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- 20. The finished piece. The tail is the hanger, and the snake is held securely to the wood with two screws.
- 19. Fitting the snake to the piece of grapevine. Because of the two shapes and the way they fit together, I could not bend the tail to its final shape until after the two were put together, So I had to have the final polish and patina on it ahead of time.
- 18. Showing the first bit of texturing, only took a minute or two.
- 17. On the left, a rotary tool I made for the flexible shaft. As it revolves, each lobe acts like a little hammer, putting a hammer mark on the metal. This creates a nice texture reminiscent of snakeskin, in a very short time.
- 16. I had to do some hammering to take care of some flattening and to smooth out irregularities.
- 15. More bending.
- 14. Now for bending. This was very hard work.I made this special bending tool out of hard maple, which was helpful.
- 13. Then to remove the file marks, I'm going over it with a unitized wheel in the flex-shaft.
- 12. The silver-solder just love to go other places besides the seam, which means a lot of painstaking filing.
- 11. SIlver-soldering the seam. Those cheap Walmart "visegrips" really come in handy for things like this. I have put a U-shaped piece of brass in between each clamp and the snake to protect it.
- 10. closing up the rest of the seam.
- 9. Using the tool on the left, hammering on the nose to make it more rounded.
- 8. Silver-soldered and pickled. I will clean up the excess silver-solder after the whole thing is done.
- 7. The seam for the head has been closed up. I will silver-solder this first, so it won't open up when I close up the rest.