Strings attached

I got to work on the head, giving the guitarist a dreamy expression, as though lost in his beautiful melodies!

allen-stichler-tree-carving

The hat and the hair was to match the drummer’s, except with a design of stars on the hat rather than a moon.

allen-stichler-tree-sculpture  I gave him a diamond pattern on the edge of the cloak, and added the guitar strings.

I debated for a while about the best way to carve the strings; ideally they should be made to be raised off the guitar neck, but with such a small area to work on it could end up a real mess and just look very unclear. Also there would be a concern over very thin long strips being durable over any length of time. I’m not aiming for realism with this carving, the designs are quite stylized, and so I thought just a suggestion of the strings would work. I’m still pondering about the absence of frets; I tested carving horizontal lines (the strings) crossed by vertical lines (the frets) on a small part of the trunk, but it put strain on the spaces between the strings. Looking at the photos now I think the guitar does need the frets, and I can’t think of another way to do them. I’ll try it next time.

I’d been given a CD by Freddy James, “The Doctor”, which featured a drawing of a 1937 Dobro on the cover ~ and it was requested this was to be the model for the carving.

allen-stichler-sculpture

The musician carvings have to work together, and with the drum on the other stump being very simple, I didn’t want to overdo the detail on the guitar. Also, I didn’t want the guitar to be the main focal point, standing out above all else.

allen-stichler-guitar-carving   allen-stichler-guitar-carving

allen-stichler-carving

The latest pop duo to hit the scene ~ or is it the Medieval Tyrannosaurus Rex?!

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