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An AI Made Me Do It: AI-Assisted Artwork #1

AI-assisted artwork #1: wooden heart fridge magnet - LaserSister Kay Vincent

As mentioned in an earlier blog post , I follow Joanna Penn’s Creative Penn podcast and was inspired by her New Year newsletter where she invited listeners to share their creative and business goals for 2024. Therefore I’ve declared that one of my creative goals for 2024 is to create at least 52 AI assisted/inspired artworks this year, where I will use AI-generated images as a prompt for actual physical creative pieces. As the year progresses, I’ll note down what happens and what my thoughts and feelings are about it. In the meantime, here we go with AI-Assisted Artwork #1: Heart-shaped wooden fridge magnet.

[By the way, my links in this post aren’t affiliate links or sponsored products. They’re just for info.]

I’ve already been experimenting with a few AI text-to-image generators in the last couple of weeks, and so far the overall results range from “Wow!” to “WTF?”. I haven’t yet found a single image that feels absolutely perfect for me to use immediately, however, that actually makes me happy. If computers can generate perfect art at the push of a button, then what’s the point of humans creating art? And indeed, what would be the point of humans viewing that art? As a creative person, these thoughts can all be very confusing and unsettling. However, as with most things in life, there is a sliding scale of what people find acceptable or unacceptable. Through this AI Made Me Do It project I’m going to attempt to find where my own views are along that sliding scale. (And if I can get the technology to work, I’ll also attempt to find out what other people think.)

AI Assisted Artwork #1

The first step was to come up with a text prompt for generating an image that could be somehow rendered as a physical object. I already had a laser-etched design in mind when I created the prompt, but it took several attempts to get an AI to generate an image that I could convert into something usable.

I started out with the Kittl AI engine, and didn’t get very far. The images were pretty cool (I thought the photography-style images in particular were amazing), but I didn’t feel like I could do justice to any of them:

I continued adapting the prompts to see if I could produce something simpler:

…but although I thought the images were fascinating and they might inspire me for future projects, they weren’t what I was hoping for. Not to mention that Kittl seemed to be deliberately ignoring my instruction about books and pens. The designs were a bit too complex for a first attempt at making something. (I was trying not to be too ambitious with my first design, so that I hopefully wouldn’t be too disappointed with the end result.)

Because Kittl wasn’t producing the goods, I switched to using the Adobe Firefly generator. Again it took me a few iterations of not-quite-what-I-was-looking-for images…

…before it finally produced an image I thought I could use for this project.

Prompt used: “heart-shaped wooden fridge magnet decorated with leather books and 3 pens, with a circle in the centre for text

It’s not 100% accurate in terms of the brief:

  • there are only two pen-looking things instead of three,
  • there’s a thing that looks quite like a book, but it’s not particularly leathery and there’s only one of it
  • there is a blank space in the middle but it’s an oval rather than a circle

However I quite liked the design and I thought it had the right amount of detail in it for me to attempt to turn it into an actual physical object.

I imported it into CorelDraw (the recommended software for my lasercutting machine), and tweaked the colours to make some areas of the image etch more deeply than others. I also added a hairline-width border around the design, to tell the laser machine to cut out the heart shape.

The CorelDraw screenshot below records my experiments with the colours and settings of the image. Each one took at least a couple of minutes to manipulate, which shows that the process certainly wasn’t a question of just clicking a button to churn out a finished piece.

Eventually I found the right balance of settings, and then etched and cut the heart shape from a sheet of laserable birch-veneered MDF. Here is the lasercutting machine in action (speeded up!):

Below is the original image on the left, then the actual physical piece that I etched and cut. I was fairly pleased with the result, although somehow the etched design seems flatter than the original 2D image?!

Of course now that I’ve made the thing, I can think of zero occasions when anyone would actually want a heart-shaped wooden fridge magnet with designs of pens and books etched into it. However, I can think of several examples of when a heart-shaped magnet would be an appropriate gift or keepsake, provided it had a different design etched into it. How about:

  • A “save the date” keepsake item, etched with the bride and groom’s names and the date of the forthcoming wedding.
  • Gift for a husband or wife for their fifth (i.e. wooden) anniversary
  • Family fridge magnet with names and birthdays listed
  • Reminder of inspirational, thought-provoking, or religious quotes

Things I’ve learned

  1. There is definitely more to creating AI-generated images than just typing in some words and pressing a button. For a start, I constantly had to amend my prompts in order to steer the image closer to what I was hoping for. I went through loads of iterations, and in fact with the Kittl generator I just gave up in frustration because it seemed to be willfully ignoring my instruction to include books and pens in the image. To go from the first attempt to finally receiving an acceptable design took nearly an hour of re-tweaking prompts. Then to go from that image to a suitable format for laser etching took about two more hours. It was very interesting to be part of this human/machine partnership, because we were constantly providing feedback to each other and I’m sure that neither of us could have produced that final design by ourselves.
  2. Technical lessons. I’ll skip the details because I’m sure they’ll be boring and irrelevant to a lot of people, but basically I’ve discovered several useful skills that I should be able to build on when I’m creating future pieces. E.g. I’ve learned the pros and cons of converting the original image to greyscale bitmap image versus converting it to a vector graphic. (See? Told you it was boring).

Things I still need to learn or improve

  1. More technical lessons. There are a lot of technical factors that I could improve (mainly to do with the depth and quality of the etching), but considering this is the first time I’ve converted an AI-generated design into a fridge magnet, I won’t beat myself up over it. For now I’m fairly pleased with the result, and I can always try to improve on the object later after I’ve actually gained those technical skills.
  2. How to streamline the process and waste less time. This is related to the first point, but I do feel like I wasted a lot of time trying to get Kittl to understand what I was trying to achieve (e.g. that I wanted the wooden fridge magnet to have drawings of pens and books etched onto it). So I need to try to find out more about how to give better prompts to AI image generators, to ensure a more accurate result. Also, once I get a handle on the technical aspects I might be able to create a checklist of steps to follow, instead of blundering around experimenting with colour/contrast/brightness settings, etc.
  3. Keep better records! Even though I’ve only been using these AI image generators for a couple of weeks, I’m already looking back at some of my first experiments and thinking “Ooh, that might work for another project one day. I wonder what prompt and style I used for that image?”, but unfortunately I haven’t noted them all down. I need to find a quick and efficient way to store and retrieve that information. Firefly does keep the prompt details along with the images if I save them to a gallery, but it doesn’t seem to include the styles or effects that were applied. For example there is a lot of difference between the two sets of images below. They both used the prompt “black cat with blue eyes and bat wings”, but the upper set used styles like “anime”, “flat design”, and “line drawing”, whereas the lower set used styles like “photo”, “hyper realistic” and “fantasy”:

(I was going to criticise the number of tails that a couple of those cats have, but then I realised I’d asked for pictures of cats with wings, so I can’t complain that they’re not realistic.)

Hopefully my skills will improve over this coming year as I continue to experiment with using AI-generated images to inspire physical artworks, but for now I’m pleased to have got off to a successful start. The final design might not be something that customers would interested in buying, but at least I’ve proved to myself that I can produce an AI-generated image that can be etched onto a wooden fridge magnet.

Homework:

  1. Try to find tutorials or tips about Firefly- and Kittl-specific prompts.
  2. Try to create a “Save the date” fridge magnet.
  3. Try to create a heart fridge magnet for a fifth (wooden) anniversary
  4. See if I can find a way to store and organise screenshots of my AI experiments without them taking up too much digital storage space.
  5. Use a normal AI text-based generator to see if I can get it to suggest some further products.

Thanks for reading this post. If you’ve got any suggestions of prompts or products – or if you’ve been experimenting yourself with AI-generated images – I’d love to hear about them. You can either comment below or send me a message via the Contact form.

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An AI Made Me Do It (Adventures With AI-Generated Artwork)

Throughout 2023 there was a load of hooha around AI (artificial intelligence) in the news and online. Many writers, artists and makers seemed to be lining up to say how awful it was, but I felt pretty open-minded about it. I was persuaded by the opinions of people like Joanna Penn from the Creative Penn podcast, who basically said she viewed it as a tool that could work as an “amplifier of human imagination” (as opposed to a replacement for it), but that as with any tool – e.g. the printing press, cameras, the internet – that tool could be used by people in either negative or positive ways.

I was particularly interested in the mention of text-to-image generators, because it appealed to all of the different versions of ‘me’: the me with an MSc in computing, the me with an MA in creative and critical writing, the me with an accidental MRes in education, and the overall me who loves learning and making new things.

So at the very end of 2023 when my Christmas craft rush was over, I thought I would have a play with some AI image generators to see if they might be useful in my own artwork…

…and it was FUN!

This is the first ever AI-generated image that I produced, using Adobe Firefly: [oh by the way, the links on this page are all just for information – none of them are affiliate links and I’m not sponsored by any products]

I was completely blown away. I’d used the prompt “Letter ‘K’ with doodle flower art, output as a vector image for a papercutting design“, and it came out looking like one of my own sketchbook doodles – only better.

AI disappointments

However, I discovered that even though Firefly has a specific theme of ‘Vector look’, I couldn’t find a way to get it to actually generate SVG/vector images. Maybe this will change in future, but at the moment (January 2024) it looks like Firefly can’t generate vectors so you have to use Adobe Illustrator instead. I did start a free trial of Illustrator, but (1) it was really stingy with the number of images that could be generated, (2) the images were so rubbish that I never even bothered saving any, let alone using them, and (3) considering those first two points, I couldn’t justify going ahead with a paid subscription when the package didn’t do what I needed it to do.

Having tested Firefly and Illustrator, I thought I’d try out another AI image generator. After a Google search trying to find an image generator that could output vector graphics, I discovered Kittl. Like Firefly, it produced some really interesting initial results for me…

…but like Firefly, it had some drawbacks. Again, everything may have changed by the time you read this, but at the moment Kittl seems to be unable to reliably create anything with letters or words in it.

For example, can you guess what letters these are below? “X”? “B”?:

Nope – they’re both the letter K, according to Kittl. Sigh. Back to the drawing board (literally).

AI Wins

So I went back to Firefly to see if it could handle letters any better than Kittl. It could (mostly). Here’s what I got with the prompt “Large serif letter ‘J’ decorated with waves” I really liked it – even though the decoration looks more like a feather than waves:

I saved the image, loaded it into some software that can convert images to SVG files (“Curve“), and then tweaked the image a bit.

And so I created my first-ever piece of AI-assisted laser art. Because after editing parts of the SVG file, I etched the J onto a “scribbles that matter” bullet journal for my sister, and gave it to her for Christmas.

Instead of taking hours to create, it took 10 seconds to generate the initial image, then about half an hour of tweaking the vector file. I am now thinking that AI will supercharge my creativity and artistic output, because…

AI-assisted designs versus my traditional method

Let’s compare the AI-assisted process to my usual method of creating a design:

With my traditional method, first I round up lots of reference images (from books, my own photos, and/or other media like Creative Commons images, licenced images, and images that are in the public domain.) With all of these images I then begin to ‘synthesise’ elements and shapes in my sketchbook – i.e. combine them into what feels to me like a summary of the images.

[IOU a screenshot of my digital sketchbook here, but in the meantime just imagine a load of seagulls in different positions and from different angles]

The eventual design is therefore an original artwork that references all of those other images, but doesn’t copy them. What I’m aiming for is to try to get to the concentrated “essence” of a shape. So from the images above I am attempting to create the most seagull-y seagull possible. I want people to look at the image and instantly think, “Yep, that’s a seagull”. It should be a design that represents a seagull. It’s not one specific seagull that really exists in the world, but rather an amalgamation of many examples which make up the seagully-est design I can manage.

Example of the final seagull on a fridge magnet, which I’ve been selling via some small shops and galleries:

The whole process often takes between two and five days (I tend to take longer for historic buildings than I do for animals). This is fine for products that I will be able to sell in large quantities, because the cost of my time will eventually be repaid – albeit in very small chunks – e.g. a fraction per sale from each fridge magnet or Christmas bauble. And that time is also OK for pieces that I make for family or friends, because I’m creating the items purely for their (and my) enjoyment.

But what happens if someone wants to commission a piece of unique artwork from me? If it takes me a day to design and make, then I’ll probably have to charge over £100, which would put my work out of reach of most people. Plus I’m also not currently well-known enough as an artist to attract many of those customers anyway.

The way that papercutting artists usually get round this pricing problem is to spend time creating a template, which has the same overall design but key parts of it can be customised. For example, my Christmas baubles share the same filigree designs, but can then be adapted to include individual names inside them:

What I would really love is to create a completely unique item for each person, but for the process to only take me about an hour instead of a couple of days…

AI Aid

…That’s where the AI comes in.

Remember the “artistic synthesis” stage above, when I created the most seagull-y seagull that I could manage but it took me two or three days? This is where AI might be able to revolutionise my design process.

AI engines are basically able to follow the same process as me, but in about ten seconds instead of ten hours. They can access thousands of images of seagulls, compare them to each other, and come up with their own version of a seagull based on the similarities in the images. Great!

Unfortunately, the AI doesn’t actually know what it’s doing. If it produces an image that is pleasing to humans, that’s probably pretty much by accident. It may have come to a similar output design as mine, but it’s done it through brute force and ignorance rather than by artistic judgement. Probably the only reason it has come up with a human-pleasing design is that humans tend to only upload/share images that they actually find attractive in the first place, so those are the inputs on which the AI is basing its outputs.

My theory is based on experiences during the last couple of weeks. I’ve learned that AI image generators are capable of producing some nice-looking images, but that they make errors that no human would ever make. For example, the images below show that the Kittl AI came up with some recognisable designs of ballerinas…but they featured anything between 0 and 4 legs. I would suggest that four out of those five options represent a non-standard number of legs:

And since when do ballerinas wear stilletos?! Similarly, in the last two weeks I’ve seen an awful lot of 2-tailed cats, plus a 14-fingered woman (6 on one hand and 8 on the other, just for info).

Yes, but is it really ART?

This is not a new debate. Marcel Duchamp famously sparked outrage with his 1917 “sculpture” piece called Fountain. (It wasn’t a fountain – it was a mass-produced urinal.) And heck, is photography really art? Over 100 years after these questions originally surfaced we are still basically asking the same questions about art and/or artists. Can Andy Warhol be considered the creator of all of his Factory of artworks? (check out Tim Harford’s Cautionary Tales podcast episode for a good discussion about Warhol’s work.)

I think for most people there is a sliding scale of what counts as an “artwork” or an “artist”, and what counts as “original”, “influenced by”, “derivative”, “pastiche”, or “blatantly plagiarised”. It’s often a very personal decision, depending partly on the intent and skill of the artist, and partly on the interpretation of the beholder. Billions of digital photographs are taken every year, but surely only a tiny percentage of those photos are intended/interpreted as art, even though they may have all been created using the same basic equipment.

AI generated art versus AI assisted art

I personally am convinced that the images that AIs come up with are at least original. Every human artist has been influenced by other artists or artistic movements – whether consciously or not – so as long as the elements of the AI reference images have been legally obtained and have genuinely been influenced rather than directly copied then the method of creation seems OK. If it’s good enough for humans, it’s good enough for AI.

But for me, there is a difference between AI generated pieces and AI assisted pieces. Thanks again to Joanna Penn of the Creative Penn podcast for bringing up this distinction. AI can produce some fantastic images, based on prompts by humans. Do we call those humans “artists”, though? At the moment I’m leaning toward saying yes, because I can think of established artists who already use pre-existing objects in their artworks. One of my favourite artists is Andy Goldsworthy, whose work has included ice, leaves, rocks, branches, twigs. When I think about the processes that he must go through in order to get from the start to the finish of an artwork, I could argue that they are vaguely similar processes to those of people who work with text-to-image generators. They have to come up with an idea or prompt in the first place, but then (if my experiments so far are anything to go by) the artists may have to discard tens or even hundreds of the generated images in order to end up with just the one “right” image. I’d bet that Andy Goldsworthy doesn’t use every leaf or rock or ice shard that he sees while he’s creating his artworks, and that he carefully selects exactly the right objects for exactly the right positions. And I can’t remember who originally declared it, but don’t many photographers say that the secret of being a good photographer is to discard all of the bad photos? The perceived artistry therefore comes partly through the ideas and decisions that the humans have made during the production and/or presentation of their works.

That makes a lot of sense to me, so I’m satisfied that people who use unedited AI-generated art do have some claim to being creators of art.

However with my own work I’d like to go one or two steps further than just churning out images that have been made for me by a computer. For a start, I rarely get a result that looks perfect to me. Nearly all of them have some element that either looks plain wrong (three-legged ballerina, anyone?!), or maybe doesn’t fit well with the rest of the image, or doesn’t match the prompt words. Therefore I almost always have to change the prompts, and to find ways to edit the images to make them fit my notion of “good”.

After that I’ll convert the image into an SVG file and then edit that file for another hour or two. Finally, I’d like to actually turn the image into some kind of physical item (e.g. like the “J” bullet journal above). Maybe more about those additional stages in a later post, but for now I’m just happy to report that because of the stages my work goes through, I regard my recent experiments as being AI assisted rather than AI generated. An awful lot of me will be going into the final pieces, and the main difference between these artworks and my usual ones is that a lot of the time-consuming “synthesis” stage has been speeded up for me by the use of an AI tool. I feel like it’s the equivalent of Andy Goldsworthy taking a team of assistants with him when he’s going to make a leaf-based art installation, and saying to each of them “Bring me a bucket of orange and yellow autumn leaves that don’t have any bits of green in them”. He would still be creating the actual artwork, but would also be saving himself some time. I guess it’s also like painters buying their paints from shops, instead of grinding and mixing the colours themselves.

This is only the very beginning of my adventures with AI-generated artwork, and I’m hoping to explore them a lot more during the rest of 2024. I know it’s still a very contentious issue with a lot of people, but for me, for now, it’s FUN. I think that as long as I’m honest about my creative processes then it should be up to me to use whatever tools I want. Just as I wouldn’t try to pass off my laser-cut artworks as being cut by hand, I won’t be telling people that my pieces aren’t influenced by an AI if they actually are. On the other hand though, if I’ve spent a lifetime enjoying Art Nouveau and Celtic knotwork, I don’t think I should be expected to calculate what percentage of each of my artworks has been influenced by those genres if my pieces somehow all end up with flowers or sinuous lines in them.

Creative goals for 2024:

Bearing all of the above in mind, I really do want to continue exploring AI text-to-image generators, and to see where they might lead my work. Therefore here is a ‘goal declaration’ for 2024:

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Christmas #1

All of the hard work by me and my elves the last few weeks has paid off, and we have scored a Christmas #1 on Amazon!

At the moment when you see the wooden letter baubles on Amazon, they have a little orange flag with them that says “#1 Best Seller”:

I’m really happy about that! But of course, it’s only a Christmas #1 in a sub-sub-sub category of Amazon (i.e. “Handmade Ornaments”), and at the moment it’s still #9 in the “Handmade Products” category:

One day I’d like to get to number 1 in that Handmade Products category. Especially because at the moment #5 in the chart is a joke “million piece jigsaw puzzle”:

I suspect that people buy those as Secret Santa gifts for colleagues, and I have a strong suspicion that their colleagues would prefer to receive a nice wooden bauble rather than a plastic bag full of sawdust 🙂

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Here comes the Christmas rush…

Having a craft business means that the “Christmas rush” starts early. Normally I begin sending boxes of my lasercut gifts off to Amazon in September, but this year my existing lasercutters both broke, so I had to order a new one – but it couldn’t be delivered until mid-October. Since then I’ve been frantically trying to catch up with my cutting schedule, making alphabet baubles:

This is what I look like for most of the day at the moment:

However there’s so much to do that it’s not just my Laser Lair that gets full of baubles. The rest of the house becomes part of my little factory…and the rest of my family become my little Christmas factory elves. Here is one of them putting ribbons in the baubles:

LaserSister factory elf #1

…and here are two more making up boxes and putting the labels on them:

LaserSister Christmas factory elves #2&3

Hopefully we’ll get all of them sent off to Amazon in time for the Christmas rush!

Click here to see if I managed to get them to the warehouse on time, or if they are sold out. (The link shoud go to my Amazon Handmade page, so you can get a live view of the baubles.)

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Cutting a marquetry QR code

Am I the first person in the world who is barmy enough to hand-cut a marquetry QR code pattern?

More photos (and text) to follow – because I haven’t actually finished this project yet – but this is the current status of my marquetry/parquetry QR code project.

DISASTER!

It took me about 10 solid hours to get as far as I did with the pattern below, but then I had a disaster. I discovered that some free QR code generators are AWFUL, and take you to an intermediate site first. So if I used the pattern below, anyone viewing it would not be sent straight to my website but would be sent to a confusing ad-filled page first, and might not even realise how to access my website. So I had wasted 10 hours.

(On the other hand I’m fairly sure that most people would describe even a successful parquetry QR code as a waste of 10 hours anyway.)

Where the idea came from

I joined the Leeds Marquetry Group in 2022 and am really enjoying learning different marquetry skills. One of the recent club projects involved creating parquetry (using wood veneer pieces to create geometric patterns). First I hated parquetry, but now I’m getting a bit obsessed with it.

parquetry box in progress

The idea for this QR code project surfaced because I wanted to cover a small box with a marquetry design, but because the box had a hinged lid it meant that whatever design I chose, there would be a line running all the way across it where the box and lid met.

So I wanted a design that would include a horizontal line in it, which would disguise the line in the box. Because I’d recently been working on parquetry designs I thought about doing a checkerboard-effect pattern, but the box’s dimensions didn’t divide up neatly into either centimetres or inches, so for some reason that annoyed me and I gave up on that idea. I also wasn’t sure I’d be able to cut lots of tiny squares so precisely that they would fit together without going a bit wonky. I did a bit of Googling of ideas for marquetry on small boxes, and discovered Tunbridge ware patterns, where the design looks like tiny little mosaic pieces, and is created by bunching long slivers of wood together. I loved that idea, but unfortunately don’t yet have the equipment or skills to create any myself. But it sparked a stupid idea in my head, of creating a micro mosaic marquetry pattern, using squares of veneer that were less than 2mm square. I’ve no idea why that thought appealed to me when I’d already rejected the idea of making checkerboard pieces that would have been about 5mm wide.

The next challenge was to think of an actual design for the micro mosaic. I did a bit more Googling of micro mosaic marquetry patterns, but all of that staring at little squares suddenly made a link in my head; the tiny square dots were like the ones that make up a QR code (where you can point a smartphone at the code and it will lead you to a specific website). The idea of making a parquetry QR code was so ridiculous and seemed like such a difficult challenge…and yet it didn’t seem impossible. I mean, “all” I would have to do is cut hundreds of tiny squares of wood veneer so accurately that when I arranged them in the overall design it would be recognised by smartphones as an actual QR code.

A quick online search for “free QR code generators” brought up several – e.g. like the QR code generator by Adobe Express. I created a QR code for my overall website (LaserSister.com), then imported the resulting pattern into CorelDraw so that I could change the size. I wanted to put the code onto the side of my box, so it needed to measure no more than 50mm across.

Before I started I didn’t know how many squares make up a QR code. If I’d have stopped to think about it, I would probably have guessed they were about 20 squares across/down. And then if I’d thought about it for a bit longer, I would have realised that 20×20 = 400, so I’d need to cut a minimum of 400 squares. Fortunately I skipped that thinking stage, otherwise I might not have bothered with the project. Because when I printed the code it turned out that it was actually 29×29 squares. Which is 841 squares. Worse than that was the fact that I needed the code to measure no more than 50mm across. If I’d then bothered to divide 50 by 29, I would have realised that each veneer square would need to be no more than 1.724mm across.

Fortunately I got so carried away with the practicalities of printing off the pattern and applying it to my cutting mat with sticky-backed plastic that I didn’t think about the size (or number) of the little squares until the time came to start cutting them out.

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Lasercutting TikTok Video

Woo, get me – I’ve been trying out 21st-century technology today, and have discovered how to put a lasercutting video onto TikTok.

I’m not sure it was worth all of the effort, to be honest. I’m hoping that TikTok goes away, and that I never have to interact with it again. Either that, or I’m hoping that as more middle-aged people (like me) start using it, TikTok will realise how much people hate the bossiness of an app that immediately starts playing video and audio content as soon as you open it up. Ugh.

Anyway, in an attempt to train TikTok’s algorithms into at least showing me more relevant looping streams of video, today I’ve been trying to teach it that I like crafts and art – especially laser-cut and polymer clay art.

Below is the actual video I uploaded. My first ever attempt at uploading some content on TikTok. It was such a giant, convoluted hassle that I might never bother again. But just in case I do, I wrote a reminder to myself on my KayVincent.com website, vaguely showing how I managed it.

@kay_vincent

LaserSister – my laser cutter making an M Christmas decoration. #LaserCut #LaserCutter

♬ original sound – K

It was a speeded-up video clip showing my laser cutter in action, cutting this ‘M’ Christmas tree bauble decoration:


Maybe I’ll stick to YouTube, Pinterest, and Instagram, and leave TikTok for the kids. Dunno.

Sander sadness…

In the meantime, the reason I’ve been making lasercutting TikTok videos instead of sanding the decorations is that my sander is broken. It’s the second sander this year that has spontaneously conked, so I’m going to hunt down the receipt to see if it’s still under warranty. In the meantime I’ve ordered another sander, but have gone for a more industrial model, rather than the (literal) home or garden version. Hopefully by Friday my little sanding station (in the garage) will be back up and running. Because I definitely don’t want to be hand-sanding hundreds of wooden Christmas decorations.

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More Marquetry

More marquetry news this week: I’ve won first prize in the “Beginners’ Applied” category of a marquetry competition – wow!

I’ve been really enjoying my membership of the Leeds Marquetry Group, and last week I entered their annual competition. I submitted the Yorkshire Rose coaster, which was the very first marquetry project that I’d ever completed (and which I wrote about in July here).

I created the design myself, and based the petals on heart shapes. Then found a really pesky, tricky wood to cut it out of. (For such a therapeutic hobby, I do seem to find myself inventing a surprising number of new swear-words.) Then I covered the coaster with a heat-resistant and water-resistant melamine sealant, gave it to my dad as a birthday present, only to pinch it back again to enter it into the competition.

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Wedding Papercut

This is the most recent wedding papercut that I’ve created.

I did originally create a design that just used the initial letters of the two people, but the trouble with couples who have the initials of “N” and “O” is that it looks like the artwork is spelling out “NO”. Which isn’t a very auspicious message for a wedding gift. So I decided to spell out their names in full, after all.

First I tried cutting the piece with my lasercutter, but the result wasn’t as good as I’d hoped for. The laser-cut edges of the designs were just a bit too brown and toasted. So I cut the design by hand instead, to ensure that the edges of the paper stayed their original colour. Then I framed the piece in a “shadow box” frame. (It’s taken me years of experimenting and searching, to finally find the right type of frame for this type of papercut. Would you like a tutorial article on how to frame papercuts like this? If so, please let me know via the comments section or the Contact page. )

Creating the design

The leafy/berry-y elements of the wedding papercut design came from an SVG file that I bought from Vectorstock.com. I’ve mentioned Vectorstock here before, but basically the idea is that to save time, you don’t want always to draw a completely new design from scratch – especially if someone else has already created a lovely design to begin with. Buying an expanded licence allows other artists to buy the SVG file and then sell their own artworks, based on that design. With this system the original artist gets a payment from other artists who want to use their design, the customer-artist gets to save time when creating their own artworks, and the customer-artist’s own customer gets an artwork that is totally unique but is usually a lower price than if the papercutting artist designed every single element of the design from scratch . Win/win/win!

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Marquetry goldfish

As mentioned in this post, I have recently taken up marquetry and I’m really enjoying it. I am now always on the lookout for new projects. This week I’ve combined marquetry with another hobby (fishkeeping), and have cut out a goldfish design. Because I’m still at the learning phase I’m cutting everything by hand, but at some point I’ll probably start to combine hand-cutting with laser-cutting.

This is what I’ve managed so far:

Stages of making the marquetry goldfish

First I chose a piece of veneer. It’s impossible to tell from this photo, but the piece had been dyed to a light greeny-blue shade. Once I’d found the nice wood I traced a basic fish design onto it.

Using the ‘window method‘ of cutting, I started with the dorsal fin. I deliberately made bottom end of the cut longer than it needed to be, so that I could use the inserted fin as part of the window of a later section. So it didn’t matter that there was a gap at the bottom left of the fin.

Selecting a suitable piece of wood by viewing it through the window

Then basically I kept repeating the steps of:

  • cutting a window shape out of the greeny-blue veneer (e.g. fins, body, tail sections)
  • viewing the orange-coloured veneer through the window so I could find a woodgrain that looked as fishy as possible
  • using that window as a guide for cutting the right size of orange-colour veneer to insert into the window
  • glueing (?gluing? Both spellings look wrong) the freshly-cut orange veneer piece into the window.
Cut a window, find a suitable grain of wood, cut the shape, and glue it into the window

Wonderful woodgrain

This is one of the things I like most about marquetry; the way the woodgrain pattern makes each piece absolutely unique. Here the grain not only has lines in it but wavy lines, so the goldfish tail looks even more realistic. And of course, the lines in the greeny-blue wood look nice and watery.

More fins being added:

Pectoral fins cut and inserted:

Bottom section of fish tail has been cut and inserted. Again I was pleased to find some grain that had a bit of a wave to it.

I thought I’d gone horribly wrong here, because it looked like I’d added a clown’s nose to the fish:

…but when the body was cut and inserted, I was very relieved because the nostril thing didn’t stand out much after all. (Note: at this stage the inserted body-section replaced the bottom of the dorsal fin, so removed the previous gap.)

I was also quite chuffed with the way that the woodgrain looked a bit like fish scales:

Fin-ishing touches

Nearly finished, with the mouth and gill inserted, and a window cut out for the eye. The single mouth-and-gill shape was a really difficult shape to cut out. I could have made things easier by cutting it as two pieces instead of one, but fortunately nothing broke while I was doing it.

I forgot to take a picture of how I cut the eye, because it all got a bit tricky at this stage. Here is the finished marquetry goldfish:

The outer section of the eye is just under 5mm in diameter so was fiddly enough to cut by itself, but then I had to cut a 2-ish mm hole out of the middle of it so that I could insert the smaller, darker circle. No finesse at all was involved; I had to just hack away with my scalpel until I’d managed to carve out a hole from the wood.

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Marquetry at the Great Yorkshire Show

Having mentioned in a previous post that I’d started a new hobby of marquetry this year, I was excited to find out this week that one of my competition entries for the Great Yorkshire Show had won a prize. I really am addicted, now!

The Leeds Marquetry Group encouraged all of this year’s (2022) beginners to submit some of our pieces to the GYS, so for the last few months I’ve been tinkering away with several projects and trying to expand my range of skills.

I turned up at the woodworking tent of the show hoping to have a nose around and see what everyone else had been working on this year, and was amazed to discover that I’d won first prize in the category of “applied” marquetry:

(Photo taken by Eileen)

I’m still sure there must have been some mistake! But what I really loved was that all four of the initial-lettered people were there to see their coasters. I hadn’t shown any of the coasters to Rob (husband), Eileen (mum) or Brian (dad) during the time that I was making them, so there were nice surprises all round.

I created the design by first printing out the letters in a giant font size and then drawing square borders around them. Then I used Saral transfer paper to copy the design onto the wood veneer sheets.

Try, try, try again

This was my first ever attempt at hand-cutting wood veneer. When I cut out the K and the background I was fairly happy with the outcome…

…but then noticed that I’d cut the letter too close to the edges of the background veneer (above), so had to start again.

…only to decide that I’d like to make a whole family set of initial letter coasters – at which point I realised that I didn’t have enough of those two veneers above (cherry and birch??) to make a matching set. So I had to start again again.

Favourite wood so far…

I went up to LMG’s wood store, and discovered a lovely veneer. Fiddleback sycamore. Apparently it’s called that because it’s used on the backs of violins and other similar musical instruments. It is a very very attractive wood:

Woof. It’s got a silky, wavy pattern somehow at right angles to the grain.

For a good contrast with the sycamore, I chose a much darker and more grainy-looking wood. I think it’s sapele wood.

Making things (more difficult)

To make life difficult for myself, I decided to try to keep the outer section of the sycamore veneer in one piece. But I also wanted to learn how to apply a border strip (‘stringing’?) around the main design as well, so I mitred some thin sections of the sapele wood and somehow got them to fit between the pieces of the sycamore veneer.

Work in progress, with the two new woods.

That was actually the second most difficult part of the whole project. I must have wasted about 10 strips of wood trying to get them to the correct width and length and fitting nicely together and properly mitred.

By the time I started on the letter R coaster I was a bit more confident with my cutting skills:

…but was horrified by the gaps between the veneers when I held them up to the window:

Fortunately my new friends at LMG assured me that when I actually glued the veneers together and stuck them to the coaster itself, the gaps wouldn’t be as noticeable. Partly because the glue fills in the gaps anyway, but also because the wet glue causes the wood to soften and change shape a bit. The tutors also kindly reminded me that nobody else in the world was going to hold one of my marquetry pieces up to the light to inspect it. Duh.

As part of my marquetry adventure I also discovered a new phenomenon: my pieces always look better from the back than they do from the front!