
I started by covering the sheet of 22 gauge brass with masking tape and drawing the pattern on that. Then I had to drill some holes in the metal to get access for the blade in the closed patterns. The center of the pattern had a small hole, and I thought I could drill that without making a starter hole and cutting around the hole. Well, as it turns out, I couldn't. The drill badly distorted the metal around the hole and lef
t a couple large shards of metal sticking out. I tried to flatten out the distortion a bit with a hammer so it would not scratch the table of the scroll saw. You can see a couple of the hammer marks. I made the rest of the holes with a much smaller drill bit, and there was very little distortion, all of which was cut off. The top picture shows the cut out piece with the masking tape still attached. The lower picture has the tape removed. These have not been filed or sanded to remove the sharp edges yet. However, I am happy withe the way it came out. I did break 5 saw blades. According to one youtube video I was watching breaking lots of blades while cutting metal is inevitable so I am not going to worry about it. I do have to buy more blades though before I start on the big piece. this is only one repeat of the pattern. There are 6 on the final coronet. So 5 broken blades times 6 repeats. I could break as many as 30 blades if I stay like this. It is exciting to see it working out though.

2 comments:
That is some great saw work. http://www.getuptite.com/
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