mjncad
Super Member
I love how fast you heal when your young.
I hope that means you aren't going to injure yourself again so you can enjoy healing quicker than old farts like me. :laughing:
I love how fast you heal when your young.
I hope that means you aren't going to injure yourself again so you can enjoy healing quicker than old farts like me. :laughing:
What kind of carving were you doing DM? or I should say what types of cutting tools were you using. If you were doing relief type carving with small hand cutters, you can continue after you heal abit but use a small wooden mallet with small wood chisels. Much easier on the hands for now.
I was doing the opposite. Trying sculpture with an adze I forged. Adze worked well, just did too much too fast. I have got back to bowl turning though, I hope to start selling them soon, to fund new tools.
I remember when I first started sculpting. Because of my profession, I was no weakling in any sense of the word but with a chisel and a large sculptors mallet, my forearms just kind of "lumped up" into these rock hard painful mass of bunched up muscle at the end of the session. It was like having a charlie horse in your forearms. Made me appreciate Michelangelo. That dude must have had arms like Popeye.
I was about 20 when i had to have both hands operated on. I was with in a couple of months of loosing use of my hands, the nerve damage was getting so bad. The pain was gone, i had no feeling left in my hands. I didnt even really realize i had an issue, other then when i was typing. My letters would get turned around, and i couldnt figure out wth was going on. Then one day my hand got slammed in a car door and never felt it. I knew i had an issue.