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  #1  
Old 04-10-2010, 10:54 AM
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Default Scrimshaw tips/tricks by Ron Jr.

Hello, my name is Ron Luebke Jr. and I'm a full time scrimshaw artist and bulino engraver. If you'd like to see some of my past work just follow the link to my website at the bottom of this post.

I'm not much of an entertaining writer, especially when trying to explain something so I apologize for how dry this is but if you can wade through it I believe........ well, I hope you will find at least some useful information. Oh, also I use the "/" mark constantly, oftentimes I find that I can explain something more completely/quicker by using a couple words, I think it's just my lack of writing skills so if you find it irritating (and a lot do) I will apologize to you also.

The following is how "I" do scrimshaw, I believe there is no right or wrong way to do something, the only thing that counts is how good the results are. If you do something differently and it works then how can it be the "wrong" way.

I'm assuming you have a general understanding of stipple scrimshaw and how to do it in this explanation. I'm also assuming you are using some kind of magnification to work with. I personally use a 7.5x to 22.5x variable power stereo microscope on a boom stand.

Layout; I think there are as many ways to layout/transfer artwork to a piece as there are engravers and scrimshanders so I'm not going to talk much about it. I will tell you that whether working from a photo or drawing the subject directly onto the piece I only do an outline of the subject and lines that indicate where major shading edges/areas are. After I dot in my outlines I renaissance wax the piece, no I don't ink them first, they might be too big/deep or a bit off and I want to be able to move/adjust them if needed. Besides I can see the dots under the stereo microscope just fine even without ink in them. Don't try to put too much detail into your layout as all those dots on a tiny piece of ivory can get very confusing.

Starting; ALL ivory responds differently to being "worked", sometimes even different areas of one piece react differently (which can be a REAL pain). Start on a small area where the shading is not critical. Poke some dots trying to match the shade you want and then ink it to see what your going to get. I can only speak for myself but I always end up working up to a shade, i.e. its too light and I go over it/add more dots on average 2-4 times until I get the shade I'm looking for. In scrimshaw this is good as there is no going back, if you over do it you either have to work with it or start over. Where you start when you figure out how the ivory is reacting is completely up to you. For me when doing a person I always do the face last, I find it's easier to put the facial features in correctly when I have the rest of the figure to use as a reference but that's just me.

Working; Now that you've figured out how the ivory is reacting to being worked it's time for the real work to begin, settle in as it's going to take a while if done correctly, no such thing as a good "quick" scrimshaw, the example portrait of my daughter while small even for scrimshaw took me 11.5 hours to complete. Some work from light to dark others dark to light. I don't know if it's my lack of official art schooling or my goofy ocd way of doing things but I start at the bottom right hand side of a piece and work my way across and up. The reason for this is I'm left handed and want to rest my hand on the completed work as little as possible. I hold my scribe like a pencil and my middle finger rests on the piece, quite often I also use my right hand to help steady my scribe. Basically it goes like this, stipple a selected area, ink it, remove ink from surface, wax it, see how you did. Once you are close to the shade you want look for any unevenness in it and correct as needed. I find it easier to zoom way out with the microscope to fill in those pesky uneven spots.

Technique; In bulino all your dots are supposed to be the same size, more, closer together for darker areas, fewer farther apart for lighter areas.......... I disagree with this but am not going to get into it and don't want to argue with 100's (1000's?) of years of experience and tradition. In scrimshaw this is definitely not the case. If you want black go in heavy and hard with the scribe and repeat till you can't fit anymore dots in. If you want lighter go in light and spread the dots out. Keep in mind the bigger the dots the easier it is for the naked eye to pick out a single one. You don't want this in scrimshaw, you want it to look completely "filled in" painted on if you will. In the close up picture of the portrait I did of my daughter you can see the dots with the naked eye because the picture is taken close up (about 6 inches away) with a good camera using a good macro lens. If you were to see this piece in person you can barely make out those dots from up close with your naked eye (depending on how well your vision is), most pictures simply do not do high quality scrimshaw much justice, you have to see one in person to truly understand. Interestingly even with this camera this close up you cannot see all of the dots. Look at the "outsides" of the whites of both of her eyes, see any dots? Yet if you look the eyes do have a slight shadow, it is not from the lighting for the photo, there are VERY tiny dots there to get that shading, they are so small the camera could not pick them out, it simply shaded that part of the photo. That is exactly what you are trying to do only on the level of human eyesight. Now look at her teeth, yep your right got too heavy with the scribe, I was trying to do the same thing I did with the eyes but poked too hard. It is not a total loss though as only the camera see's these dots, I cannot make them out from even close up with the naked eye, Whew! Afterthought; Keep in mind also in these close up pictures your eyes are fighting to see the individual dots instead of the flat even "shading" I'm trying to create. The shading from close up is not as dark/apparent as it is if you look at it with the naked eye, is a big part of the reason photos do not do scrim justice. Always look at your progress repeatedly with your naked eye as that is how everyone is going to see it.

Mistakes; We all make them, is part of the "game" only question when you make one is, can I fix/hide it or do I have to start over? Look at the chin of my daughter in the scrim portrait, left hand side as you view it, see it? Looks like a tall skinny triangle, maybe the edge of a band-aid or something. I was doing the shadow around her chin and went up one of my shading indicator lines by mistake, d%#n. The ink in scrimshaw not only sits in the crater your scribe makes it also absorbs into the ivory somewhat. Depending on how deep/hard your mistake is sometimes you can get away with "digging out". What your seeing in the picture is the ink that soaked into the ivory and the shadows from the surface marks from me digging out the little pools of ink in each dot. If you were to look at this under strong magnification you would see the surface is pretty rough from me scratching out the ink. I was lucky in that it was a small and light enough mistake that I knew you would barely be able to make it out with the naked eye after it was dug it out. Speaking of that, do any "digging out" last! If you do it and your not finished and any more ink gets in that area you will be starting over. Even if you do manage to get all the ink out some will be absorbed into the ivory and you will have to dig that much more/deeper to get it out making the blemish that much more noticeable and yes I know this from experience.

Renaissance wax; is a "semi-synthetic micro-crystalline fossil-origin wax that is chemically neutral". For what it's meant to be it truly is some pretty amazing stuff. I don't want to push/or endorse this site but it gives a very complete explanation of what Renaissance Wax is and what its good for. http://www.restorationproduct.com/renwaxinfo.html

Why Waxing?; It helps seal the raw ivory keeping ink from absorbing into places you don't want it too, it gives the surface a shine so when you poke a dot into/through it the dot appears dull and is easier to view. If you make a mistake and catch it before you ink it just wax over the mistake and the wax will stop the ink from absorbing into the ivory saving you from having to "dig out". But probably the the 2 biggest reasons I use wax are 1. I work hard to get a "shade" just where I want it and sealing in the already completed work keeps more ink from getting into/absorbing into the already worked areas and 2. In scrimshaw I work, ink, and wipe off excess ink up too and sometimes more than a 100 times on a single piece. If I didn't seal in the already completed work after each inking a little of it would wipe off each and every time I did it and throw my hard fought for "perfect shade" off mucking it all up!

What Tool do I Use?; Again, am not trying to make an endorsement here on the forum but I use a Coulter Precision carbide scribe. (see pic) Charles can be found on eBay just search "scrimshaw hobby tool" and he should show up.

Stipple or Scratch?; Whichever you prefer or do best! There are some amazing scrimshaw artists out there that use one or the other or both.

If anyone has any questions or wants any advice or would like a further explanation about anything I wrote please feel free to ask. Is always enjoyable to talk to others who are interested.

Happy scrimming or engraving or drawing or carving or whatever it is you do to express yourself artistically to everyone

Ron
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  #2  
Old 04-10-2010, 11:06 AM
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Default Re: Scrimshaw tips/tricks by Ron Jr.

Awesome post Ron Thank-You
David
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Old 04-10-2010, 11:50 AM
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Default Re: Scrimshaw tips/tricks by Ron Jr.

Quote:
Originally Posted by KDavid View Post
Awesome post Ron Thank-You
David
Ron, Your artistic ability is awesome!
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Old 04-10-2010, 03:16 PM
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Default Re: Scrimshaw tips/tricks by Ron Jr.

Great tips!!! Thanks for all the INFO. Mike A.
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Old 04-10-2010, 05:05 PM
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Default Re: Scrimshaw tips/tricks by Ron Jr.

Thanks for this post Ron
I saw so much of yours and others scrimshaw that I was wondering how you all did it. Katherines tutorial is fantastic and yours too
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Old 04-11-2010, 05:52 AM
SEngraver SEngraver is offline
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Default Re: Scrimshaw tips/tricks by Ron Jr.

Hi Ron Jnr,

Thank you for your post.That is valued and appreciated a lot by me, and many other patrons I am sure.
SE

Ps. where did you purchase the scribe from?
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Old 04-25-2010, 07:00 PM
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Default Re: Scrimshaw tips/tricks by Ron Jr.

Hello Ron,
I am watching your work and am very impressed with it. The portrait of your Daughter that you did is just amazing! How you did her hair and the highlights in it is just as amazing as how you captured her lovely eyes.
Well done.......... George
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Old 05-10-2010, 01:33 PM
Neil83 Neil83 is offline
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Default Re: Scrimshaw tips/tricks by Ron Jr.

Ron-

INSPIRED BY YOUR ARTICLE - I bought the wax and the scriber you recommend. What do you prefer for ink and where do I buy it?

Thanks,

Neil83
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  #9  
Old 05-17-2010, 05:03 PM
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Default Re: Scrimshaw tips/tricks by Ron Jr.

Hello and am glad to help. I use Higgins Black Magic ink and it is readily available all over the internet just search the name. If you have any other questions just ask.

Ron
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Old 05-21-2010, 07:19 AM
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Default Re: Scrimshaw tips/tricks by Ron Jr.

Thank you for this post. Very nice.
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Old 11-15-2011, 02:59 AM
StudioDison StudioDison is offline
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Default Re: Scrimshaw tips/tricks by Ron Jr.

Great info. Beautiful art
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Old 11-15-2011, 01:16 PM
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Default Re: Scrimshaw tips/tricks by Ron Jr.

Thank you Ron! It's always a pleasure to see some of your work I'm glad you shared some good advice with us here! Greetz Paulsph
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Old 11-24-2011, 07:29 AM
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Default Re: Scrimshaw tips/tricks by Ron Jr.

Ron,Thank you for sharing your knowledge,it will be a big help to those interested in the beauitful art of scrimshaw.Keep up the good work. J.J.
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Old 03-31-2014, 05:34 PM
rosco rosco is offline
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Default Re: Scrimshaw tips/tricks by Ron Jr.

ron it doesn't get any better than that. beautiful job,thanks for sharing
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Old 08-20-2014, 02:01 AM
gWebber gWebber is offline
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Default Re: Scrimshaw tips/tricks by Ron Jr.

Hi Ron,
Was reading your piece on scrimshaw and how you use a wax method to keep the surface sealed. I was wondering if if you've tried or know if this would work on bone.
I'm just getting started with scrimshaw and so far my biggest problem is ink getting in the grain or just staining the heck out of the whole thing.

Any thoughts or suggestions.
PS, yes I have ordered the wax.

Thanks
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Old 09-05-2014, 07:15 PM
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Default Re: Scrimshaw tips/tricks by Ron Jr.

When doing bulino on metal do you use the same scribe/tool? Do you sharpen the tip to a specific geometry for bulino? Angle of attack for scribe vs working plan?

Donny
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  #17  
Old 09-06-2014, 07:00 AM
JoeJacob JoeJacob is offline
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Default Re: Scrimshaw tips/tricks by Ron Jr.

This link to another tutorial may be of some value.
http://www.handengravingforum.com/showthread.php?t=2256
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