Tiger Sculpture From Scrap Wood
This sculpture is made for scrap 1/4 inch plywood. the idea is to use the small scraps as much as I could to make this sculpture.
Tiger has been a creature with many symbolic attributes in Asian countries, the tiger is one of the 12 animals of the Chinese zodiac. In Chinese art, the tiger is depicted as an earth symbol and equal rival of the Chinese dragon – the two representing matter and spirit respectively. This sculpture is based on an ink sketch by one of my favorite Chinese artist Huatunan you can find his work here http://huatunan.tumblr.com/
Find Wood Scraps
At Pier 9 a lot of awesome projects are made every week, many was done with laser cutter. the throw away pieces all have nice clean edges and the burn mark of the cut out also gives the piece extra dimension/depth. I picked 1/4 inch plywood that still have some area to work with. alternatively, I could use card stock or anything that is easier to cut.
Make the Sketch
I sketched it in illustrator, and knowing that the scraps are quite small, I drew as many layer as possible. there is a little overlapping so each piece can be glued. the canvas is 36in X 24in.
if you dont have access to laser cutter print it on letter size card stock is also a good idea.
Laser Cutting
I roughly measured the workable area on the scrap wood, then pick out the similar size pieces from the drawing. and let the laser cutter do the magic. I was able to cut 32 pieces from these scrap pieces. the goal here is too make this sustainable and waste as little as possible.
Enhance the Burn Mark
Once have all the pieces cut. pre assemble it to see where are the overlaps. I didnt mind have the exact look as the illustrator sketch. it looks good anyways.
I roughly marked out the areas I want to burn with a pencil. it is all free hand, and there is no guide, what I am trying here is to suggest the stripes on tiger.
Take all the piece outside to a concrete ground and I just used a propane torch to quickly char some of the edges. the burned area also covered the pencil marks. the tip here is too burn it quickly, and try not to rub it off and dirt the wood
Assemble
I used nail gun with some tiny nails. and superglued it from the back side. it just comes alive after everything glued.
Finish
I just rubbed some linseed oil and let it dry for a day. It also looked very cool when back lit. I hot glue it onto a piece of plywood that is been lightly white stained.
it is ready to be displayed on the wall.
to come up with a sketch was the hard part. making it took me a weekend from start to finish.
Practice N Enjoy