Decoy Carving- Simplified

Rutgers

Well-known member
First of all and most important-I've thought about posting this for a while but I've been hesitant because I'm worried someone would get hurt. After some thought, I decided to post it, but warn you-This is inherently dangerous. I'm simply telling you how I do this. If you choose to do this you do it at your own risk. Be careful, the hatchet isn't very forgiving to careless use.

After seeing so many guys talk about wanting to carve decoys but not having access to a bandsaw, or money for tools, etc. I decided to post how a guy can carve a decoy without wrapping up a lot of money in equipment. Thousands of decoys have been carved this way for a lot longer than how things are done now. Talented men created masterpieces that now fetch hundreds of thousands of dollars at auction now carving this way. Most importantly though, those decoys were carved to gun. Seems today, that is the furthest thought from many carver's minds; actually carving a decoy to fool a duck.

While I use a hatchet and spokeshave in my carving, this is the first body completely done using only them (and a chisel a little bit). Total time carving from log form to what you see at the end of this is about an hour give or take. I think with some more experience I could just about cut that time in half. I started with a crappy piece of wood and wish now I hadn't. I just didn't know how it would turn out. This is as far as I am going to take this decoy. IF there is enough interest, I will do another tutorial from start to finish for my rig.

First off, material. I'm using northern white cedar. Pine, Cedar, basswood, poplar, pretty much anything you have available to you will work. For a long time I carved decoys out of scrap construction lumber glued together. It was a little tougher to carve, and a bit on the heavy side, but it worked, and I couldn't beat the price. I know there are a lot of guys that are always searching for that perfect piece of wood, but I don't worry so much about small knots, heartwood, minor checking, etc. I only carve very dry wood, and I hollow all of my decoys. This stabilizes things enough that I don't have much trouble. I carve enough that I could never afford to if I only carved select clear wood. Sure, I have the occasional decoy fail, but the percentage is low and I feel its an acceptable amount for what I have invested into my materials.

Tools. Nice and simple. A good hewing hatchet, flat on one side, and VERY sharp. I can shave with this thing. Look for one that is forged and not cast, and make sure it has an chisel edge, not a knife edge. For right handers, the flat is on the left. For lefties, the flat side is on the right. This is changed by sticking the handle in either top or bottom of the head. Sorry for the bad pic, but s you can see, one side is at a right angle, offset.

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The other tools you'll need are a good knife and a spokeshave.

Knife. Everyone has their preference. I like a long narrow blade. This one is made by Cape Forge and the blade is 1 3/4" long. I don't use it on the body, but it is all I use on my heads aside from a little final rounding with a rasp and sandpaper. Flexcut makes some excellent knives as well, and they are priced right. Their roughing and pelican knives are my favorites and they are easy to care for. Keep a good knife stropped and you will hardly ever have to sharpen it.

Spokeshave. I use a Dunlap. They aren't too expensive, and with a little looking not that hard to find. The iron is made of good steel, and they are comfortable to use and adjust. They also have a good angle for the softer woods. I've got a lot of spokeshaves and find most are too steep for use on soft woods and just chatter and foul constantly. Save yourself the aggravation and get a Dunlap.

I also used a 1/2" flat chisel for cutting in the head shelf, but it's not in the picture.

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Now on to the carving. I get my cedar from a log home MFG and it's already sawed flat on two sides. First I draw the pattern on the top and start to hacking with the hatchet until I have the top profile close.

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Be sure to keep the wood between your "free" hand and the hatchet at all times. Also, I never strike above the middle point of the decoy. I start with heavy blows, and choke up on the hatchet as I get closer to the line and use lighter blows.



Once I get close to the line I use the spokeshave more so I dont take a big chunk out of the side. I leave the breast and tail a little square at this point to help in holding it against my push block for spoke shaving. These will be rounded off later.


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Bear with me, I only have so many pictures. Above I'm using the push block to hold the decoy as I spokeshave on it. I'm using the spokeshave in a bicycle tire pump motion while holding the decoy between my gut and the push block.

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Once the top profile is set, I draw the side profile and go back to work with the hatchet. You can see it doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure this out. so far we've only used two tools.

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More hatchet work on the side profile and starting to round. By God, it's starting to look like a duck. Probably just over 1/2 hour invested so far.

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Time to pick out a head. I carved this last week, and I admit I cut out the blank on a bandsaw. Since it is only about 2 1/4" wide, this could easily be roughed out with a coping saw and finished with a knife.

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Now we finish getting the body rough shaped and cut in a shelf for the head with a chisel. try the head on and do some more shaping. At this point its just a matter of how much work you want to put into details. If I were going to carve this to completion, I would really put some more time into it, hollow it, etc, but you get the picture.


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Viola! Mallard!

I hope you enjoyed and learned something from this. Happy carving, and watch those fingers!

Paul
 
I've shaped lots of stuff using the same tools. I also have an axe with a very scooped adze on the back side. It's a little scary when choking up with the axe, but I've never cut my forearm with the adze blade when using it in this manner. I prefer the broad hatchet, similar to yours, over the combination tool most the time, but the hollow adze is good for scooping out under the tail. I think separate adze and axe would serve better. Sticky sharp is an absolute.
I'll add that most of the motion is done with wrist and fingers, very little forearm, and almost never upper arm motion when chopping. Let the weight of the axe head do the work, the muscles should be directed toward control. I also shave by pushing the axe with the hand, not swinging.
If the handle is shellac coated, scrape it off, and finish with linseed oil. I keep a hunk of bees wax near by. Rub it on the handle to improve grip. Keep a wetstone handy, and use it often. My adze I bought new, and the bevel was way too abrupt. I had to regrind the bevel, then hone. It's probably 20 degrees. Used hewing hatchets frequently have had a bevel ground on the flat side, this is wrong. You'll have to grind the bevel side back until the flat side bevel is removed. You don't want hollow grind on the bevel. It's better to be slightly convex to bend the shaving away.
 
For those that may be interested....
By a stroke of luck I came across some past DU issues. There are step by step plans with patters to scale for constructing a wooden hollow body decoy. Much like Paul's this will not require a band saw, VERY simple tools needed. The issue is March/April 1975 and the article is by C.D. Stutzenbaker. It is a great article with easy steps, I would have linked it but the DU archives site only goes back to 2000 issues. So some of you computer wiz people can probably track it down. I have actually made two of these decoys, great fun projects, but they still sit unpainted. Now if somebody out there has some painting tips or ideas I would love to hear them.

Take Care,
Gene
 
Def. one of the top posts of the year for me... I'm not a decoy carver, but I really enjoyed this post. Nice work.

A.
 
Great Post! I've heard of that method but never seen any pictures, now I've just got to get the
guts to try it!

Really where should I look for one of the hatchets and how much should I expect to spend?
Are they available new or should I start scouring flea markets?

Thanks Again
 
Paul,

Thanks for the post. I've been thinking about carving but don't have many power tools. This may be what it takes to get me started.

Maybe this post should be archived somewhere with easy access in the future?? I doubt I'm going to start carver in the next few weeks and will want to refer to this page again.

Tom
 
Hi Geoff,

I get my hatchets at flea markets, antique stores, and on E-bay. I have learned that there are a few things to watch out for. First, make sure that it is forged steel, and not a wrought iron type metal, and no cracks. With as many people as made thses, there are varying degrees of hardness. I like one a little on the softer side than can be sharpened with a file. I am a little more cautious of the ebay ones because it seems that I get as many ones that are not useable as I do ones that work. Make sure that the flat side is as flat as possible all the way to the edge. Most have been mis sharpened and will require some work. In fact I haven't found one yet that didn't. Take the flat side and flatten it all the way to the edge with a belt sander and then file the angle to a good point. It is very important the flat side has no bevel on the edge. I will do a demo soon on tuning up a hatchet with pictures. Trying to carve like this with an improperly sharpened hatchet is both frustrating and dangerous! You'll see that once I post the pictures of tuning one up, it's really not that difficult. I pay anywhere from $5 to $20 for a usable hatchet. Also, try to get the smaller ones. The lighter, the easier to control.

This one looks like it would be a good one

http://cgi.ebay.com/VINTAGE-OLD-LOGO-CRAFTSMAN-BROAD-AXE-HATCHET-FARM-TOOL_W0QQitemZ230299872414QQcmdZViewItem?hash=item230299872414&_trkparms=72%3A1205%7C39%3A1%7C66%3A2%7C65%3A12%7C240%3A1318&_trksid=p3286.c0.m14

I have a few that I will be tuning up soon and have in the classifieds if you're not interested in tuning one up yourself too. Good Luck

Paul
 
Maybe this post should be archived somewhere with easy access in the future??


Tom, I agree this is a nice instructional post that would be good to have for future reference. My advice would be to archive it on your own personal computer. That way you know exactly where to find it plus you are not depending on it to be "out there" someplace on the web.
 
Please keep me posted, I'm not scared of tuning them but if I have an example to go by
it will be easier.

Those Cape Forge Knives are great aren't they? I think they even call that one you
have "The Garvey Knife". At least thats how I ordered mine.

Thanks for the info and I look forward to the tutorial.
 
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