:QUOTE [quotetype:personal] Chip carving is geometry practiced with a knife. The wood tells you when you got it right. :INFO What Chip Carving Is Chip carving is a woodcarving technique where small wedge-shaped chips are removed from a flat surface using two angled knife cuts. The cuts meet beneath the surface, popping out a clean triangular or curved chip. Working across a grid of triangles and circles, the negative space of removed chips creates complex geometric patterns that appear carved rather than incised. Basswood and butternut are the preferred woods — they are soft, consistent, and cut cleanly without grain interference. :COUNTER.half 65 Degree | :COUNTER.half 1/4 to 3/8 Inch :PATH Draw Your Pattern on the Wood Pencil a geometric grid — equilateral triangles are the starting point. | :INFO Draw Your Pattern on the Wood Lightly draw your pattern on a smooth, flat piece of basswood with a pencil. The standard chip carving grid is equilateral triangles — draw parallel lines in three directions at 60-degree angles to create a field of triangles. Each triangle becomes one chip. Circle patterns and rosettes are built from the same geometry with curved lines added. Draw lightly — deep pencil lines show in the finished carving. :PATH Make the First Stab Cut Hold the blade at 65 degrees and cut along the first side of a triangle. | :INFO Make the First Stab Cut Hold your chip carving knife like a pencil, at a 65-degree angle to the wood surface. Place the tip at the deepest point of the triangle (typically the center of the three-triangle star group) and pull the knife toward you along one side of the triangle, angling the blade so the cut is deepest at the start and tapers to zero at the corner. Maintain consistent angle and pressure throughout the cut. :PATH Make the Second Cut and Pop the Chip Angle the second cut to meet the first — the chip pops free cleanly. | :INFO Make the Second Cut and Pop the Chip Reposition to cut the second side of the triangle from its corner to the center point, again at 65 degrees angling inward. The two cuts should meet precisely beneath the surface. A third cut along the base of the triangle completes the chip removal. When all three cuts intersect cleanly below the surface, the chip lifts free on its own or with gentle persuasion from the knife tip. :CHECKLIST What You Need [ ] Chip carving knife — Pfeil or Wayne Barton style [ ] Stab knife (optional) — for curved and detail cuts [ ] Basswood board — 1/2 to 3/4 inch thickness [ ] Pencil for pattern drawing [ ] Leather strop loaded with honing compound :NOTE Sharp Is the Entire Skill in Chip Carving A slightly dull chip carving knife does not cut clean — it tears, skips, and splits wood across grain. Strop your knife on a leather strop loaded with green or white honing compound before every carving session and every 20 minutes during. The edge that feels sharp enough to you is not sharp enough for chip carving. :QUOTE [quotetype:personal] The chip that pops out clean on the first try is the reward for the one that tore on the last try. :LINK https://www.woodcarvingillustrated.com/chip-carving/ Wood Carving Illustrated — Complete Chip Carving Guide and Patterns