile that looks (to me) like an Indian or Native American. I thought this was pretty freaky... so I went with it. The profile is what it is, I have not modified its shape.... it's a natural occurrence in the wood, related to the angle of the slice and shape of tree.

The Eddy Pool (difficult to photograph):
This is the elliptical knot containing two Sterling Silver Cutthroat Trout (exceptionally lifelike painted by an award winning fish taxidermist Freestone Fine Art), buncha Gold, black sands with Quartz, Pyrope Garnet, and a Chrysoprase streambed (Chrysophrase alternate spelling). The knot was filled with bark, sap, and dirt. Possibly a squirrel or two living there during the course of its life. Once I cleaned it out I was left with the beautiful naturally rounded wood features seen in the pic. To me.... I envisioned it a mineral rich, undiscovered, swirly eddy pool containing exposed bedrock and all the goodies (hey, a man can dream can't he?). I chose Chrysoprase for the streambed #1 because it's highly translucent and the perfect color and, #2 because it can be found in Colorado. I purchased a small lot of Chrysoprase from a guy in Colorado. They were rough slices approximately 10mm thick (average) and many different shapes/sizes. I puzzle-pieced them together under the elliptical knot to create the streambed. Next.... the slices went to GoldBarnstormer (Jeff) for a little lap work so they'd fit together tight. He also milled them down to a uniform 4mm to aid in translucency. Jeff did an excellent job, thank you! The effect is beyond what I expected. The streambed receives enough natural light from below to cause a somewhat 'glowing' effect from the top looking into the pool. I finished the feature off with an ornate Maple cover-plate routed to fit the Chrysoprase and keep it firmly in place. Once this was done, I began filling the pool (again, painstaking 1/16" at a time with 24hr cure between mixes). Placing the Gold and goodies was a lot of fun I must admit. The two Trout are suspended at different depths and look freaky-real, but again, this feature was difficult to photograph (due to flaring from surface glare). I filled the pool to the surface (1/16" at a time) then poured the entire top with the 2-part Polymine (challenging). The final finish is crystal-clear, about 1/16"-1/8" thick, and impervious to water and alcohol. The two shelves received the same treatment. I used different stains in the knotty void to achieve the look I wanted within the Eddy Pool in an effort to replicate bedrock. Most of the fine Gold came from my primitive back-breaking shovel/hand sluice mining. Much of the larger colors came from Dan & Denise's CP cons. I did my very best to make sure all of the Gold in the pool is from Colorado (mostly by color separation and some help from Dan). Is it 100% Coloraddy Gold? I think so... only my hairdresser knows for sure (I shave my head regularly). chin.gif biggrin.gif

The Base
The beetle-kill Pine crotch base is sentimental to me. It was cut by a former log home client of mine who unexpectedly passed away (heart attack) shortly after I completed a chinking project on his home. His name was Ron DeFore. He was a Vietnam USMC veteran and one of the kindest people you could ever imagine meeting. When my chinking project was finished we remained friends. He offered me all the wood I wanted from his property as he was clearing beetle-kill Pine. He'd cut it all to length and piled it for me to come and get. Hell... he even let me use his nice trailer to haul it all! Anyway, this chunk was from one of his wood piles and turned out to fit perfectly for my purposes. R.I.P Ron, you're missed.

Here are some pics, it may take a couple posts to fit them in this thread... bear with me. This was a difficult photography session as the surfaces are highly reflective. I used indoor studio equipment with umbrellas, soft & hard light sources, and black people-popper background.
"click to enlarge" for better detail if you're interested, the bandwidth compression was not kind to the thumbnails

Front


Back


Top (Chrysoprase artificially lit from below for effect in this image)


The Chief


Eddy Pool


pictorial continued.....


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swizz
post Mar 28 2010, 11:36 AM
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Damsel Hatch! Damsel Nymphs spend most of their life under water as a carnivorous nymph. Then, on a nice warm July day, they crawl to the surface in hoards and hatch (on land) into beautiful adult Damsels spending the remainder of their adult lives focusing on reproduction and eating insects... including many mosquitoes. Fascinating creature. I wood-burned these (their actual size within 1mm) into the wood base to depict this event.


Closer Look (haa... one crawling out of a hole in the wood)


Stonefly Nymphs - Similar to the Damsel but larger, these critters spend 1-4 yrs underwater then crawl to the surface for an explosive hatch. I always get excited when I encounter these on the stream. Major fish food. These were also burned into the wood and within 1mm of their actual size.


And... I had to burn some of my favorite fly patterns into the knots:








Maple Cover Plate under Chrysophrase (it looks a little blue here [color temp slightly off], the next pic down is the actual color, light-med green)



Here's what it looked like just before I installed it, to give you a better idea


Credits - Woodburned into the bottom of the slab THANK YOU MY FRIENDS!


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CP
post Mar 28 2010, 11:56 AM
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smiley-shocked003.gif jawdrop.gif cool.gif
WOW......

AWESOME......

SPECTACULAR........

AND FANFRICKENTASTIC!!!!!!!!!! worthy.gif Doesnt' even begin to describe that project. SWEET!

That is a very cool table and will never be matched I'm sure. thumbsupsmileyanim.gif

Thank you for sharing the bueaty of the piece within it's story too. You'll cherish that table from now on I bet.

Ok, I'm off to blow all those pics up again........thumbnails looked good too but WOW! smiley-shocked003.gif char098.gif I recommend clicking the pics for the larger view. happy088.gif

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RichDColorado
post Mar 28 2010, 03:25 PM
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Swizz - I don't know what to add to what Dan said, but absolutely beautiful piece of art. You should be unabashedly proud to show that anywhere, anytime, to anyone and know there is not another piece like that in the world. Spectacular. Thanks for sharing the pics and congrats on your achievement.
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russau
post Mar 29 2010, 05:13 AM
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very striking peice!
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Denise
post Mar 29 2010, 07:10 AM
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thumbsupsmileyanim.gif Amazing work Chris with fantastic detail!! wub.gif Those pics blew me away and left me speachless. ohmy.gif You definately have amazing talents!!

The detail in your eddy pool is fantastic, almost too real! Brought back great memories of underwater dredging in the winter with my "wee little friend" (a small fish) supervising and snacking on what I was stiring up. happy.gif
I think I have even encountered one of those Damsel Nymphs. Felt like it stung me on my hand while I was dredging. smiley-shocked003.gif Do those attach themselves to rocks in a created shell like underwater? The Damsel Nymph looks very similiar but without the underwater shell.

Thanks for sharing pics of your fantastic creation with us. I knew you were hiding amazing talents.
happy088.gif wink.gif


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Hawkewind
post Mar 29 2010, 07:32 AM
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Truly awesome
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swizz
post Mar 29 2010, 09:30 AM
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Thanks for the compliments and kind words you guys!!
I certainly could not have completed the project as envisioned without the collective help of those mentioned as well. happy088.gif happy088.gif happy088.gif happy088.gif

Denise, regarding the aquatic insects.... (forgive me if I ramble on a bit)
None of the aquatic insects can "sting" per se. They can however pinch with their mandibles. Damsel Nymphs are not cased. In all my years of encountering thousands of Damsel Nymphs I've only been pinched twice, it gets your attention. Damsels occur primarily in stillwaters (lakes or ponds). They crawl and swim (they are excellent swimmers) to the surface, shore, stick, anything, dry out and hatch into adults. I've had days out in my 1-man pontoon anchored in a lake..... looking down the acnchor rope and seeing a single-file like of Damsel Nymphs (as deep as I can see the rope) climbing upward and onto my boat. I've watched them emerge on my pontoons while I fish. If I'm not paying attention they'll be on my arms and neck before long, can barely feel them. Relatively large nymph though, over 1" long and slender. Normally olive or light green, sometimes light tan.

The cased nymphs that you're encountering are something completely different. Caddis, another (possibly most abundant) source of Trout food in the western states. Usually you'll see clusters of the cases attached to underwater sticks, rocks, basically everything underwater. They are very prolific and not as environmentally fussy as most aquatic insects. They live in streams as well as stilllwaters. Not swimmers but exceptional clingers and crawlers. Their beefy claw-like legs are designed for this as opposed to the longer skinny legs of Damsel (swimmer). The Arkansas is probably the most famous river in Colorado for epic Caddis hatches. Heck, Buena Vista even has a holiday celebrating the Mothers Day Caddis Hatch every year. I contemplated including clusters of the cased Caddis woodburned into my project base but decided not, can always add them later. Caddis spend 1 year underwater as a nymph. They make protective camo cases from whatever is available in the stream or lakebed. The cases are primarily spun with tree bark from tiny waterlogged twigs but I've seen many in certain areas made exclusively from gravel. As they grow underwater they shed cases and build new ones. Trout are keen to this and will go around eating them case and all... but when the hatch happens... ohhhhh mama, explosive action. Once the Caddis emerges into an adult it gets to experience one whole day of life above surface. During this time they mate, lay eggs on the water surface (which sink), then die. they can happen during the day or night and there are (MANY) different subspecies, sizes, and colors. I've never been pinched by a Caddis Nymph but they appear to have the tools and it might not surprise me if it were a larger one, would have to be more of a defense mechanism pinch. I've seen (tiny) empty Caddis cases in the CP placer dirts so I know you guys are encountering them with some regularity. Hard to avoid.. they're everywhere! beautiful little creature they are.
If you like Gold and know what a Caddis Nymph is capable of... you'll LOVE this:
A French artist captured a bunch of Caddis Nymphs and crated an aquarium environment. The nymphs were forced to construct cases from the only available materials. Well... he gave them some incredible materials to work with and they did all the work, stunningly I might add!
You gotta check this out: Incredible Caddis Cases

(sorry, I'm a bit of a bug nerd)


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jim
post Mar 30 2010, 05:20 PM
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WOW!!! Swizz that is some fine workmanship there. Great imagination in design too. happy088.gif
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swizz
post Mar 30 2010, 06:40 PM
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QUOTE (jim @ Mar 30 2010, 06:20 PM) *
WOW!!! Swizz that is some fine workmanship there. Great imagination in design too. happy088.gif

Thanks Jim! I had contemplated incorporating that superb pick you sent me at one point. It wasn't quite large enough to do the job though. I'm definitely a fan of your work.


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Coalbunny
post Mar 31 2010, 07:51 AM
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Wow! Nice job!


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Denise
post Apr 2 2010, 05:41 AM
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QUOTE (swizz @ Mar 29 2010, 09:30 AM) *
If you like Gold and know what a Caddis Nymph is capable of... you'll LOVE this:
A French artist captured a bunch of Caddis Nymphs and crated an aquarium environment. The nymphs were forced to construct cases from the only available materials. Well... he gave them some incredible materials to work with and they did all the work, stunningly I might add!
You gotta check this out: Incredible Caddis Cases

(sorry, I'm a bit of a bug nerd)


Fantastic information Chris thanks, and that link was great! I showed Timmy because he too was wondering what those were.
His jaw dropped when I showed him the pictures in that link. jawdrop.gif

He also thought you did a great job on the table. He didnt believe us at first that the eddy pool with the fish wasnt real. wink.gif






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swizz
post Apr 2 2010, 07:25 PM
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QUOTE (Mrs.CP @ Apr 2 2010, 06:41 AM) *
He also thought you did a great job on the table. He didnt believe us at first that the eddy pool with the fish wasnt real. wink.gif


hahaha, thanks Timmy!
I had a feeling you guys might like that link with the Gold Cased Caddis.... pretty neat experiment.


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Denise
post May 4 2010, 03:34 PM
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We loved the info on the them, thanks Chris! smile.gif What is the brand name of the 2-part Polyamine Epoxy you used for the eddy pool, If you dont mind me asking? It sure turned out nice I think!!

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swizz
post May 12 2010, 01:45 PM
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QUOTE (Mrs.CP @ May 4 2010, 04:34 PM) *
What is the brand name of the 2-part Polyamine Epoxy you used for the eddy pool, If you dont mind me asking?


I used EnviroTex Lite for this project. It was challenging to control micro bubbles... had to lightly torch it occasionally during the curing processes. Really tuff stuff (yet semi-flexible) once it cures. A taxidermist friend recommended it to me. He uses it to create pools and such for nature settings. It's incredibly clear and resistant to yellowing as long as you keep it out of direct UVs.


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