Tiki Central / Tiki Carving
Buzzy's work: Lasciate ogne speranza, voi ch'intrate
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BPB
Bay Park Buzzy
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Fri, Apr 7, 2006 10:12 PM
I'm going to try to post a couple of picture of some recent things I made. ADDED NOVEMBER 2006: Click HERE for a gallery of all my work without any text. [ Edited by: Bay Park Buzzy 2009-04-28 01:46 ] [ Edited by: Bay Park Buzzy 2009-06-08 22:50 ] |
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OnaTiki
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Fri, Apr 7, 2006 10:18 PM
Welcome!! Nice carvings. We live just down the road from you in Clairemont. Post more pictures please!! Aloha!! |
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Monkeyman
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Fri, Apr 7, 2006 10:18 PM
looking good. How long have you been carving? welcome aboard |
BPB
Bay Park Buzzy
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Fri, Apr 7, 2006 10:26 PM
It worked!!! as you can see I have a bit of sanding and staining to do. Most of the works here I did in the last four or five weeks. I've been carving on and off for about seven months now. I get my ideas and inspiration from many of you on this site. thanks to all who take the time to respond and help beginners who find this place. |
BPB
Bay Park Buzzy
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Fri, Apr 7, 2006 10:38 PM
Ona: I saw your house on another thread last week and really thought it was great. It looked like dear old Clairemont. In all my travel I've never come across it. I have not figured out what to do with all the stuff I've been making lately, but hopefully I'll sell some of them. Otherwise I'll have to throw them away because I'm running out of space. I have logs in my front yard, back yard,garage,living room, and close to everywhere else on my sprawling estate... |
BK
Basement Kahuna
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Fri, Apr 7, 2006 11:04 PM
Beginner...get ouuuutta here...You've been doing this for a while! |
BPB
Bay Park Buzzy
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Fri, Apr 7, 2006 11:12 PM
Here's a picture of my first carving attempt. The only tools I had were a small dovetail saw, a pruning saw, and a small hand planer. When I started, I didn't know if I had the right tools or even the right type of tree. The log was a Mexican fan palm that had been dead for quite some time and was dry throughout. I grabbed my tools and took to it. Here is the result: |
BPB
Bay Park Buzzy
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Fri, Apr 7, 2006 11:45 PM
BK: I carved my first piece around June or July of '05. Then it took about two or three months of wasted time with a bunch of queen palms...more about that later. Then in October I had a little accident with a loose rope from my shade tarp, some unexpected wind gusts, a chain saw that I was using, and my face. I took about a month off to pursue a career as a movie extra; I wanted to turn my tradgedy into a triumph and I figured to cash in as the weirdo scar faced stitches guy in prison or horror movies. But alas, I had to get all my stitches out and the scars turned out to be not as bad as expected. So I made about 6 or 7 tikis before january 06. Then in january I had a tree service deliver about 20 logs to my house and I got over my fear of power tools and went hog wild. I made 5 or 6 pieces in jan and have been keeping that pace the last few months. I just had another 22 logs delivered about three weeks ago so I have plenty more to get to. So I feel like a beginner because I feel like I have so much more that I'd like to try and I've just barely begun a long journey. On my one year anniversary I'll change my official designation to an experienced carver. Until then, for a couple more months or so, i'm just a beginner. Oh yeah, thanks for posting, commenting, and being such a presence and inspiration on this site. |
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Benzart
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Sat, Apr 8, 2006 6:38 AM
Hey Buzzy, these are Very Excellent for your first bunch of carvings. You mush be a tool kind of person to be turning these out with such precise detail. Beautiful work, Love it. |
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hiltiki
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Sat, Apr 8, 2006 6:49 AM
BPB welcome to TC, nice carvings. You are a real fast carver aren't you? |
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GMAN
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Sat, Apr 8, 2006 6:57 AM
I agree with Benz, way kool stuff. What kinda palms are you using? Also, how bad was the saw to the face? I've seen some bad saw cuts, but not one to the squash. I imagine that rope blew into your bar and the saw wrapped it up and pulled up into your face? Yikes! I've been carving with saws since the early 80's, and one thing I've learned (and not by eating a bar) is to keep your area clear of anything you don't want cut or that can bind the saw, and wear as much safety gear as you can stand. Glad you survived and have continued to carve. You seem to have a real gift in designing your pieces. They are very clean and stylized. If you want to step them up a bit, work on cutting deeper into the logs. You'll find, as you stain those, that you may want some more depth to make them really pop. Thanks for posting and keep at it, Gman |
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tfisherart
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Sat, Apr 8, 2006 7:25 AM
Very nice work keep 'em commin and welcome. |
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McTiki
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Sat, Apr 8, 2006 9:02 AM
Awesome begining post Buzz! Wow. More and more folks joining. Happy. Welcome to TC. |
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Basement Kahuna
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Sat, Apr 8, 2006 9:18 AM
No, thank you...nice work for so early in your career. |
BPB
Bay Park Buzzy
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Sat, Apr 8, 2006 10:00 AM
Thanks for all the nice comments and being so welcoming. Here is tiki #2. For this one I used Queen or coco? palms. This was when I still had no idea about what kind of wood to use. I found this type of tree to be limiting and frustrating. I originally dried out some test logs to see what kind of structure these logs were composed of. I found out that I could only use about two inches of the outer surface because the middle just kind of cracks and rots away. Orginally I tried to hollow them out but they warped and ended up being figure 8 shaped and unusable. So after discarding two or three futile attempts, I carved this tiki out of a dried log that seemed to hold its shape. |
BPB
Bay Park Buzzy
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Sat, Apr 8, 2006 2:46 PM
Here is my third tiki attempt. I tried to solve the problems that I had with the body on the last one. I also wanted to try to carve in deeper, but still hide the cracking that would occur within this type of wood. This one was done with another coco/queen palm. I started by chainsawing the mouth to depth and then used my new chisel set to round it out. |
BPB
Bay Park Buzzy
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Sat, Apr 8, 2006 3:01 PM
For my next trick, I'll pull a rabbit out of a log... |
BPB
Bay Park Buzzy
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Sat, Apr 8, 2006 3:04 PM
oops! here's the picture that should have been last |
BPB
Bay Park Buzzy
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Sat, Apr 8, 2006 3:41 PM
posting pictures of these chairs so new owners can see them before delivery |
BPB
Bay Park Buzzy
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Sat, Apr 8, 2006 8:02 PM
Tiki #5 was the first time I used a fresh mexican fan palm. I picked the design from a candle that I found online and he was named AHU KAI(historians please verify.) The log was four feet nine with an eleven inch diameter. I carved it with a one inch wide flat chisel. I never really used chisels before so I used a log that was cracked on the ends. Not knowing anything about logs yet, it didn't occur to me that if the ends are severely cracked, the middle will be too. It fooled me at first because the outer surface was uncracked and appeared solid. After carving in about 3/4 inch, all exposed wood was cracked or would crack within thiry minutes of being exposed to the air. Since I didn't know what I was doing, I charged on just to see what happens when you have few skills and a messed up log. Here it is:
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BPB
Bay Park Buzzy
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Sat, Apr 8, 2006 9:01 PM
Tiki #6 |
BPB
Bay Park Buzzy
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Sat, Apr 8, 2006 10:13 PM
GMAN was real close to what happened with my accident. Specifically what happened was that I was holding the saw at waist level spotting a cut I was about to make. I use a 4hp 16 inch electric McCulloch saw. When I hit the trigger button, I felt something hit me in the face. It was a shock and I couldn't figure out what hit me. I thought that something came flying in and hit me. My head hurt and I took a quick inventory of what happened. I remember asking myself what I could have been hit by. I yelled a bad word when I realized the only thing that could have hit me was the saw. I looked to the ground and saw a huge pool of fresh blood. What happened was that a rope from my tarp blew into the saw sprocket. It ran up the rope as I took my finger off the trigger. After disengaging the trigger, the saw still spins for a few rotations while shutting down. The saw continued up the rope and was now between shoulder and head high. When the blade hit the tarp, it cut the tarp right down the center. When the tarp was cut, it lost tension and caused the whole tarp to drop about ten inches towards me. Unfortunately, my face was only about six inches away at this time. The blade struck me in the forehead at my hairline and made four parallel cuts all the way down through my eyebrow. It then continued further down, taking three sizable pieces out of my nose. Additionally, I had a small gouge on my cheek. I was able to drive myself to the emergency clinic for first aid. I got right in, bleeders have priority, and received my stitches. I was back home in less than an hour. I don't know how they count stitches, but I had about 22 visible threads with around 46 separate stitches. So, I got somewhere between 22 and 46 stitches total. They stayed in for about 10 days. I did not take any pictures at the time because I was mad and depressed and thought that I did not need any other souvenirs than my new set of scars. In hindsight, I should taken a couple, not for myself, but for others as a warning about safety and how quickly things can change. I was wearing safety goggles at the time and they probably saved my eye. I found them when I got home later and there was a big gash in them and the corner was cut off. Like the doctor and everyone else said, it could have been a lot worse. thankfully it wasn't worse, it could have easily been. I have since added a hard hat to my safety supplies and fixed my tarp. |
BPB
Bay Park Buzzy
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Sat, Apr 8, 2006 11:31 PM
After cutting myself, it was about a month before I started carving again. I was very nervous with the chainsaw and needed to get over my fear. I decided to make some quick chainsaw only carvings. |
BPB
Bay Park Buzzy
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Sat, Apr 8, 2006 11:44 PM
So now it's Dec 05 and I decided to kick up my productivity a couple of notches. I had a big delivery of Mexican fan palms dropped off at my house. I spent about a week solid getting the logs prepped. |
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hiltiki
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Sun, Apr 9, 2006 12:00 AM
Very interesting story and nice pictures, keep it up you are doing a great job with all your carvings. |
BPB
Bay Park Buzzy
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Sun, Apr 9, 2006 10:46 AM
Hiltiki: I don't carve fast in my opinion, however, once I start a piece it's hard to walk away from it. I'll spend 6-7 hours carving in a day and quit around sunset. Usually what happens though is that I drag the piece inside and work on it in my living room until I pass out. There have been a couple of times where I worked a few 12-15 hour days in a row. For some reason I have this overwhelming compulsion to finish a project by working non-stop once it is started. Some times needing sleep is annoying but working all night sure has cured my insomnia. I've been posting all my Tikis chronologically and am now up to #10. After #10 I really started taking a lot more pictures of the process so brace yourselves, I have a ton of stuff to share with you goes. Don't abandon me now, it's just starting to get good... |
TG
Tiki G.
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Sun, Apr 9, 2006 2:29 PM
Glad for your enthusiam, and for your willingness to share your entire carving experience with us. Very interesting, please continue..... [ Edited by: Tiki G. 2006-04-12 12:20 ] |
BK
Basement Kahuna
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Sun, Apr 9, 2006 11:18 PM
Yeeps...480 an hour? Me and everyone else I know get around 150.00 a foot. By that standard OA is cheap!! |
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hiltiki
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Sun, Apr 9, 2006 11:26 PM
We won't abandon you, carry on with your interesting work and keep us(me!) posted. |
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AlohaStation
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Mon, Apr 10, 2006 6:56 AM
Holy crap - I don't check the web for a few days and look at what pops up. Nice collection and interesting story. I'm glad to see that the accident didn't stop you. I look forward to seeing more of your work because we all get better the more we carve and it looks like you have many more to share with us. |
BPB
Bay Park Buzzy
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Tue, Apr 11, 2006 5:07 PM
From left to right #8,11-14 |
BPB
Bay Park Buzzy
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Tue, Apr 11, 2006 7:48 PM
Continuing on with my saga...
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BPB
Bay Park Buzzy
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Tue, Apr 11, 2006 9:43 PM
Adventure 11: |
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AlienTiki
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Wed, Apr 12, 2006 1:17 AM
the words "chainsaw accident" and "my face" should never be in the same sentence. Great job Man! Thanks for posting. [ Edited by: AlienTiki 2006-04-12 01:18 ] |
TG
Tiki G.
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Wed, Apr 12, 2006 4:53 AM
[ Edited by: Tiki G. 2006-04-12 12:19 ] |
BPB
Bay Park Buzzy
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Thu, Apr 13, 2006 12:05 PM
Bummer! I just spent an hour working on my next post and all my work vanished suddenly. Stupid computers. I need to get to carving because I'm burning daylight so I'll redo an abridged version of my lost message: |
BPB
Bay Park Buzzy
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Thu, Apr 13, 2006 2:16 PM
Doub: I use a Ryobi hand planer. It is more of a consumer grade version but it doesn't weigh as much as most other models. I think it was about $75 regular price at Home Depot. The only problem that I've had with it is it gets clogged frequently and if you don't unclog it the motor wheel will get super hot and actually melt the plastic belt. the replacement belt was only about $4 but I had to order it and it took 5 days and cost $8 to ship. After learning about melting belts, I only run it about an hour and wait about 3-4 until it cools to run it again. I work from the bottom of the tree towards the top. In this picture, the log is upside down with the bottom of the tree on the top. I'll start from the top and run the planer downhill.When you try this, it will be obvious which direction to go. The right way will leave a smooth plane and the wrong way leaves a mess of rough fiber on the plane and clogs the machine almost immediately [ Edited by: Bay Park Buzzy 2006-04-13 16:18 ] |
BPB
Bay Park Buzzy
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Thu, Apr 13, 2006 2:44 PM
Alientiki: I thought that my injuries were on the moderately severe side and felt sorry for myself initially. Then I watched the UFC middleweight championship fight between Rich Franklin and Evan Tanner. After about eighteen minutes of a severe beatdown at the hands of Franklin, Tanner's face was a disaster. Two minutes after the fight he looked worse than I ever did. Whenever I see my scars, I feel lucky that I only got hit with a chainsaw instead of Rich Franklin. |
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McTiki
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Thu, Apr 13, 2006 2:55 PM
Awesome work Buzz. Keep churning them out and posting pics. |
BPB
Bay Park Buzzy
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Thu, Apr 13, 2006 4:05 PM
Oh boy it's getting hot outside. Summer's here. I came in to cool down and take a break. Here's more of today's progress: |
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JohnnyP
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Thu, Apr 13, 2006 4:33 PM
Man, you are one enthusiastic tiki carver! Welcome aboard. PS. After the chainsaw accident, I know you should be preaching to us, but have you read the safety thread yet? That scared the crap outa me when I read that. |
BPB
Bay Park Buzzy
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Thu, Apr 13, 2006 8:14 PM
Buzzy's Tiki Field Trip I went to the Red Lion after reading about the restaurant and the tikis on the events forum regarding Tiki Oasis 6.
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BPB
Bay Park Buzzy
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Fri, Apr 14, 2006 2:18 AM
Tiki # 12: On #12, I tried to concentrate on the angle of my initial cut and blending in features and multiple depth layers-much as I did on #8. I purposely chose something more complex to attempt this time. I looked in my album once again for inspiration (how’s that scavenger hunt going TCers- I’m not going to name the prizes yet-I’ll wait for least one correct original source named first.) I found something suitable. There were a few changes that I did from the original source: like the eyes, nose, mouth, tint, and body. Other than these minor changes, I left it exactly the same. It all started with a Mexican fan palm 4’1” tall, eight inches in diameter. I didn’t know it yet, but this would be by far the best piece of wood that I ever worked with.
the whole thing
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Bete
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Fri, Apr 14, 2006 11:02 AM
Very cool tikis you made! I also like the look of that Red Lion place you went to, where is that place located? |
BPB
Bay Park Buzzy
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Fri, Apr 14, 2006 9:16 PM
Bete: thanks! It's in San Diego. It's actually called the Red Lion Hanalei. This link will give you more info. There is a gallery on this page right under the easter island picture with a few more pictures of tikis, etc. [ Edited by: Bay Park Buzzy 2006-04-14 21:18 ] |
BPB
Bay Park Buzzy
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Sat, Apr 15, 2006 2:40 PM
Hi Mom, [ Edited by: Bay Park Buzzy 2006-04-15 15:00 ] |
BPB
Bay Park Buzzy
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Sun, Apr 16, 2006 1:02 AM
The Continuing Adventures of Buzzy, wherein Buzzy explains the process of tiki #13: This one was the first one that I carved in one sitting. I also did it at night. I hope the neighbors couldn't hear me. It went fast. the next morning it looked like this:
Well, to you who finds yourself reading this now or in the future, I hope you learned something from me reading this post. I really don't know anything though. There's this guy named benzart around here and he seems to know just about everything. Stop wasting your time here and find his thread. You'll learn something from not only a black belt in the art of carving, but like a tenth degree something black belt at that. I bet when benzart was a white belt, he was actually carving all night, not sitting on a computer talking about his junky white belt carvings like I do....Good night future readers, I NEED TO GO AND TRAIN MORE, right now. I won't be a white belt for long. |
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Benzart
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Sun, Apr 16, 2006 6:36 AM
Buzzy, your work is really looking Great and your Posts describing yout trials and tribulations are rally Awesome. Thanks for taking the time to entertain us so thoroughly. |
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