Very nice example of cutting flares. You have an incredibly steady hand, cutting the second side of the flare so perfectly in line with the first is very impressive. So is your original scroll drawing for that matter. It looks like you are using a push engraving tool rather than a pneumatic power tool. Either that or you've got it so well tuned that it's not leaving any chatter marks. As someone who struggles to do even utilitarian engraving, I'm seriously impressed.
@@KaiSimolaHandEngraver pretty name I'm still lost but I'll Google that, keep uploading more of your your so we can see hahaha thank you for being nice and answering :)
That's a beautiful cut. Not really what I'd call a "tutorial", Professor, but I suppose people who know what they're doing already could glean something from it.
It isn't a flare engraver, the person is the "engraver", the tool is the "graver" he's using a square graver basically anywhere from 90 degrees to 120 degrees vshape with a 45 degree face and a 15 degree heel. You get the flare effect by twisting the wrist and leaning it one side or the other and doing both sides of the line respectively. Hope that helps its obvious now but starting out i had a hard time w the Dimensions of the graver. Might make a video about it soon.
Master!!! I'm enjoying the video. I always watch it and practice copying it. Do you draw the patterns you use in your sketches at a time? And I always end up with a messy beginning and end. I wonder what the reason is.