Add a new twist to traditional three-dimensional scroll saw work!
- 128 distinct, ready-to-use patterns for nautical themes, religious themes, wildlife, music, people and more
- Instructions and illustrations explaining "two-in-one" cutting techniques
- Color photographs of select pieces showing all four sides of the figure
Take a look at one of Sam Keener's scroll saw pieces and you'll see an angel. Turn it 90 degrees and look again. Now you'll see a butterfly perched on a flower. Pick up another piece: One side is a musical note; the other is a saxophone. A step beyond "three-dimensional" scroll saw projects, these two-in-one figures are made with a unique cutting technique perfected by author and artist Sam Keener.
This intermediate level scroll saw book provides patterns for creating these objects along with instructions on how to execute the tricky scroll saw maneuvers required to cut them.
Not for beginners, 128 Compound Scroll Saw Patterns offers a new challenge for scroll saw craftsmen: How to create a single object that is shaped so that two different subjects are revealed with the object is turned. Compound patterns include:
- Griffin & Knight
- Quarterback & Receiver
- Cat & Mouse
- Swooping Eagle & Liberty Bell
- Hunter & Duck
- Lighthouse & Anchor
- Mermaid & Seahorse
- Jesus & Cross
- Angel & Butterfly
- Tuba & Cello
- Ballerina & Swan
- Chapman & Keystone Cop
- Grizzly Bear & Boone
- Bull Rider & Rodeo Clown
- Uncle Sam & American Eagle
- Hydrant & Fireman
Each of these compound figures is a single object shaped so that two different subjects are revealed when the object is turned 90 degrees—from one angle it is a cat, from another it is a mouse. Go a step beyond the usual compound projects with these two-in-one scrolled pieces!
Sam Keener started woodworking as a small child in his grandfather's shop. Today he and his wife Mary create and sell woodworking projects—mostly compound figures and Intarsia—through their shop in Ohio.
Sam first spotted large compound carvers on a trip to Mexico. With a little encouragement and more than a little patience, Sam adapted the techniques to cut four- to five-inch-tall compound figures on his scroll saw. This is his first book on the technique.