Getting the wood
Getting the wood

With my chainsaw, Harvesting dead trees in the forrest.

Shaping by axe
Shaping by axe

After having found the perfect piece of Ponderosa pine, this is how I start a Zigzag piece. With an axe working my way in to a square piece of wood.

Sawing
Sawing

With my japanese precision saw I start the first cuts.

The beautiful colours
The beautiful colours

The heartwood in the middle has a nice pinkish colour while the sapwood has a darker blue gray tone. This blue gray colour comes from blue stain fungus. It's really beautiful and will not decay, now that I have taken it out of the rain to dry properly. Sometimes I am lucky to find the wood at the stage when it has exactly this colour. Not too much and not too little.

Treating the ZigZag piece
Treating the ZigZag piece

After having shaped the wood into a ZigZag relief - by cutting from both sides, and sanding it smooth and nice - I let it absorb linseed oil. That brings out the contrasts of the colors and it also helps it not dry too fast. Depending how wet the wood is, I may wrap it in a plastic bag for a while, to prevent cracking.

Close to finished ZigZag relief
Close to finished ZigZag relief