CALLIGRAPHY ON WOOD

Bewar from ire...Chaucer's serpent. Inscribed on a turned wooden dish.

Any special occasion lends itself to celebration with inscribed wood! These items are UNIQUE.

The LETTERING is incised (i.e. actually cuts into the surface) by burning and is thus permanent. It is NOT just applied to the surface and will not wash off. The most suitable timbers for lettering are dense and smooth. I find sycamore is excellent; beech, cherry and other fruit woods are OK. I use ONLY native British hardwoods and NO TROPICAL or IMPORTED TIMBERS.

Most of the inscribed dishes shown were made from 2 inch (50 mm) thick sycamore. I can turn up to 24” (610mm) diameter as a ‘regular’ item - but please check the size of your table! Larger sizes than this are possible but expensive.

LAY OUT. Conventional left to right reading means inscriptions go clockwise around the rim - see the dish on the right below. Where suitable, inscriptions can be split to read half clockwise and half anticlockwise as in the example below on the left. The latter can be read from one way up without the need to rotate the dish. This works well where a name/s and date are combined with a short inscription as in the example at left.

Two weddings, no funeral. Turned and inscribed wooden dish.

Inscriptions around the rims of dishes tend to look best when they cover the whole of the rim. A name and a date on their own can leave the dish looking rather ‘bare’. But judge for yourself! Or have a look at this if minimalism is what you are after. The ‘minimalist’ bowl really was that shape! Roughly speaking, 30 to 40 letters will comfortably go around the rim of a 12” (300 mm) diameter dish.

Rudis indigestaque moles - a confused, unformed mass inscribed on a turned wooden dish.

Inscriptions can also be worked in the base of a dish - see right. (The Latin is from Ovid and means ‘an unformed, confused mass’.) Some people like the fact that such inscriptions may be hidden and only reveal themselves gradually, as all the food that is in the dish is eaten for example. Others feel they would rather have the inscription visible all the time and thus placed entirely round the rim. The underneath can also be inscribed, which is where I sign my work; but that really is hiding one's light under a bushel.

While most of the inscribed items featured on this website are turned, inscriptions can be worked on other pieces such as this lectern. Nor does all ‘engraving’ have to be lettering; coats of arms, logos, symbols and other figurative designs are possible.

The scripts have evolved (and continue to do so) along strictly Darwinian principles: anything with an adaptive advantage (for me!) has survived and prospered. I use two principle types; a sort of Bastard Lombardic Versal which are all capitals and a sort of Bastard Italic which are all lower case. Many examples of both bastards are included on this website.

Chaucer's mouse. Turned and inscribed wooden dish. The inscription reads I holde a mouses herte nat worth a leek that hath but oon hole for to sterte to, and if that faille, thanne is al ydo from the Wife of Bath's Prologue.

I occasionally use scripts markedly different from the majority of those shown above. On the left, for example, there is a ‘runic’ type that is very useful for (and indeed benefits from) being compressed, i.e. trying to fit quarts into pint pots. Why a leek? It is referred to in the inscribed quotation from Chaucer “I holde a mouses herte nat worth a leek ...” There is more Chaucer on the QUOTATIONS page. And why a 50 pence piece? Because that was the price per pound of leeks when I did the dish. While all the examples illustrated use Roman letters I have done Russian, Greek and Persian.


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