

The learning curve is a long one with practice at every possible opportunity. Last but not least, my elbow adze is, as they say, like a bandsaw on a stick. There is a local carvers group, but they are all retired and meet during the work day when I am busy at work. There might be some, but I haven't come across them yet. Hard to try before I buy as there are no stores in my local city that sell adzes and I don't know of any local carvers using them. Check out this video.Thanks nomad, but I don't think I am ready to make my own yet. Large dough bowls are great for adze work.Īnother cheaper route is to find an old gouge and mount it in a handle. Also, the smaller the bowl, the more challenging it is to carve with an adze. And if you happen to chop your finger off, well, that would be a disadvantage. The advantage of an adze is that you can hold the wood with one hand and chop with the other. It goes much more quickly if you are using green wood and it can go quite slowly if you are trying to carve seasoned hardwood. Mighty clumsy yet.īefore you run out and buy an adze, I'd recommend finding one that you can try out before you buy. Gimme several more Umbrella Stands and I might have more to say. It's all about control to make a row of strikes. More to the shape and geometry than meets the eye. They have excellent connections with the PacW native carving community.ĥ. You can buy good adze blades from both Kestrel and North Bay Forge. Buy the info package from Kestrel, read it then decide.Ĥ. You need to decide whether you need the gutter form with turned up corners for cross grain work or not. I posted thread of that build-up here in Tools.Ģ. I use it for the roughest of field work when I'm cleaning western red cedar log shell pieces.ġ. I have the full-size Stubai wood carving adze, it's about a 7/75 in size. Does anyone have any experience with these.

I notice that Stubai also offers a scupting adze for about $105. Has anyone tried these or have an opinion based on the picture/description? ? Woodcarving Tool Curved Adze Small Curve With Hammer | eBay I did find these adzes from this seller on eBay who has very positive feedback: I notice several brands recommended on this forum and elsewhere such as Granfors ($300), Hans Karlsson (270 - $300) and (Kestrel ($200-$250) and this is beyond my hobby budget at present.Īre there any good value budget adzes that are worth considering? I am thinking of a small one-handed adze to help with the small bowls. My Del Stubbs hook knife is working fantastic for the spoons and I will try it on the kuksa and small trencher as well.īut I am hankering to eventually work up to bowls (starting with small bowls) and that would mean a larger tool than a hook knife. I am really enjoying making spoons and I am going to try a kuksa and small trencher next.
