For many centuries, Nordic and Nordic-American cultures have practiced the traditional wood carving decorative art called kolrosing. [1]
Though kolrosing is categorized as a type of woodcarving, instead of shaping the wood by carving and altering its form, kolrosing is a way to decorate an already carved surface. Because of its delicate line and detailed designs, Kolrosing looks like a line drawing, taking on the appearance of a fine tipped pen drawn onto paper, or even like a black ink tattoo. Kolrosing designs are also comparable to pyrography ornamentations; but, even pyrography transforms the texture of the surface, while kolrosing does not. Instead of adding ink to the wood’s surface, practitioners create their designs by making small incisions into smoothly sanded wood and then highlight their marks by pressing dark pigment into the small crevasses.
Practitioners often kolrose small utilitarian objects such as spoons and bowls. Designs vary, but are often geometric, almost Celtic in style, are frequently inspired by nature, include initials, and sometimes reference rosemaling patterns. Other designs look like animals, flowers, and even scenery. [2]
Alongside important cultural artifacts such as the bunad, kubbestol (log chair), and rosemalled objects from trunks to bowls; kolrosing is definitive of an especially Norwegian style. [3] Museums such as the Vesterheim Norwegian-American Museum in Decorah, Iowa and the Sunnfjord Museum in Sogn og Fjordane, Norway have many kolrosed spoons viewable in their digital collections. The Digitalt Museum collection includes more than 100 kolrosed objects dating back to the eighteenth century. Many objects in their kolrosing collection, like those in the Vesterheim's collection, are spoons with intricately carved handles and kolrosed bowls. That being said, any clean, flat wooden surface sufficed for kolrosing. Into the nineteenth century, people decorated everything from wooden belt buckles [4] to canes [5] with intricately carved designs as a way to personalize their belongings. It is evident by the kolrosing materials list, anyone with a sharp knife, a bit of coffee and oil can adorn and personalize their belongings, which also ties kolrosing to make-do ideologies in which craft and home decoration that developed according to available resources. [6]
Kolrosing is a vernacular craft tradition that has been passed down from generation to generation, as opposed to a professionally trained skill. On the other hand, some practitioners have created websites and videos as a way to share their craft with the broader public. For instance, the YouTube channel Zed Outdoorsfeatures kolrosing carver Adam Hawker in its May, 2017 video. [7] Other practitioners have created websites in order to share their designs and technique while selling specialty tools, such as Pinewood Forge's Del Stubbs, a Swedish-American from Minnesota. [8] In the United States today, community workshops centered on sharing traditionally Scandinavian crafts often include kolrosing as a part of their woodworking programming, further establishing the craft as a part of the Nordic-American aesthetic vocabulary. [9]
Here is a list of what you will need to practice kolrosing:
A wooden object - Norwegian-Americans often decorated spoons with kolrosing. The Wisconsin Decorative Arts Database has a digital collection of kolrosed spoons from the Vesterheim Norwegian-American Museum. [10]
Knife - the blade should be short with a flat side to rest your forefinger for control. A blade used for chip-carving would work well.
Pigment - charcoal or very finely ground coffee.
Finishing oil - beeswax, walnut, vegetable, or flaxseed oil.
Sandpaper
The following step-by-step provides a summary of kolrosing technique and does not represent the breadth or mastery of stylistic and technical preferences.
For many centuries, Nordic and Nordic-American cultures have practiced the traditional wood carving decorative art called kolrosing. [1]
Though kolrosing is categorized as a type of woodcarving, instead of shaping the wood by carving and altering its form, kolrosing is a way to decorate an already carved surface. Because of its delicate line and detailed designs, Kolrosing looks like a line drawing, taking on the appearance of a fine tipped pen drawn onto paper, or even like a black ink tattoo. Kolrosing designs are also comparable to pyrography ornamentations; but, even pyrography transforms the texture of the surface, while kolrosing does not. Instead of adding ink to the wood’s surface, practitioners create their designs by making small incisions into smoothly sanded wood and then highlight their marks by pressing dark pigment into the small crevasses.
Practitioners often kolrose small utilitarian objects such as spoons and bowls. Designs vary, but are often geometric, almost Celtic in style, are frequently inspired by nature, include initials, and sometimes reference rosemaling patterns. Other designs look like animals, flowers, and even scenery. [2]
Alongside important cultural artifacts such as the bunad, kubbestol (log chair), and rosemalled objects from trunks to bowls; kolrosing is definitive of an especially Norwegian style. [3] Museums such as the Vesterheim Norwegian-American Museum in Decorah, Iowa and the Sunnfjord Museum in Sogn og Fjordane, Norway have many kolrosed spoons viewable in their digital collections. The Digitalt Museum collection includes more than 100 kolrosed objects dating back to the eighteenth century. Many objects in their kolrosing collection, like those in the Vesterheim's collection, are spoons with intricately carved handles and kolrosed bowls. That being said, any clean, flat wooden surface sufficed for kolrosing. Into the nineteenth century, people decorated everything from wooden belt buckles [4] to canes [5] with intricately carved designs as a way to personalize their belongings. It is evident by the kolrosing materials list, anyone with a sharp knife, a bit of coffee and oil can adorn and personalize their belongings, which also ties kolrosing to make-do ideologies in which craft and home decoration that developed according to available resources. [6]
Kolrosing is a vernacular craft tradition that has been passed down from generation to generation, as opposed to a professionally trained skill. On the other hand, some practitioners have created websites and videos as a way to share their craft with the broader public. For instance, the YouTube channel Zed Outdoorsfeatures kolrosing carver Adam Hawker in its May, 2017 video. [7] Other practitioners have created websites in order to share their designs and technique while selling specialty tools, such as Pinewood Forge's Del Stubbs, a Swedish-American from Minnesota. [8] In the United States today, community workshops centered on sharing traditionally Scandinavian crafts often include kolrosing as a part of their woodworking programming, further establishing the craft as a part of the Nordic-American aesthetic vocabulary. [9]
Here is a list of what you will need to practice kolrosing:
A wooden object - Norwegian-Americans often decorated spoons with kolrosing. The Wisconsin Decorative Arts Database has a digital collection of kolrosed spoons from the Vesterheim Norwegian-American Museum. [10]
Knife - the blade should be short with a flat side to rest your forefinger for control. A blade used for chip-carving would work well.
Pigment - charcoal or very finely ground coffee.
Finishing oil - beeswax, walnut, vegetable, or flaxseed oil.
Sandpaper
The following step-by-step provides a summary of kolrosing technique and does not represent the breadth or mastery of stylistic and technical preferences.