Sunday, January 16, 2011

Mother of Pearl




After a little searching, native Tasmanian green-lipped abalone shell for mother of pearl (a stunning material used for the pearl slide and pearl eyes on the frog of a bow) has been sourced. Saturday saw us pile the kids in the car and take a drive up the river in search of our local neighbourhood abalone diver.

On a stunning vineyard on the West Tamar we found several piles of 'stink' shells, as named by the kids, and I collected a box full. In my enthusiasm, the box was overfilled and unshuttable so the drive home was a little aromatic, but well worth it, as the shells cleaned up beautifully.




Its great to have a local Tasmanian material to use in my bow making. Most of the other exotic supplies - pernambuco, mammoth bone, ebony etc must be sourced from the far corners of the Earth.

Photo courtesy of http://www.flickr.com/photos/johnwhite/sets/72157594369988268/

Mmm, green lipped abalone, looks disgusting, tastes delicious!

2 comments:

Gina said...

Finally taking a peek at your blog via Mrs Smith. I'm a cellist, I have a lovely Adrian Studer cello. What's the story behind the mother-of-pearl dots? Is it purely aesthetic?

Philip Smith said...

Hi, Thanks for having a look. Yes the pearl eyes are only decorative. Some makers leave the frog just plain. The pearl slide is part of the mechanics of the frog. I have just today fitted the neck into my newest cello. I will post some photo's soon. P