I managed to make it something like 20+ years without owning a bandsaw, and when I finally bought one in 2019, I mostly used it for resaw work. But I did buy a 1/8 Starret blade when I got it, and today I pulled it out and tried my hand at scrollwork for the first time.
My son wants a Pikachu themed Pinewood Derby car this year, and I decided the fastest route to achieve this would be to just have him cut a wedge, and then we'd glue a Pikachu cut-out on it and paint it yellow. This is his final year, and he's already crossed over to Boy Scouts, so this isn't going to be as involved as prior cars have been. For those of you who are not a Millineal, or didn't raise one, Pikachu is a creature from Pokemon. It is a rat with electric powers, owned by a small boy who makes it fight his friend's pets until one of them is unconscious. And this is the core of a franchise with $100 billion in total revenue, outstripping every Disney property including Star Wars and the Avengers. But I digress...
Anyways, printed the little guy out and coated him with some template adhesive, then stuck him to a scrap of cherry veneer backer board I had laying around.
And then with great fear and trepidation, I scrolled him out. I got better and more comfortable as I went along. Reminded myself to steer with the front of the blade instead of focusing on feeding the piece. Didn't take long to make a rough cutout, but my technique could definitely use some work. The edges came out pretty jagged and required a lot of smoothing.
A copious amount of sanding with some profile shapes and some 220 grit at least made him smooth and splinter free. Cut up his tail and glued it on. I was pretty pleased with the end result.
This was not a complex undertaking or a work of art, but as the first fruits of trying something new, I have no complaints. The downside is now my son just wants him as a stand-alone thing. Told him I wasn't planning to cut another one, but we'd hot melt glue him to the pinewood car, so he would be easy to pop off when the race is done.
Thanks all!
My son wants a Pikachu themed Pinewood Derby car this year, and I decided the fastest route to achieve this would be to just have him cut a wedge, and then we'd glue a Pikachu cut-out on it and paint it yellow. This is his final year, and he's already crossed over to Boy Scouts, so this isn't going to be as involved as prior cars have been. For those of you who are not a Millineal, or didn't raise one, Pikachu is a creature from Pokemon. It is a rat with electric powers, owned by a small boy who makes it fight his friend's pets until one of them is unconscious. And this is the core of a franchise with $100 billion in total revenue, outstripping every Disney property including Star Wars and the Avengers. But I digress...
Anyways, printed the little guy out and coated him with some template adhesive, then stuck him to a scrap of cherry veneer backer board I had laying around.
And then with great fear and trepidation, I scrolled him out. I got better and more comfortable as I went along. Reminded myself to steer with the front of the blade instead of focusing on feeding the piece. Didn't take long to make a rough cutout, but my technique could definitely use some work. The edges came out pretty jagged and required a lot of smoothing.
A copious amount of sanding with some profile shapes and some 220 grit at least made him smooth and splinter free. Cut up his tail and glued it on. I was pretty pleased with the end result.
This was not a complex undertaking or a work of art, but as the first fruits of trying something new, I have no complaints. The downside is now my son just wants him as a stand-alone thing. Told him I wasn't planning to cut another one, but we'd hot melt glue him to the pinewood car, so he would be easy to pop off when the race is done.
Thanks all!
Math is tough. Let's go shopping!