Wow. Got some inspiration up in here!
I struggle with these as well. I'm snapping my compound curve accents about 30% of the time. However I haven't tried that glueing up trick Wood Carver 2 is talking about. So if I understand it correctly... You glue the patterned lam between the solid lams and clamp that in the riser but you don't put glue on the outside of the solid lams right? Then after that drys you'll glue the outside of the solid lams and thus the sandwich into the riser? I feel like I'm not understanding this correctly but perhaps I am and I just need to trust the process.
Max - Thanks for the write-up. I've learned grain direction is rather key in this part. Have you found that to be the case or does it vary depending on wood type and how thick you're grinding to? I think it would be nice to not always have end grain but maybe that's a pipe-dream.
There are a few different patterns you can get from these pieces. Move them around until you get what you want. Then clamp and drill, pin, with a toothpick and then glue up. JF
You sir have some really cool patterns! I'm curious about this toothpick trick you're referring to. Do you position the lams then drill through them into the riser and then put a toothpick through? That sounds like it would work for interior lams but what about outside accents where having a little drill hole is not super cool?
Question for the squad - What thickness do you grind your patterned lams to when using it in a curve/flare accent? I'm generally around .02" - 0.06"