Please click on any of the images and photos for a full-sized close-up.
The Versa-Tool uses 120 volts, 25 watts, and reaches 950 degrees F. It has an in-line variable rheostat that allows you to set your temperature range from very pale tonal value settings to very black burns. It comes with a five interchangeable burning tips, hot-knife tip, soldering tip, soldering wire, and three hot-stamp points – at a retail cost in the US of $29.99.
The Woodburner Detailer is a one-temperature tool with a setting of 120 volt, 16.5 watt, 750 degrees F (398.89C) unit, and has an on/off inline switch. It comes with just one small ball tip. The Detailer sells for $14.99. For this unit you can purchase extra tip profiles either individually for in prepackages sets of five.
Let’s find out why I would want a burner that has less power, less temperature variability, less tips, even if it is a half the price of the Versa-Tool. As I work through the burning steps for this Henna Tattoo Moon Face pattern I will be commenting on how well I think the Detailer is preforming. Please remember, this is just my opinion.
Henna Moon Pyrography Project
Walnut Hollow Woodburner Detailer – Introduction
Walnut Hollow Woodburner Detailer 2 – History of Henna Tattoos
Walnut Hollow Woodburner Detailer 3 – Tracing the Pattern
Walnut Hollow Woodburner Detailer
Basic Hand Position in Wood Burning
With both pen styles – the Optima and the Walnut Hollow – I use a light pressure writing grip resting the pen between the first two fingers of my hand on one side of the pen and my thumb on the opposite side.
Because I want as much free-motion to my hand movements as possible I do not rest or support my hand directly on the wood surface. The side or base of my palm never touches the wood. Instead I extend my small finger until it touches the wood and use that finger’s tip as an anchor or balance point. I have exaggerated the hand position in this photo so that you can see how the small finger is the only part of my hand that comes into contact with the burning surface.
The only part of my hand or arm that is holding the pen that touches anything is that small finger. This position and grip gives me a full range of motion as I pull the burn stroke. Please note that I do not grip my pens as tightly as shown in this photo … that tight grip comes from holding my hand still while waiting for the camera to take the photo. A better image of grip pressure is shown in the photo below.
Step 5: Plug your Walnut Hollow Woodburner Detailer into a surge protector electric strip for general safety. Allow the pen tip to heat for several minutes to reach its full temperature setting.
Note: In any burning session around the studio I have a practice board on my table as well as the project board. A practice board is just a piece of scrap wood that is the same wood species as my project. I can use that board to practice strokes, experiment with textures, and in this project check the burner to see if it is at full temperature.
Detailer Performance: With this very first step in the burning I knew I loved the Walnut Hollow Detailer! Look closely at the moon and sun face photo. The outlines are all of the same thickness, and all of the same tonal depth. There are no thin, week areas in the outline and no hot spots were I paused to turn the pen tip in the curve or at an intersection line. And not one scorched or haloed burn that can happen with a very hot tipped pen. That outlining looks as if it could have been printed right onto the wood. With my first go at using the Walnut Hollow Detailer I achieved what I would consider my best outlining step ever !!! I love it !!!
If this burner does nothing more than allow me to create perfect outlines every time, it has already earn its right to be on my photography table.
Step 6: With the outlining complete, lets see how the Detailer preforms as a shading tool.
With a very light pressure on the pen tip, I have worked a tightly packed scrubbie stroke into the two faces – my moon and sun. The shading for both falls of your right hand side of the element. Because the sun sits behind the moon, her face shading will become the darkest tonal value in this burn.
The eye pupils, and the inside of her open mouth was burned to a dark tonal value using a simple touch-and-lift dot pattern. By allowing the pen tip to rest for a moment on the wood the dot burns to an even black spot.
Detailer Review: Creating pale tonal values with the Detailer is done by simply adjusting the pressure on your pen tip! A light, even moving touch creates smooth pale tonal values. Adding layers of light-pressure strokes quickly brings the tonal values into the mid-range. There is no waiting for the pen tip to cool as I would with my high-end burners.
So at this point the Walnut Hollow Woodburner Detailer is creating perfectly even, smooth outlines, and a nice range of tonal values. There is one more note here, which sadly I did not think to capture in a photo. Even though I have been burning for about an hour at this point in the work and have created an area of dark and very dark tonal values there is no carbon build-up on the pen tip. The tip is as bright and clean as when I began burning.
In the next posting we will be working the Henna Tattoo flowers and scrolls and adding to the facial shading.
While I work on the next posting, here are a few links you might enjoy:
Contrasting Tonal Values – How to use black and white to create drama in your burnings.
Mushroom Pyrography Doodles – Using textures, fill strokes, and patterns to create your shading.
Tonal Value Worksheet – Create a sepia tonal value scale using your wood burner.
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