hotshot Posted December 29, 2017 Report Posted December 29, 2017 (edited) This is coin was based on the first scroll saw pattern designed by Julia Harmon, a student at Pensacola Christian College. Pattern is free to the Scroll Saw community. Here is the Pattern: Buck_Julia_Harmon.pdf Edited December 29, 2017 by hotshot Lucky2, frankorona, JimErn and 4 others 7 Quote
meflick Posted December 29, 2017 Report Posted December 29, 2017 Another beautiful piece Randy. Quote
DWSUDEKUM Posted December 30, 2017 Report Posted December 30, 2017 Fantastically done Randy. Thanks for sharing this with us. DW Quote
GPscroller Posted December 30, 2017 Report Posted December 30, 2017 Wonderful pattern and cutting. Jeff Quote
newfie Posted December 30, 2017 Report Posted December 30, 2017 Nice cutting Randy thanks for sharing Quote
rjweb Posted December 30, 2017 Report Posted December 30, 2017 Randy, your like iggy he is the puzzle king, and your the coin king, another beautiful piece, RJ Quote
wombatie Posted December 30, 2017 Report Posted December 30, 2017 Love it. Great work Randy. Marg Quote
Lucky2 Posted December 30, 2017 Report Posted December 30, 2017 Nice cutting Randy, what do you do with your scraps seeing as how they're not burnable? Len Quote
amazingkevin Posted December 30, 2017 Report Posted December 30, 2017 8 hours ago, hotshot said: This is coin was based on the first scroll saw pattern designed by Julia Harmon, a student at Pensacola Christian College. Pattern is free to the Scroll Saw community. Here is the Pattern: Buck_Julia_Harmon.pdf Do you do the majority of your coins with the pike #6 blade? Quote
hotshot Posted December 31, 2017 Author Report Posted December 31, 2017 On 12/30/2017 at 1:28 AM, Lucky2 said: Nice cutting Randy, what do you do with your scraps seeing as how they're not burnable? Len I keep them, for what, I'm not sure yet. Was think about getting a crucible and trying to melt them together for possible re-use. Quote
hotshot Posted December 31, 2017 Author Report Posted December 31, 2017 (edited) On 12/30/2017 at 1:53 AM, amazingkevin said: Do you do the majority of your coins with the pike #6 blade? Anywhere there is an sharp inside corner, the 6/0 is the blade I use for that in order to get the sharp corner. So, #6/0 is used for special cases, which occur in a few place on many coin designs. Anywhere I can get away with it, I use #2/0 or #3/0. Edited December 31, 2017 by hotshot Quote
Lucky2 Posted January 1, 2018 Report Posted January 1, 2018 10 hours ago, hotshot said: I keep them, for what, I'm not sure yet. Was think about getting a crucible and trying to melt them together for possible re-use. Now that sounds very interesting Randy, please make sure to post the results if you do proceed with this idea. It would be super nice to see a video of the process, but I'd settle for a few pics. Len Quote
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