Slimline - Celtic Knot using Curly Maple with Texas Ebony Inserts

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thomgarner

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I spent the day making this pen, it is a slimline that I completed a Celtic Knot using my new trimming sled I built last week. I cut the inserts out of Texas Ebony and used a piece of Curly maple for the body. The finish of course is a CA finish. Let me know what you think, I was a little excited on how it came out.

Pen Kit: Slimline
Wood: Curly Maple w/ Texas Ebony Inserts
Finish: CA Finish

Slimline Celtic Curly Maple 1 (1).JPG Slimline Celtic Curly Maple 1 (2).JPG Slimline Celtic Curly Maple 1 (3).JPG Slimline Celtic Curly Maple 1 (4).JPG
Slimline Celtic Curly Maple 1 (5).JPG Slimline Celtic Curly Maple 1 (6).JPG Slimline Celtic Curly Maple 1 (7).JPG
 
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I spent the day making this pen, it is a slimline that I completed my first Celtic Knot using my new trimming sled I built last week. I cut the inserts out of Texas Ebony and used a piece of Curly maple for the body. The finish of course is a CA finish. Let me know what you think, I was a little excited on how it came out.at how it came out.


That looks great brother !

Definitely one to be excited about !
 
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Very nice Tom. The combination with the Maple and Texas Ebony is perfect. Every segmentation you do will reveal 2 more design tweaks for future projects. The top knot looks very tight and well executed. I'll suggest no knot on the bottom section, or a simple end cap segmentation, or a similar 4 segment knot (that will be tough to get the symmetry correct).

Well done, knots are tricky buggers!
 
Looks like you have the sled dialed in and it looks exact. If I may make a suggestion or two. Doing on a slimline cries out for thinner material which means a thinner blade. I would also stretch the knot out instead of 45 degrees. Good job with what you did though.
 
Looks like you have the sled dialed in and it looks exact. If I may make a suggestion or two. Doing on a slimline cries out for thinner material which means a thinner blade. I would also stretch the knot out instead of 45 degrees. Good job with what you did though.
I am getting a Freud Thin kerf blade next month for my table saw and my miter saw and this will help me make thinner cuts as you suggested. I agree that 1/8 kerf is a little thick but it is the blade I have šŸ˜° so I will do another when it is installed.
 
Very nice Tom. The combination with the Maple and Texas Ebony is perfect. Every segmentation you do will reveal 2 more design tweaks for future projects. The top knot looks very tight and well executed. I'll suggest no knot on the bottom section, or a simple end cap segmentation, or a similar 4 segment knot (that will be tough to get the symmetry correct).

Well done, knots are tricky buggers!
Good feed back Mark, I am getting a thin kerf blade next month that will also help.
 
You do not say what type saw you are using but to let you know that you can use a 7-1/4" blade on a tablesaw too and they come thinner than 10"
 
Good looking pen Tom really good job on the alignment I would have to agree with some of the previous comments on a slimline is so thin try cutting you knot at 60 degrees instead of 45 degrees to stretch the knot out. As far as the lower barrel I kind of like it but I definitely see a starting point of many other designs. Keep up the great work.
 
Very nice job Thom! What is Texas Ebony? Not familiar with any wood by that name; lived in Texas off and on for a number of years, don't recall ever running across any such.
 
Very nice job Thom! What is Texas Ebony? Not familiar with any wood by that name; lived in Texas off and on for a number of years, don't recall ever running across any such.
It's a wood I got from my dealer FlyingMWoodworks they also supply my mesquite and mesquite burl
 
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