But I hope it doesn't show too much. This is the carving that I broke AFTER I finished it ARRRRRGH!!!!
It was a clean break, and I believe that the mend is almost invisible. I know that these aren't great pictures, but I'd be grateful if you scour them and try to work out where the break is. It'll help me decide whether to recarve or to send it on as it is (I'm going to admit to it, and offer to recarve anyway if they're not happy).
It shows, incidentally, the much hated 18thC Governor of Jersey, Matthew Baker, closing the Middle Ward Gate of Mont Orgeuil castle against the St George's day pilgrims.
Inspect my balls and other whittlings at Teh Gallery
i just looked at that pic for ages and couldn't see where the break was.
that's some damn fine work btw.
Edd
The
factory of the future will be run by a man and a dog. The man will be there
to feed the dog. The dog will be there to make sure the man doesn't touch
the machines
Although, if that is it, Iwould never have spotted it without looking. I think the right approach would be as you said, tell them what happened, tell them it's repaired and give them the option.
I'm one of these that tends to think that anything like this is a valid part of the work anyway. But, yeah, that doesn't really tranmslate to wood carving, admittedly.
No, it isn't the flaw to the left of the gate, Xen: that's just wood being cussed like it is.
I agree with what you say with regard to art, but I've always thought of my stuff as essentially craft-based, which is much more oriented around control of materials and notions of material perfection. I still think they'll probably be happy, because it is so very hard to see, it's a corporate client rather than an individual, and it's one of twelve.
I'm helped by the fact that it broke in extraordinarily unlikely way:
Would never have guessed it was there. Top notch repair work on that.
If it's as invisible to the eye as it is in a photo, I'm not sure it's even necessary to tell them - with it being what it is, if it's not discernable, it's not really relevant to the use of the thing...
In the absence of a single shred of conscience, I'll be guided by good business sense. I'll send it to them unnanounced, then ring up & explain about the break. That way, they'll see it with the eyes of the punters who'll be visiting the castle, but they'll still have the option of asking for it to be recarved.
*you just drew that yellow line on at random didn't you*
<weeps>If only<weeps>
You cannot imagine the sheer horror of the moment I broke it. I was gluing the roundel into the hemisphere that holds it, and I simply squeezed it too tight. I already knew it was thin: I could see light through it if I held it up to a lamp.