Roughing out:
The first chisel
you use is the point
chisel.
Hold the chisel with your thumb on the outside over the knuckle.
It feels awkward at first, but prevents accidentally striking
your thumb with the hammer. Hold the point loosely. Look at the tip when chiseling. Let the weight
of the hammer do the work.
Start carving by cutting parallel rows about
an inch apart in the stone, creating ridges and grooves. Hold
the chisel at an angle that just bites into the stone (75 degree),
but not so steeply that it will bury the tool.
Chiseling directly into the stone will bruise
the stone causing "white marks" to ¼" into
the stone. Now go back over the same area with a crosshatch pattern
of cuts to knock off the ridges of the first cuts. Place the point
so it catches under the ridge and the force pops the chip off.
Using this technique, begin defining the geometric planes of the
large forms. Work away
from the highpoint of your sculpture. Be careful not to work too close to the edges if you want to keep them. Carve parallel to the edge
rather than perpendicular.
Defining the Forms:
Once
the large forms have been established with the point chisel, begin
refining them with a tooth
chisel. Hold this chisel tighter with your thumb braced against the tool.
Use a 45-degree angle. A higher angle only bruises the stone; a lower
angle just skips over the surface. As with the point, try to catch
the tool under a ridge of stone to pop it off.
Hold the tooth chisel close to the tip. Try to keep all the teeth in contact with the stone at one time as not to break a tooth off the chisel.
Always overlap your chisel marks slightly. When chiseling, try to
rest your arm on the stone to keep steady.
The point chisel has left a rough texture of grooves and ridges,
which can be smoothed down with the tooth chisel. The tooth chisel
closely follows the contours of the forms. Continue to carve in
two directions creating a crosshatch.
If your sculpture is small you may use less of the point and more of the tooth
chisel at the beginning.
A flat chisel is now used on flat or convex forms to remove the texture
left by the tooth chisel. Use the curved edge of the rondel
to clean out concave shapes.
During this cleaning up stage, you will discover if you have bruised the stone and need to do extra work to remove the white marks
When you want to keep stone
in one area and remove it in another, you
can use the edge of a flat chisel to score a line. You can use the
tooth chisel to remove stone below the line, keeping the stone
on the other side of the line. If you use the point to score the
line, stone will break off on both sides.