I've really enjoyed making these chopsticks. I want them to be loose pairs. I'm not shooting for exact replication. I want them to just sort of belong together. Oddly and unintentionally, some of them seem to have a man / woman sort of feel to the pair. Interesting, interesting. From left to right the wood species are as follows: cherry, maple, bubinga, black walnut, maple. I finished all these with light coats of sesame oil which really brings out the color and grain patterns in all these beautiful woods, especially the cherry and bubinga.

Here are a couple shots of a bowl I've made out of green soapstone. It's for my mother. Actually, this is her Mother's Day 2006 present -- just a few days late. I really dig the way the finished / unfinished contrast came out. These pictures don't show that too well though. I finished this and the bowls below with beeswax. I heated the stones up in the oven after I carved and sanded them down (all the way to 600 grit wet / dry sandpaper) and then coated them with the beeswax. Really high shine -- made it hard to take the pictures (it was impossible with the flash). Nice luster.


These are a couple of 'bowls' that I've made out of a black soapstone. It was much harder stone than the green one with it's own challenges. These came from the same boulder which I broke into two large pieces. My original concepts for the bowls hasn't worked out. I wanted to incorporate some white stone with these. In the end I have -- with some strange, fragile crystal looking rock that's a real pain in the ass the sand and finish well. It's not my original plan though. I'm getting used to that with my work. Often I begin with an image or an idea and then as I learn about my materials and about my limitations with them I am forced to revise. These days I'm much more excited about that than frustrated. Indeed, the learning and adapting is a lot of the fun as I work out these physical puzzles and rocky paragraphs of stone and wood and paint.


This last pic is of a pendant I tried to make. In the end, I think it's a clumsy, crude thing to try and aspire to be called jewelry. I do love the texture of the rock though, and the way the light comes through the blue bands in the sediment layers was a complete and sweet surprise. So was the woman I was thinking of when I found the rock and made the thing. I'm going to call it a rough draft and maybe try another piece. It's the densest of the rock I've worked with and is taxing to shape with my dremel tools. Really prone to flake and chip out too. I reached beyond what the rock could stand at least three times and had to drastically alter the shape of the thing. Learned a lot though. Lots yet to get.










