Svisson I took horn scales boiling water and used the steam to bend them the direction I wanted on my Tally Ho. It is a bit time consuming but due to their age I wanted to go slow. This in no way affected the look of the horn.
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Svisson I took horn scales boiling water and used the steam to bend them the direction I wanted on my Tally Ho. It is a bit time consuming but due to their age I wanted to go slow. This in no way affected the look of the horn.
I believe I'll get me a heat lamp save from running the stove and heating the kitchen up and upsetting the wife :) heat lamp would be handy.
It works on plastic scales too.
But ya gotta keep testing the temp. and flexibility of the scales with you hand. You can get horn so hot, it will start curling, but you'll scrap a plastic set, well before that temp.
I've only scrapped one set of plastic (cellulose) scales with the heat lamp. But I learned from it, and I've gone on to straightening many other's, successfully. [emoji41]
My heat gun has a thermostatic control to make it hotter or cooler so I imagine messing around with it some & noting the temp when success with a warped scale is achieved would work.
It took me a while but I finished up my first three restorations. I poured a lot of time first into the W&B Celebrated. Learned a lot with patience being a key I think. For the W&B in faux ivory, I tried a satin finish application the way Tuzi does it--I don't have his mastery of the technique (nor the photography skills) but it works very, very well and I think that may become my go-to finishing style.Attachment 273610Attachment 273612Attachment 273613Attachment 273615Attachment 273616Attachment 273617Attachment 273619
That is some work to be proud of. The blades look great and I can see the attention to detail.
The wedge ends are sweet!
Get Tuzi to coach you on photography a bit and get those on the custom-builts and restorations subforum pronto! That's an order! :whipped:
I think most things done here should be run there as well. JMO.
(Nice Corian!)