ear3
Member
- Joined
- Jul 24, 2014
- Messages
- 4,341
Currently working on an interesting commission that is an outgrowth of some of the art installation work I've done in the past. One of the gallery owners I've worked with has bought a restaurant in Chinatown, and is now transforming the space into a kind of permanent art installation, relying on some of the gallery's stable of artists to design the space. I've just been handed boxes upon boxes of Ipe offcuts (b/w 12-16" in length), and have been tasked with creating a kind of mosaic motif from tiles I will manufacture out of the offcuts layed out over a plywood substrate.
I've never worked with Ipe before, so I just have a couple of questions.
The main one is about adhesives. I've heard that Ipe can have problems with glue, so I thought this would be a good application for using the PamTite gun I got for a flooring/stairs project last year:https://www.amazon.com/HB220-Adjust...coding=UTF8&psc=1&refRID=9XA38677EHFF9Q60FY4T
After setting the tiles in place with the PamTite, I would go back and drive some 18ga. brads from the underside of the plywood to make the tiles more secure. Does anyone anticipate there being a problem using PamTite on Ipe?
Second, I've heard that Ipe, being so dense, can be difficult to work with. The offcuts are already thicknessed, but I will have to rip the edges to take off the bevel they currently have, and then probably have to design some sort of jig for my Kapex to create some of the smaller tiles that are required, lest my fingers get too close to the spinning blade with pieces that small. Has anyone had problems when having to cut a large amount of Ipe in terms of dulling blades?
Ideally I would also want to have the option for some hand tool action on doing the final fit of some of the tiles, say, something like a shooting board for shaving tiny amounts of the pieces. But given how dense Ipe is, does it make sense to even attempt to work it by hand? I had a bad and unsuccessful experience over the summer trying to work by hand Wenge, a similarly dense wood, which I don't want to repeat. I would also have to spend some time building a custom shooting board for this project, and want to get a sense of whether it's even worth it to devote that kind of time to the prep stage.
I've never worked with Ipe before, so I just have a couple of questions.
The main one is about adhesives. I've heard that Ipe can have problems with glue, so I thought this would be a good application for using the PamTite gun I got for a flooring/stairs project last year:https://www.amazon.com/HB220-Adjust...coding=UTF8&psc=1&refRID=9XA38677EHFF9Q60FY4T
After setting the tiles in place with the PamTite, I would go back and drive some 18ga. brads from the underside of the plywood to make the tiles more secure. Does anyone anticipate there being a problem using PamTite on Ipe?
Second, I've heard that Ipe, being so dense, can be difficult to work with. The offcuts are already thicknessed, but I will have to rip the edges to take off the bevel they currently have, and then probably have to design some sort of jig for my Kapex to create some of the smaller tiles that are required, lest my fingers get too close to the spinning blade with pieces that small. Has anyone had problems when having to cut a large amount of Ipe in terms of dulling blades?
Ideally I would also want to have the option for some hand tool action on doing the final fit of some of the tiles, say, something like a shooting board for shaving tiny amounts of the pieces. But given how dense Ipe is, does it make sense to even attempt to work it by hand? I had a bad and unsuccessful experience over the summer trying to work by hand Wenge, a similarly dense wood, which I don't want to repeat. I would also have to spend some time building a custom shooting board for this project, and want to get a sense of whether it's even worth it to devote that kind of time to the prep stage.