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  1. #1
    Join Date
    31st May 08
    Location
    Higham, Kent
    Posts
    200

    A cap-badge carved from bone?

    I'm not a fan of showing too much metal if I'm wearing daywear, but I've been wanting a Balmoral in green lovat or fawn, and would like to sport a McLaren clan cap-badge.

    I've just asked a bone-carver for a quote to have one made from 'bovine ivory'. It'd be a slightly stylised and simplified version of the usual crest, but I've a feeling it could look good.

    Do you think it's a good idea? Are there any implications to consider? Has anyone thought of this before?
    creag an tuirc

  2. #2
    Join Date
    22nd November 07
    Location
    Desert SW USA
    Posts
    11,373
    That's an interesting idea.

    I've seen bone buttons with scrimshaw; kind of makes me think of that.
    I tried to ask my inner curmudgeon before posting, but he sprayed me with the garden hose…
    Yes, I have squirrels in my brain…

  3. #3
    Join Date
    31st May 08
    Location
    Higham, Kent
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    I hadn't made the scrimshaw connection, I'd been watching YouTube videos of someone making traditional bone fish hooks in Hawaii (a lot of people wear them as pendants I think) which are very simple and smooth, but I love scrimshaw! Thanks Ted!
    creag an tuirc

  4. #4
    Join Date
    26th March 08
    Location
    Atlanta, GA
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    2,257
    Sounds like an interesting idea to me. A good one, too, I'd say. I hope to see a picture, once the badge is finished.
    Quote Originally Posted by piperdbh View Post
    ...then the store manager would try to throw us out, and when RR and tyger and various others tried to stare him down with The Look he'd accuse us of voodoo or something and we'd wind up in the clink or on Dr. Phil.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    22nd November 07
    Location
    Desert SW USA
    Posts
    11,373
    I very much love scrimshaw, too.

    In ceramics I use a similar technique or it's opisit... I'm having trouble remembering how to spell it but it's spoken masheema,*mishima- or *the reverse, scraffito (*corrected spellings) Good luck, and hope it goes well.
    Last edited by Bugbear; 25th November 09 at 07:43 AM. Reason: I corrected spellings of mishima and scraffito
    I tried to ask my inner curmudgeon before posting, but he sprayed me with the garden hose…
    Yes, I have squirrels in my brain…

  6. #6
    Join Date
    31st May 08
    Location
    Higham, Kent
    Posts
    200
    I know there's a technique in oil painting where thick paint is scratched at to reveal another colour beneath, called scraffito, could this be similar?

    I shall be sure to put up pics of the badge when and if it comes into being!
    creag an tuirc

  7. #7
    Join Date
    22nd November 07
    Location
    Desert SW USA
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    11,373
    Exactly, "scraffito" and I spelled it all wrong.

    The other method, which is more like scrimshaw, is to scratch designs into the leather hard clay, cover it with an underglaze, then trim off the top layer. The underglaze, just a colored slip usually, is left in the design and the surface is basically smooth.

    I need to go look up how to spell that word...

    I'm also going to correct that post a little, so I don't look like an idiot.
    I tried to ask my inner curmudgeon before posting, but he sprayed me with the garden hose…
    Yes, I have squirrels in my brain…

  8. #8
    Join Date
    16th January 06
    Location
    Kingston upon Thames,UK
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    1,149
    Ted,
    the word is "mishima" something I used to do a lot of, I really enjoyed using a cobalt carbonate mix with slip in the incised lines, then scrapped back, it looked slightly pink, fired it was blue back and glazed it had a strong line with a lovely blue haze around it, just the thought of it makes me want to do some more in my next firing, which should be at the end of next hopefully, if I carry on throwing, but I need some fo them for Christmas.. so I had better be busy!

    BOOKBINDER & KILTMAKER
    Traditional and Modern

  9. #9
    Join Date
    22nd November 07
    Location
    Desert SW USA
    Posts
    11,373
    Quote Originally Posted by paulhenry View Post
    Ted,
    the word is "mishima" something I used to do a lot of, I really enjoyed using a cobalt carbonate mix with slip in the incised lines, then scrapped back, it looked slightly pink, fired it was blue back and glazed it had a strong line with a lovely blue haze around it, just the thought of it makes me want to do some more in my next firing, which should be at the end of next hopefully, if I carry on throwing, but I need some fo them for Christmas.. so I had better be busy!


    Thanks Paul. I used to use a lot of mishima on pieces I threw on the wheel. I would also use the scraffito and mishima together on a single piece.

    There is also wax resist, and scraffito on the glaze... All kinds of things.
    Hope it goes well.
    Last edited by Bugbear; 25th November 09 at 07:45 AM. Reason: Clarifying
    I tried to ask my inner curmudgeon before posting, but he sprayed me with the garden hose…
    Yes, I have squirrels in my brain…

  10. #10
    Join Date
    25th March 08
    Location
    Louisville, Kentucky
    Posts
    1,998
    Quote Originally Posted by Joseph McLaren View Post
    I'm not a fan of showing too much metal if I'm wearing daywear, but I've been wanting a Balmoral in green lovat or fawn, and would like to sport a McLaren clan cap-badge.

    I've just asked a bone-carver for a quote to have one made from 'bovine ivory'. It'd be a slightly stylised and simplified version of the usual crest, but I've a feeling it could look good.

    Do you think it's a good idea? Are there any implications to consider? Has anyone thought of this before?
    Just make sure that the crest badge conforms to the blazon (description) of the Chief's crest, and that the buckle, strap, and motto are not omitted, as the crest belongs to Donald MacLaren of MacLaren and Achleskine and is his personal property.

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