First Build Log - OM 6-String
- Bryan Bear
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Re: First Build Log - OM 6-String
Barry, may correct me here, but I think he means that they are too thick/wide. This is, of course, a matter of taste, but that will be a really bold black line and one on the inside and outside may dominate the overall look. I think he was encouraging you to go much thinner in the stock prep. This will also make bending and installing much easier.
PMoMC
Take care of your feet and your feet will take care of you.
Take care of your feet and your feet will take care of you.
- Eric Knapp
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Re: First Build Log - OM 6-String
Thanks, that was just an experiment, not a design decision. I was trying to see if I could make my own thin strips. My first try was for 1/16" edging. Next I'm going to try to make 1/32" strips. I have some ideas on how to do that and we'll see if they work. I can see that at 1/32" it would be easy to bend to that curve without heat.Bryan Bear wrote:Barry, may correct me here, but I think he means that they are too thick/wide. This is, of course, a matter of taste, but that will be a really bold black line and one on the inside and outside may dominate the overall look. I think he was encouraging you to go much thinner in the stock prep. This will also make bending and installing much easier.
-Eric
- Barry Daniels
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Re: First Build Log - OM 6-String
Yes, too thick was my main concern. For some reason, strips this wide look bad too me. Maybe just what I am used to. Also, it was hard to see from your pictures, but the strips looked rough and I assumed that the show edge that fits against the top wood was rough too. Sorry if I was wrong there. But my other concern was you having to bend on a hot pipe. As you found out, bending ebony is a hit or miss proposition. I've made many a rosette and never had to resort to pipe bending. If you can make 1/32" thick strips in a smooth and consistent dimensions, you will be better off, IMHO.
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- Eric Knapp
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Re: First Build Log - OM 6-String
Thank you, Barry. There's no need to apologize, you've been incredibly helpful. I'm trying to learn many things at once and I'm having fun. It's all good! I've been playing with designs while giving final exams. Here's the latest.Barry Daniels wrote:Yes, too thick was my main concern. For some reason, strips this wide look bad too me. Maybe just what I am used to. Also, it was hard to see from your pictures, but the strips looked rough and I assumed that the show edge that fits against the top wood was rough too. Sorry if I was wrong there. But my other concern was you having to bend on a hot pipe. As you found out, bending ebony is a hit or miss proposition. I've made many a rosette and never had to resort to pipe bending. If you can make 1/32" thick strips in a smooth and consistent dimensions, you will be better off, IMHO.
I think I can do that and I got some black dyed maple veneer for the black lines. I have some maple veneer for the light lines.
-Eric
- Bryan Bear
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Re: First Build Log - OM 6-String
I like that.
PMoMC
Take care of your feet and your feet will take care of you.
Take care of your feet and your feet will take care of you.
- Mark Swanson
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Re: First Build Log - OM 6-String
That is exactly how I do many of my rosettes. So I like it! It makes a difference to me if you make the grain direction in the segements to go across the short dimension, make them all have grain direction that points toward the center of the ring. That looks best to me.
I cut angled sections on my table saw, and glued them together in a circle. Then, laying them out carefully on a router jig I routed the ring out of this glued assembly of sections. Make the channel in the top to fit the ring and glue it in...when that is dry, run the 1/16" bit around each edge and glue in the inner and outer purfling, done.
I cut angled sections on my table saw, and glued them together in a circle. Then, laying them out carefully on a router jig I routed the ring out of this glued assembly of sections. Make the channel in the top to fit the ring and glue it in...when that is dry, run the 1/16" bit around each edge and glue in the inner and outer purfling, done.
- Mark Swanson, guitarist, MIMForum Staff
- Eric Knapp
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Re: First Build Log - OM 6-String
Thanks, I hope I can make something physical that looks like that. Computer generated stuff is easy.Bryan Bear wrote:I like that.
-Eric
- Eric Knapp
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Re: First Build Log - OM 6-String
I might like it better that way too. However, this wood has such strong figure I think I will try it like this first. I made that image from photos of the wood I have.Mark Swanson wrote:That is exactly how I do many of my rosettes. So I like it! It makes a difference to me if you make the grain direction in the segements to go across the short dimension, make them all have grain direction that points toward the center of the ring. That looks best to me.
Sounds like the voice of experience. I will see what works with my toolset and let you know.Mark Swanson wrote:I cut angled sections on my table saw, and glued them together in a circle. Then, laying them out carefully on a router jig I routed the ring out of this glued assembly of sections. Make the channel in the top to fit the ring and glue it in...when that is dry, run the 1/16" bit around each edge and glue in the inner and outer purfling, done.
Thanks for the feedback. I am itching to get back out to the shop but this is finals week. The tension in the air is thick.
-Eric
- Mark Swanson
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Re: First Build Log - OM 6-String
One more thing Eric...I make my segements about two inches long, and when glued together the blank can be routed on a jig I made that cuts three rings out of it, the innermost being smallest and the outermost being biggest. I use all three sizes on different instruments I make.
- Mark Swanson, guitarist, MIMForum Staff
- Eric Knapp
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Re: First Build Log - OM 6-String
Here's my first attempt at making a rosette. I noticed a beautiful piece of walnut and decided to give that a try. I sliced some on my bandsaw and sectioned it. I think it's nice but I made it and it's my first one. I might be biased.
The light lines are maple. I like closeups so here are a couple.
That is nice wood and I'd like to know what you think of it for a rosette.
I have a piece of the cedar scrap from the top that I'm finishing with shellac as a trial. I put the rosette on it and then added more trim on the computer to make this mockup.
As always, I'm open to feedback, comments, criticism, and rotten tomatoes. Is this a reasonable rosette for this build?
Thanks,
-Eric
The light lines are maple. I like closeups so here are a couple.
That is nice wood and I'd like to know what you think of it for a rosette.
I have a piece of the cedar scrap from the top that I'm finishing with shellac as a trial. I put the rosette on it and then added more trim on the computer to make this mockup.
As always, I'm open to feedback, comments, criticism, and rotten tomatoes. Is this a reasonable rosette for this build?
Thanks,
-Eric
- Barry Daniels
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Re: First Build Log - OM 6-String
It looks real good. Your mock up shows a white/black purfling border on the inside and outside edges, which I highly recommend. Did you sand and finish it just to see what it looks like? I ask, because normally the top edge is left rough and unfinished until it gets installed.
One other thing: normally the rosette is split at the top which allows some flexibility when installing into the dado. The split then gets covered by the end of the fretboard.
One other thing: normally the rosette is split at the top which allows some flexibility when installing into the dado. The split then gets covered by the end of the fretboard.
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- Eric Knapp
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Re: First Build Log - OM 6-String
Thanks, Barry. I do intend to have those purfling lines on the guitar. I added them on the computer to see what they looked like. I got some dyed-black veneer and I'll use the same maple as I used in between the segments.Barry Daniels wrote:It looks real good. Your mock up shows a white/black purfling border on the inside and outside edges, which I highly recommend.
I sanded to get an even thickness. The finish is just a quick shellac wash and it was so I could see what it would look like. I'm planning on using Royal-Lac on this guitar and I hope doing that wash won't affect anything. I'm doing things that makes sense to my newbie instincts. I see that commercial rosettes sometimes aren't a full circle as they don't need to be. I didn't know how to do anything but the full circle and some of it will be covered up by the fretboard. The horror!Barry Daniels wrote:Did you sand and finish it just to see what it looks like? I ask, because normally the top edge is left rough and unfinished until it gets installed.
Thanks for the feedback. I am having way too much fun with this. I have to remember to go to work for a few more years.
-Eric
- Mark Swanson
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Re: First Build Log - OM 6-String
It looks good to me. The way that I make them has me ending up with complete rings too, and so I just cut them at the top afterward. It's kind of hard to bring myself to do that! However some of the designs I build need the full ring.
- Mark Swanson, guitarist, MIMForum Staff
- Eric Knapp
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Re: First Build Log - OM 6-String
Thanks, Mark. Why do you need to cut them at the top? Is that when you mount them on the guitar? Is that needed?Mark Swanson wrote:It looks good to me. The way that I make them has me ending up with complete rings too, and so I just cut them at the top afterward. It's kind of hard to bring myself to do that! However some of the designs I build need the full ring.
-Eric
- Bryan Bear
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Re: First Build Log - OM 6-String
I like it. I think it goes better with the cedar than the maple mockup. Definitely use the maple line inside the back!
PMoMC
Take care of your feet and your feet will take care of you.
Take care of your feet and your feet will take care of you.
- Eric Knapp
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Re: First Build Log - OM 6-String
Thanks, Bryan. Do you mean that I should use the same maple as purfling on the back?Bryan Bear wrote:I like it. I think it goes better with the cedar than the maple mockup. Definitely use the maple line inside the back!
-Eric
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Re: First Build Log - OM 6-String
Eric,
My only criticism would be the difference in the segments in the left side of the rosette.
Just a matter of personal taste, but I find that, when the segments are as identical repeats of each other as possible, the overall effect of the rosette as a whole just seems to feel more balanced to the eye. Kind of a feng shooey <g> thing.
If you have a piece of wood that you can take sequential slices of it to use, a lot of times you can do that. The more quartered the wood the less variance from slice to slice for your repeats.
Just my 2 rubles.
My only criticism would be the difference in the segments in the left side of the rosette.
Just a matter of personal taste, but I find that, when the segments are as identical repeats of each other as possible, the overall effect of the rosette as a whole just seems to feel more balanced to the eye. Kind of a feng shooey <g> thing.
If you have a piece of wood that you can take sequential slices of it to use, a lot of times you can do that. The more quartered the wood the less variance from slice to slice for your repeats.
Just my 2 rubles.
- Mark Swanson
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Re: First Build Log - OM 6-String
Eric, I cut them at the top when I mount them into the dado, when it won't show. of course on designs where it shows you can't do that. With a ring like this, the whole thing is exposed.
- Mark Swanson, guitarist, MIMForum Staff
- Eric Knapp
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Re: First Build Log - OM 6-String
That's a beauty, Mark. I am going with the traditional sound hole for this first build. I may experiment some day.Mark Swanson wrote:Eric, I cut them at the top when I mount them into the dado, when it won't show. of course on designs where it shows you can't do that. With a ring like this, the whole thing is exposed.
-Eric
- Eric Knapp
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Re: First Build Log - OM 6-String
Thanks, Randy. That was a little piece of walnut and I just had to use it. I don't know which way is up with it yet and I hope it looks ok when done.Randy Roberts wrote:Eric,
My only criticism would be the difference in the segments in the left side of the rosette.
Just a matter of personal taste, but I find that, when the segments are as identical repeats of each other as possible, the overall effect of the rosette as a whole just seems to feel more balanced to the eye. Kind of a feng shooey <g> thing.
If you have a piece of wood that you can take sequential slices of it to use, a lot of times you can do that. The more quartered the wood the less variance from slice to slice for your repeats.
Just my 2 rubles.
-Eric