The most recent thing out of the shop is another long spoon. I have made a couple of these long handled spoons in the past. The spoon is 18 inches long and perfect for mixing large pots of chilli, stock or stewed fruit.
In some ways these spoons are a speciality item for the kitchen. After all it is not often we make four gallons of chilli.
First I laid it out, and cut the rough shape with a band saw. (a jig saw would have done the job too,
This spoon started out as a piece of oak trim from a local farm house. A few years ago I was contacted by a friend who had a friend that was over hauling a big ol' farm house. I was able to go and get a station wagon full of mixed oak trim. Some of the trim had been painted, some was splintery and good for fire wood and some was really nice. The stain and/varnish sanded off easily and so the wood has been used for lots of things in many places.
This long spoon is a lovely piece of that white oak trim. Since the wood was a milled board this spoon is a machine made effort. As a milled board there is no advantage to working the wood with hand tools, there isn't much chance to work with the grain.
The wood showed a really nice grain and was as hard as stone to shape. I used a belt sander and a Dremel tool with various bits to do much of the work. Ultimately the final sanding was done by hand, 80,120,180 grit sandpaper and card scrappers providing the final result.
I gave the spoon a quick coat of Hemp Oil and it is ready for the soup.
I paid attention this time, it took about 2 hours of hands on time to complete this spoon. If I were making several at once I am sure that I could cut the time, perhaps in half, I don't know. If you go to a craft fair and someone is selling a nice spoon, made from nice wood it should easily cost $25.00 or more, I would expect that much for this spoon and I got the wood for free.
I was easy to make this spoon. All it took was tools, time and experience. Please buy wisely and support your local crafts people.
ps. check out at years worth of spoons
https://www.dailyscandinavian.com/365-daily-norwegian-wooden-spoons/
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