CHAPTER IV
WOODS USED FOR CARVING
Hard Wood and Soft Wood — Closeness of Grain Desirable — Advantages of Pine and
English Oak.
The woods suitable for carving are very various; but we shall confine our
attention to those in common use. Of the softer woods, those which are most easily procured and most adaptable to modern uses are yellow pine, Bass wood,
Kauri pine, and Lime. These are all good woods for the carver; but we need not at present [49]
look for any better qualities than we shall find in a good piece of yellow pine, free from knots or shakes.
The following woods may be considered as having an intermediate place between
soft and hard: Sycamore, Beech, and Holly. They are light-colored woods, and very useful for broad shallow work.
English Oak.—Of the hard woods in common use, the principal kinds are
Oak, Walnut, and occasionally Mahogany. Of oak, the English variety is by far
the best for the carver, being close in the grain and very hard. It is beyond
all others the carvers' wood, and was invariably used by them in this country
during the robust period of medieval craftsmanship. It offers to the carver an
invigorating resistance to his tools, and its character determines to a great
extent that of the work put upon it. It takes in finishing a very beautiful
surface, when skilfully handled—and this tempts the carver to make the most of
his opportunities by adapting his execution to its virtues. Other oaks, such as
Austrian and American, are often used, but they do not offer quite the same
tempting opportunity to the carver. They are, by nature, quicker-growing trees,
and are, consequently, [50] more open in the grain. They have tough, sinewy
fibers, alternating with softer material. They rarely take the same degree of
finish as the English oak, but remain somewhat dull in texture. Good pieces for
carving may be got, but they must be picked out from a quantity of stuff.
Chestnut is sometimes used as a substitute for oak, but it is better fitted for
large-scaled work where fineness of detail is not of so much importance.
Italian Walnut. — This is a very fine-grained wood, of even texture. The
Italian variety is the best for carving: it cuts with something of the firmness
of English oak, and is capable of receiving even more finish of surface in small
details. It is admirably suited for fine work in low relief. In choosing this
wood for carving, the hardest and closest in grain should be picked, as it is by
no means all of equal quality. It should be free from sap, which may be known by
a light streak on the edges of the dark brown wood.
English walnut has too much "figure" in the grain to be suitable for carving.
American walnut is best fitted for sharply cut shallow carving, as its fiber is
caney. If it is used, the design should be one in which [51] no fine modeling or detail is
required, as this wood allows of little finish to the surface.
Mahogany, more especially the kind known as Honduras, is very similar
to American walnut in quality of grain: it cuts in a sharp caney manner. The
"Spanish" variety was closer in grain, but is now almost unprocurable. Work
carved in mahogany should, like that in American walnut, be broad and simple in
style, without much rounded detail.
It is quite unnecessary to pursue the subject of woods beyond the few kinds
mentioned. Woods such as ebony, sandalwood, cherry, brier, box, pear-tree,
lancewood, and many others, are all good for the carver, but are better fitted
for special purposes and small work. As this book is concerned more with the
art of carving than its application, it will save confusion if we accept
yellow pine as our typical soft wood, and good close-grained oak as representing
hard wood. It may be noted in passing that the woods of all flowering and
fruit-bearing trees are very liable to the attack of worms and rot.
No carving, in whatever wood, should be polished. I shall refer to this when
we come to "texture" and "finish." [52]
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