January 2025

Free Wood Carving Spoon Projects

Spoon carving is a wonderful beginning carving project, and a delightful canvas for advanced wood carvers.  Every aspect of a wooden spoon can be changed, altered, and decorated.

You will need just a few wood carving chisels and gouges, a bench knife, some sandpaper, and mineral oil to give your spoon a final, food-safe finish.

This large apple butter paddle spoon was carved from 1″ thick basswood.  The extra thickness gave more than enough room to add a pottery bird relief carving to the inside of the spoon bowl.

 

Supplies:

There are some wonderful specialty carving tools available to the spoon carver as spoon carving hook, wood carving scorp knife, or a long bent fishtail gouge.

While these tools are great addition to your tools kit as your interest in spoon carving grows, they are not necessary to get started in your hobby or to create a fantastic original spoon design.

Even after 25 years of wood carving, I use a basic beginner’s tool kit that contains both wide sweep gouges and bent gouges, shown below, while not busting your wood carving budget.


This beginner’s wood carving gouge set includes two wide sweep gouges, one bent gouge, and two medium sized gouge, perfect for the beginning wooden spoon carver.

 

The one specialty tool that I do have in my beginner’s kit is a small draw knife.  With a draw knife you can clamp your wood blank to your table and remove the excess wood from the outside of your spoon pattern quickly.

 

Once your wood blank is securely clamped to your table, you can used the draw knife to slice large, long shavings from the sides of the spoon handle.

 

The shape of the spoon bowl, the length of the handle, and the decorative treatment of both makes each new  spoon you carve a work of art.

 

Spoons can be carved out of several wood species, but I prefer basswood because of its dense grain that takes detailing very well, its availability, and it’s ease of carving especially for beginners.

Pre-cut spoon shapes can be purchased, eliminating the need for a scroll saw, or excessive time cutting away the excess wood from your blank.

220- and 320-grit and paper and brown kraft paper (brown paper bag) are sued to remove any fine wood fibers left over from your carving cuts and decorative relief carving detail.

Finally you may chose to give your spoon a mineral oil finish.  This gives the spoon a slight sheen and so feel in the hand.  But finishing the spoon is not necessary. Many hand carved spoons are left in their natural wood finish.

 

This trio of wedding spoons – Welsh Love Spoons – were worked from 1/2″ thick basswood and carved with very flat, wide handle areas that were later chip carved.

 

A 1″ thick basswood blank gave more than enough depth to relief wood carve this Celtic knot dragon. the handle.

With your supplies gathered you are ready to start carving!

Here are the links to the free tutorials here on LSIrish.com that will guide you step-by-step through your first wood carving spoon project.

Wood Carving a Basic Wooden Spoon

  •    20 detailed steps from cutting the spoon blank to adding the final mineral oil finish

Spoon, Fork, and Ladle Styles for Wood Carving

The Art of Spoon Carving by Lora S. Irish

 

Free Wood Carving Spoon Projects Read More »

Cane & Walking Stick Carving Projects

Cane & Walking Stick Carving Projects Read More »

Scroll Saw Pyrography Yarn Tassel Maker

Arts and Craft Show Sales Ideas found below the project instructions.

I am also looking for new idea that can inspire our next wood carving, scroll saw, or pyrography project.   I came across this idea, Yarn Tassel Maker, on Temu, loved it.  The original was cut from 1/2″ board and is for sale at $5.95.

I think we can do better on the wood layout design and have fun adding a decorative wood burning!  This is literally a ten minute project for the scroll saw cutting, sanding, and glue steps.  Add another 10 minutes for the pyrography sets.

The knitters, crocheters, and weaver in your family are just going to love you when you gift them this tassel maker.  As a crocheter, when it comes time to make a tassel I am scrambling for scraps of cardboard, thick enough to hold up to the yarn wraps, but thin enough to cut with my scissors.

My version is made with 3 pieces of 18″ plywood for strength, features a slot to  accurately wrap a gather yarn for the top of the tassel and the gather yarn for the bottom of tassel ball, plus has a slot between the plywood layers at the bottom of the tassel maker where you can insert you scissor blades for easy cutting.

Supplies:

3 pieces of 1/8″ plywood that measures 3″ wide x 5″ long
wood glue
masking tape
ruler
scroll saw or coping saw
graphite tracing paper
pyrography pen
paste wax finish
yarn
crochet hook or a large yarn needle
scissors

NOTE:  I made my first tassel maker to create a 5″ long tassel, but you can adjust the height of your tassel maker for 3″, 4″, and even extra long at 8″

NOTE:  I went right for my pyrography pen for the decoration, but you can leave your tassel maker un-decorated, add decorative stickers, and even use scrapbook stamps to add a small design.

How to Create the Tassel Maker

1.  My prototype was worked form 1/8″ foam core board.

On your 1/8″ plywood, make the outside dimensions for your tassel maker with a pencil – 3″ wide x 5″ long.  Mark a line 3/4″ down from the top.  Make a second line 1/2″ from the line above.  Mark a line 3/4″ in from one side of  the board.  This makes the slot area of the tassel maker.

Gang cut the three pieces of plywood, following along the pencil lines.

Cut 1/4″ from the bottom edge of one plywood piece.  This piece will become the center of the three layer stack.  By removing a 1/4″ from that piece you create the slot so that the scissors can easily slip above the yarn for cutting.

Note: If you are working with foam core board, cut each piece individually.  Use an exacto knife and hold the knife at a low angle to the board.  Drop the cut slowly, using two or three cuts for each line.  My foam core board prototype is as sturdy as my plywood project!

2.  Sand the edges of the plywood with 220-grit sandpaper.  Foam core board can be sanded with a fine-grit nail file, working each filing stroke in one direction.

3. Stack the pieces with the 1/4″ short plywood in the center, aligning the yarn slots.  Use carpenter glue to glue the three layers together.  Use masking tape to tightly hold the three pieces as the glue dries.  For the foam core board prototype I used hot glue.


4. In the finished prototype, above, you can see the scissors slot.

 

How to Use the Tassel Maker

5.  To create a tassel, hold one end of your yarn at the bottom of the tassel maker.  Wrap the yarn over the full height of the tassel maker  between 35 – 50 times depending on how thick a tassel you want.

 

6. Use your crochet hook to pull a 9″ piece of yarn under the wrapped yarn at the very top of the tassel maker.  Make several loops, pull tight, and tie off.  This yarn is used to secure your tassel to your hat or scarf.

 

 

7. Cut a 9″ length of yarn.  Slide the yarn into the slot at the top of the tassel maker.  Use a crochet hook to pull the yarn out of the slot on the opposite side of the wrapped yarn.  Lay the yarn over the wrapped yarn and repeat this step several time.  Pull the yarn tight and tie off. Use you crochet hook to pull the ends of the center wrap yarn behind the wrap, down into the tassel area.

 

8. Slide your scissors through the bottom slot of the tassel maker and cut all of the wrapped threads.

 

9.  Slide the tassel off the tassel maker!  You can use your scissors to trim up the tassel ends as needed.

 


10.  The tassel maker is quick and easy to make, fun to use, and let’s you make as many tassels as you need that are all the same size.

 

Arts and Craft Show Ideas!

I did the Craft Show circuit for many years and was always looking for that ‘show stopper’ idea that caught the someone’s attention enough to tease them off the walkway and bring them up to my booth or table.

There are several things that I learned early and worked over and over again.

1. You never make a sale unless you can get your customer into a conversation.

2. A customer will browse over your booth from a distance if you only have high priced items.  They will approach your table if you have some inexpensive items out at the front of the table.

3.  The little items bring them your table where you can start that selling conversation that will then bring their attention to your higher priced items.

4. At a craft show you are competing with every other crafter for that one lump sum of money that they are willing to spend at the show on a high priced purchase, while a customer often makes multiple lower priced purchases.

5.  You won’t get sales if you have to convince your customer that they need or want your products.  But you almost always get the sale if you simply let them convince themselves that they need what you are selling.

6. Looking at the photo above, this display would be on the front of my table, about one or one and half feet from where I would be standing.  Why? Because that little distance lets them approach without feeling that they will be ‘pounce’ on by my sales pitch.  But they are well within talking distance when they reply to your “good afternoon, are you enjoying the show?”

7.  Behind that display would be my selling basket for the tassel makers with several different sizes of maker, tassel makers with different designs, and with ribboned sets of 3″, 4″ and 5″ tassel makers.

8.  Color sells, and most wood carvings, wood burning, and scroll saw projects don’t have color.  But those tassels do, the knit hat does, and so do the brightly colored ribbons that are wrapped around the sets.

8. Again returning to the photo, the display visually shows the customer exactly what that ‘thing’ is, what it does, and how it works.  They don’t have to ask you anything, but they will tell you … grin … what it does and why they just must have one.

9.  Even my display scroll saw tassel maker has a designs that clearly shows ‘this is a tassel maker’, which emphasizes this is what you can make with it, and here is where you can use the tassels you make …

You have brought them into your booth and let them make the sale.

I really good you sell dozens of these little tassel makers at your next show!!!

 

 

 

 

 

Scroll Saw Pyrography Yarn Tassel Maker Read More »

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