Bill Embacher
Well-known member
Since this is by far the most work I've ever put into a decoy rig, I thought it might be cool to document and share it here. The rig is for 24 "E-Allen sized" common eider, with one lifesized king eider drake, Stellers eider drake, and Spectacled Eider drake, to be completed in two parts. I'm almost done carving the first part, 12 common eider and the king. I only use cork at this point for commissioned decoys, I've had too many issues with wood splitting/checking in decoys i've sold in the past, The cork carves nice, is durable, and no issues with splitting or checking obviously, nice and uniform throughout.
So here we go...please feel free to critique and comment. I'm always willing to learn from others!
First drew a top pattern that fit the size requirement, 6x18x11. To get that from the cork, I opted to use 3" and double it. From a sheet of cork I could get 4 that size (2 decoys) plus plenty of extra for other work.
Cut out the two halves, and screw them together with 5" deck screws
I guess i should mention I first carved all of my heads from Atlantic white cedar. Anyway, I never use a side pattern, I just hold my head to the body, and rough in some lines with a sharpie
bandsaw out the side profile, and then use the bandsaw to knock down the top sides.
Couple of different surforms get the shape close
Leave a lot of meat around the neck
and see how it all looks
take the screws out, and run the lower half through the bandsaw to get three halves......
cut the middle out of the middle
cut a tail from 3/8 pre-primed ply
glue and screw the middle to the bottom, and glue the tail in place
two 5" deck screws at different angles hold the head in place, I use tightbond 3 glue for everything
back to 2 halves, plus a keel from 2x3
Once the glue dries over night I remove all of the screws, except the two holding the tail in place. Now I glue and screw the top in place, using deck screws to hold it tight. I'll remove those tomorrow. The first few I used clamps, but i couldn't get nice even pressure and my gaps between the halves were ugly. The screws are easy to keep even pressure all around
Screws out, head and neck joint cleaned up with surform and then various rasps
Eyes in, putty pushed into the needed spots and where the halves meet. most of it will sand right off, just a precaution.
thats where I'm at, times 13...to be continued.
So here we go...please feel free to critique and comment. I'm always willing to learn from others!
First drew a top pattern that fit the size requirement, 6x18x11. To get that from the cork, I opted to use 3" and double it. From a sheet of cork I could get 4 that size (2 decoys) plus plenty of extra for other work.
Cut out the two halves, and screw them together with 5" deck screws
I guess i should mention I first carved all of my heads from Atlantic white cedar. Anyway, I never use a side pattern, I just hold my head to the body, and rough in some lines with a sharpie
bandsaw out the side profile, and then use the bandsaw to knock down the top sides.
Couple of different surforms get the shape close
Leave a lot of meat around the neck
and see how it all looks
take the screws out, and run the lower half through the bandsaw to get three halves......
cut the middle out of the middle
cut a tail from 3/8 pre-primed ply
glue and screw the middle to the bottom, and glue the tail in place
two 5" deck screws at different angles hold the head in place, I use tightbond 3 glue for everything
back to 2 halves, plus a keel from 2x3
Once the glue dries over night I remove all of the screws, except the two holding the tail in place. Now I glue and screw the top in place, using deck screws to hold it tight. I'll remove those tomorrow. The first few I used clamps, but i couldn't get nice even pressure and my gaps between the halves were ugly. The screws are easy to keep even pressure all around
Screws out, head and neck joint cleaned up with surform and then various rasps
Eyes in, putty pushed into the needed spots and where the halves meet. most of it will sand right off, just a precaution.
thats where I'm at, times 13...to be continued.