Re: knots in Black Walnut
I'd want to stabilize it first. It wants to be an eye, if you slice it in two you could book match them for a face and a pair of eyes.
Re: knots in Black Walnut
In our cabinet shop we most often use 5 minute epoxy mixed with a dark pigment, burnt umber or lamp black. Ends up looking black with most finishes we’ve used. Not much luck with trying to match wood color using sanding dust as the epoxy “colors” the sawdust differently than the final finish. Experiment. John, coincidentally, in Walnut Creek
Re: knots in Black Walnut
Before retirement I made very expensive custom furniture for a living. I would never have filled a knot like that unless it was on a work type surface... table, desk, etc. If there are any loose bits down inside, you might want to stabilize them by applying some CA (super) glue, then finish with your varnish, oil, whatever.
Jeff
Re: knots in Black Walnut
I'm with the "feature it" school as well. Unless the opening is in a location that will reduce the functionality, leave it as an expression of the nature of the wood.
Re: knots in Black Walnut
If you want to feature the knot use it for one of the sides of the bookshelf. Not cover it with books
Re: knots in Black Walnut
Or maybe rather than fill with dust and stain, cut some scrap of the appropriate color, from the walnut stock, and 'inlay' it in the knot. As opposed to cutting out the knot and graving in a not-knot piece. It'll work like the rest of the walnut, and be easier to scrape or plane than the knot itself, while filling the void solidly will keep the brittle knot material from breaking off more. It will take the applied finish the same as the rest of the piece. It's quicker and easier than dicking with goop.
Coincidentally, I'm not in Walnut Creek, but I do have a black walnut furniture project, with some yewage knots, on the workbench at the moment. There happen to be a handful of various voids, live edge, insect bores, in the wood I have to work with. I intend to leave most of them alone and natural.
Re: knots in Black Walnut
Thanks for the input and ideas. I think I might try to fit it into a side piece of the furniture to make it more visible.
Jim do you have any pictures of your black walnut project? I am not sure I know what a yewage knot is.
Re: knots in Black Walnut
I keep them, but tuck them away so that they're not the first thing one sees. The idea is not so much to hide the knots as to reward exploration. Not a fan of filling them in unless you need the flat surface for functional reasons.
James
Re: knots in Black Walnut
Quote:
Originally Posted by
timber_cruiser
Thanks for the input and ideas. I think I might try to fit it into a side piece of the furniture to make it more visible.
Jim do you have any pictures of your black walnut project? I am not sure I know what a yewage knot is.
Funny you should ask, he said. Yewage is a Bilge-neologism, ala Trump, for huge.
Which makes me ask, should a photo essay about doing this on my walnut chair go better down the Bilge? Seems like it to me. Here's a teaser I'll post down there, too.
Further disclaimer to not hijack a thread, this knot repair I did in the time since my first post about it above. It is a current project. It might not be what you're after. This is me sharing not teaching. Anyway, this project is my 'art' furniture guitar chair. I anticipate a thread about that some day when it's done. The actual repair of the knot is on the bottom side of the chair seat and not actually structural, nor even visible under normal usage, but I was just working on it, carving the bottom of the seat to relieve a mass of wood, and this knot bothered me. The end of the photo essay I'm about to post, will be when I carve the inset chunk to be flush with the bottom shape being sculpted. The chair seat started out as nearly three inches thick. The relieved seat will be more like one inch eventually. This is in the middle of the process I'm nearly done with.
https://i.imgur.com/C3UXoYy.jpg?1
Re: knots in Black Walnut
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Jim Mahan
Funny you should ask, he said. Yewage is a Bilge-neologism, ala Trump, for huge.
Ha! Love it, look forward to seeing your post on the completed project.