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Bookmark and ShareWell, it's been a long while since I did any blogging.  LOTS has been going on, but because all the work I was doing was 'surprise' work, I couldn't post any pictures until I was sure that the spoons had all been received.  I'm sure that I would have been in a pretty serious dog-house if I was the one to wreck a surprise!!

I'm posting this spoon first because I am so pleased with it.  I have a real love for the art of North West Coastal First Nations artists.  Aside from being astonishingly beautiful, it is invariable packed with symbolic meaning and 'back story'.  Being a lovespoon carver who also uses his designs to 'tell stories', I find that aspect of various art forms very exciting and interesting.

But North West Coast art is NOT easy.  To master it requires years of dedicated study and practice and a real knowledge of the stories and legends which go into it.  Because I can never truly know how to create that art, I tend to enjoy it from afar.   But this commission gave me the opportunity to have a stab at combining NW Coastal style with Celtic.   To mask my deficiencies in the NW Coastal style, I kept that particular part of the design to a careful minimum...but I'm pretty confident with my Celtic knotwork and I let that become the bulk of the design.

My Eagle is fairly simple and straightforward and I very much hopes at least captures the essence of the NW style.   The bird's wing combines the two styles as much as possible and makes heavy use of the 'stylization' which both forms use to great advantage.
The paddle shape is based on a Haida canoe paddle but is rendered with Celtic knotwork to lighten it visually.  Elsewhere, the design relies heavily on Celtic knotwork and shaping for its form.


We took advantage of the surface found on the back of the eagle to include a very personal inscription which had significance to both the recipient of the spoon and the commissioner.  Sometimes a little bit of text makes a nice, poignant surprise when the spoon is turned over!

I'm pretty confident I will never be a Bill Reid, but I am very happy with how this spoon has turned out and how I have managed to unite two very different art styles in this little spoon!





My Tiny Shop

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Bookmark and ShareA few years back I decided to make myself a little shop down at the back corner of the garden.  At the time, the only thing going on there was an overgrown compost pile and an out of control bush that sent branches off in all directions and was in the process of falling over under its own weight.
After clearing an 8 foot by 12 foot space, I decided that my new shop would be a 'tiny shop'.  Having been used to doing my woodwork in spacious, warehouse-sized shops, this was my way of paring everything down to a bare minimum.
All I needed was space for a carving desk, some drawers for tool storage, a rack for my wood billets and an area that could house a small bandsaw and my trusty Delta Q3 scroll saw.  There was no need for table saws, jointers and huge vacuum systems and no space for them even if I wanted to cram them in!
I built the shop structure itself from a pile of old 2X4's I had laying around from previous jobs, and clad it with cheap OSB board.  My one luxury was to try out the Hardiplank cellulose/cement siding, which is great stuff!!



I finished the interior with a mix of painted OSB board and planking which I had salvaged from an old reno on my house.  The salvage planking gave me a nice 'old school' floor and a cute T&G ceiling which give the little place a nice vintage feel.
The cabinetry was largely cobbled together from offcuts of melamine board and cheap plywood rescued from various jobsites.
In all, the shop took me about 3 months of on-and-off work and cost somewhere between a 1000 and 1500 dollars!   Not bad considering it is fully insulated, trimmed and painted.
I could have wired it up and run a line back to my house, but I opted to just run a  heavy duty extension cord whenever I happen to need power...which isn't all that often.

It's a pretty sweet little shop and I hope that over the next few years I can spend more and more time in it!

Here's the view as you come in through the door.  Yes, it is unnaturally clean!!  I'm showing off.

 My little carving bench is pretty modest.  Usually it's covered in all manner of debris and not just this stylish storage case!
A view back toward the door showing the woodrack on the right.  I can store an astonishing amount of wood on its 22 inch deep shelves!!

Here's one last view showing the work bench, the storage drawers and some a little glimpse of my lovely old wood floor!   It's pretty amazing how compact yet efficient this little place is!   Tempted as I am to show you pictures of how it looks when I'm not trying to make an impression, I won't spoil the romance of this tidy, cute little shop with harsh reality!!

CHRISTMAS!!

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Bookmark and ShareWith Christmas just around the corner, what better time to think about a beautiful lovespoon for your sweetie...or even for your spouse!  If you want something really unique and handmade, then I'm your man.   Each and every lovespoon is designed, carved and finished by me, and me alone!  The woods are all locally grown and if not salvage are from windfalls.  If you want to support a small business, then again, I'm your man.
If you'd rather some plastic, wireless, soulless crap from China, then you've stumbled across the wrong page.


Every one of these spoons is currently available (but with any luck they'll sell quick, so don't hang around if you want one!) and I do have a few others that I haven't photographed yet.  As I do most of my carving to custom order, I don't keep a catalogue of designs.  Whatever pops out of my head is what will wind up on here!  Prices for the above spoons vary from about 75 dollars to 450 with all points  between.  If one strikes your fancy, drop me a line and I'll let you know more.

Big thanks to everyone who has supported me over the years!!!!


Another year!

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Another year has shot by before I even realized it.  I haven't done any blog posting, but have kept myself busy researching and writing a number of articles on European 'lovespoon' carving for the excellent carver's magazine, Wood Carving.  It was a LOT of fun finding out about the various woodcarving cultures that were prevalent throughout the continent and the UK during the period of approximately 1625 to 1914.  In fact, it came as something of an eye-opener for me to learn that so much romantic spooncarving went on in places other than Wales.

One thing I did take away from it all was that despite being a complete failure as a businessman and 'established artist', I am doing the spoon thing completely right!  I have avoided the urge to mass produce for lower costs and quicker turnaround.  I still make them all one at a time, entirely by hand, using the most basic of tools in my own little hovel of a shop.  Almost all of my spoons are made to commission order and are deeply personal to their recipients.  Even the spoons I make 'on spec' are explorations and experiments in design and are created to be meaningful interpretations of lovespoon tradition.

I'll never be picked up by any galleries and no 'serious' arty farty types will pay much attention to what I do, but that's A-OK with me.  My customers love what I make for them and that is good enough for me!!  Although I sometimes I feel like I am watching the death throes of romantic carving and can't help but be depressed that there isn't more appreciation for handwork and the individuality of fine craft, it only takes the exuberance of one ecstatic client to convince me that lovespoon carving is good and the right thing for me to do with my life.

So a big thank you to everyone who has supported me along this little lovespoon journey!  I hope you have had an excellent year in 2015 and I look forward to more experiments, disasters, and successes in 2016!





A New Year and New Ideas

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Bookmark and ShareA new year has arrived and it has only taken a couple of weeks for all my resolutions and plans to go out the window!!
I had intended unveiling a new webpage....which I haven't even begun designing yet.... and had hoped to be well underway on an exciting line of Scandinavian style spoons for my Nordic clientele.
Alas, the best laid plans and all that!!

I still plan to get all that done, but as with so many things, I don't know when!

In the meantime, I am busy writing a couple of articles for the excellent UK magazine Wood Carving. It is always exciting to be given the opportunity to pen an article, but I'm always very nervous worrying that I will be able to convey the information I want to describe in a way that is lively and engaging.  Ultimately, the goal is to pass along some of my hard-won experience and not to bore people to death.  Everything I know came at a price...often a very hard price...so being able to help others find the smooth path and avoid the pitfalls is a very satisfying thing!!

It is my hope that I can continue to push the boundaries of love spoon design while retaining tight contact with the venerable traditions of this rich craft!  Sometimes it frustrates me that the world of collectors and arty types pays such little attention to what I and other love spoon carvers are creating, but I take great pleasure from the joy my spoons elicit from those who receive them!

As I do every year, I will bemoan the state of my finances at tax time, but I can never deny that the happiness my spoons bring to my clients is at least some compensation!

With luck, I shall receive some commissions that push both my imagination and my technical abilities and with even greater luck, I shall be able to respond with more lovely spoons!

As always, my best wishes and heart felt thanks to everyone who has supported me over the years and to those who will come along in the future!

Here's to 2016!!

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Bookmark and ShareNorwegian Wedding Spoons



A while back, I was fortunate to receive a lovely set of antique Norwegian wedding spoons from my friend the renowned spoon collector Norman Stevens.  I was immediately fascinated by them and set to work making a copy.  They turned out to be a lot tougher to make than I had thought and it took several attempts, much cursing and stomping around and a fair pile of wood before I mastered the trickier of the skills needed to carve one of these beauties.

Once I felt that my work was decent enough to show on my website, I put up a photo of a nice little set and was astounded when they sold almost before I'd had chance to close the computer!  That encouraged me to make another set which also sold quite quickly and with that, the die was cast.  Since then, the word seems to have gone out, especially among the Norwegian expat and descendant community in North America and I have become something of a 'go to' guy for Norwegians looking to reconnect with an aspect of their wedding tradition.

As a Welshman struggling to keep the lovespoon tradition relevant in our modern era, it has been both heartwarming AND frustrating.  Heartwarming because the Norwegians seem to treat their traditions with much more interest and respect than many of my fellow Welshmen so it is nice to see something which was dying out being welcomed back again.  Frustrating, because as a non-Norwegian who can't speak the language, it means I am dependent on the generosity and kindness of Norwegian speakers to fill me in on the details of this lovely tradition.  I have been very fortunate to have received LOTS of helpful information from the Norsk Folkemuseum in Oslo and from the Vesterheim Museum in the United States.  Both have helped me access pictures of original spoons and have filled in some of the blanks around the cultural practices involved with Norwegian weddings and wedding spoons.


From what I have been able to gather, the spoons were brought out on the second or third day of the marriage 'ceremony', during which time they were used by the wedding couple to symbolically share a first meal as man and wife.  It was a more solemn occasion as a small parade of relatives, accompanied by a fiddler, would deliver a bowl of porridge to the seated couple.  The couple would then use a bowl each to eat at the same time, the chain joining them both as they ate and as a pair.  The ceremony also saw the young woman's social status be elevated from 'girl' to 'housewife'.  Maybe not something to look forward to today, but back then, a significant change for the woman.


The spoons are a challenge to make.  The chain link is all carved from one piece, so it is time consuming and fiddly work.  Contrary to the internet legend, I have yet to discover an antique set that was carved handles and chain from a single piece of wood.  That would be a MAMMOTH undertaking and one which you'd have to be both brave and very, very lacking for things other things to do with your time.  Every example I have seen has the handles and chain carved separately and then carefully joined to make the joint as invisible as possible.  Unless you are prepared to pay several thousand dollars for a spoon that would otherwise cost 300, don't make a big deal out of it all being carved from a single piece.



There is a significant amount of work goes into each chain and this has an effect on the final price of the spoons.  A simple set with an unadorned chain (as in the first of these two pictures) can sell for about 250 USD.  When the chain gets the X treatment, the spoons go up to about 300.  If you get fancy with adding balls in cages etc., the sky is the limit.


The spoon bowls would often be decorated with delicate Kolrosing.  In this technique, a finely etched line is filled with coal dust or coffee fines to bring up the nice detailing.  I use a penetrating oil on mine to give a soft brown line and to avoid the hassles of dust working itself into places it is not wanted.  Some of the Kolrosing on historical examples is a work of art in its own right, but many have a simple floral motif such as the one seen above.


In our more modern times, it is possible to 'play' with tradition a bit.  To this end, it is possible to make traditional wedding spoons which perhaps aren't so traditional.  In this example, a very traditional Norwegian design forms the top handle and a traditional Swedish design the bottom handle.  Made for a Norwegian/Swedish (with a hint of Irish in the mix) wedding, the spoon retains a very tradition feel but becomes more relevant for both bride and groom.


Taking things a step further, the couple's passions become the focus of the design.  She is a marine biologist and he a keen astronomer and they are represented by whimsical designs based around those themes.   The chain links are more sculptural and 'modern' in form to keep with the contemporary feeling of the spoons.

Finally, a very beautiful Welsh take on the Norwegian tradition has a very masculine Welsh dragon shielding an initialled love heart, while the other handle is a very feminine bouquet of lily-of-the-valley.  A highly decorated chain joins the two halves.

Although many of the traditions have changed and the meal ceremony probably never happens any more, the spoons are commonly used for the matrimonial couple to enjoy that first piece of wedding cake together.  (although the spoons are delicate, so I don't recommend any cake fights!)

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Bookmark and ShareHappy St. Dwynwen's Day!  The big day for Welsh lovers everywhere!  Here's a great poster my lovely friends Gaabi and Ceri at Americymru made for me!  THIS is what happens when you forget to give your sweetie a lovespoon!!!

WEDDING SEASON

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WEDDING SEASON!!


Bookmark and ShareWedding season has begun and if you are hoping to have a lovely set of Norwegian style wedding spoons to help you enjoy your first morsel of cake as a couple, then I am your man!  I carve them at a range of price points beginning at 250 USD for a basic set up to 350+ for one with all the 'bells and whistles' and custom detailing.  They are all entirely hand carved by me alone.  I use NO computer controlled cutters or lasers and follow tradition as closely as I possibly can.  They are as close to authentic as I can make them!!
Norwegian wedding spoons require a great deal of skill, time, effort and patience to make, so I make no apologies for the price.  They are not cheap, but they are also a bargain for a beautiful love token that will give you great memories your entire lifetime and beyond!!
If you are looking for a set to make your big day perfect, please contact me at lovespoons@shaw.ca  


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Celtic knot work humble beginnings!












Many years back, when I first got into serious love spoon carving, I was inspired by the wonderful Welsh love spoon carver Mike Davies to incorporate some Celtic design into my work. I discovered a fabulous softcover book called, "Celtic Art: The Methods of Construction" by George Bain. This book supplied me verbatim with the first designs I carved. At first I had no idea how to make my own designs, so copied what was in front of me. Gradually, I modified and altered and eventually made my own patterns. It was both a supremely frustrating and highly enjoyable adventure!! This little Celtic bird (copied almost directly from a tiny sketch in Bain's book) became the inspiration for a little Celtic Dragon...I'll take no real credit for the dragon as it is pretty much a direct copy of the bird, but doing things like this helped me to learn about knot work and Celtic zoomorphic form and after many false starts, allowed me to eventually undertake designs of my own. The little dragon has become a popular design and I often see copies and variations of it drift by on the internet.


I wouldn't classify these as lovespoons per se, but the eternal (closed) knot structure and the heart shaped bowl lends a certain level of romance to what otherwise I would likely label a Celtic spoon.


Humble beginnings, but it was the copying and dissecting that let me start figuring out how Celtic knots work best!!

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Since the 1960's, 'traditional' Welsh lovespoons have evolved a certain commercial style. Easy to mass produce but lacking in imagination and soul, they are the the double-edged sword of the spoon world. They are cheap enough that people will buy them and sort of keep a traditional token alive, but they are so lacking in any of the spirit and passion of an actual traditional spoon that they water down the craft and give people a real false impression of what a love spoon can be. Over the last year or two, I've started taking the old tradition a bit more seriously. Now, when asked to carve a 'traditional' spoon, my designs more accurately reflect what the old spoons actually looked like and more important, how they 'felt'. This one is a relatively simple design (as many were) but the addition of little time consuming details such as the bordering give it the style and feeling missing in commercial souvenir spoons. That the lovely couple who received it have the same initials as my wife and I, is a fun little bonus.

What a difference a week makes!

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Last Saturday I was pretty shocked when the following notice appeared on my Facebook feed.  Apparently, a TV cook named Brian Turner had thrown a Welsh lovespoon into the fire on James Martin's Saturday Morning Show on ITV Britain.  I was pretty appalled, so after making sure the story was true, contacted ITV to voice my displeasure.


In fairness to to the good folks at ITV, they were quick to reply.  Unfortunately, their view of it all was that it was just match day 'jokey' humour (England were playing Wales that day in rugby) and nothing to be taken too seriously.  Nice for them, but that didn't make his actions any less disturbing to someone who is both Welsh AND a lovespoon carver.  Watching a cultural icon being treated with such cavalier disrespect was pretty disheartening and demoralizing.  I've spent over half my adult life making lovespoons and working my ass off to promote them to a world-wide audience.  They are beautiful and wonderful things and deserve better treatment than to be used as props for cheap laughs.  

The more I stewed on it all, the angrier I got.  

Eventually though, I realized that there was a way to ride on the coat-tails of cook Turner's TV stupidity and use it to a positive end.


I keep a box of rejected spoons underneath my bench.  These are spoons which have a flaw that prevents them from being good enough to leave the David Western Lovespoon Studio.  It might be a flaw in the wood, a design problem or a technical glitch...whatever the reason, I can never sell the spoon to a client without endangering my good name.  The spoons wind up in the box and are destined to stay there until the day I day and they are consigned to a dumpster somewhere.

It occurred to me that I could stage my own spoon burning, but this time, instead of just doing it for a cheap laugh, I would use the occasion to raise money for animal welfare shelters and rescue societies.  So I posted my idea to Facebook with the goal of raising 250 UK pounds worth of donations.  I didn't care what societies or shelters received the money (or where they were located) just as long as people sent some money out!   When the donations hit 250, I would build a pyre and drop a match, sending the spoons to a special Valhalla reserved for beautiful lovespoons!!


To my very great surprise, the wonderfully compassionate and generous followers of my pages came through with gusto.  The 250 target was quickly passed and probably reached over 500 within a day.  I confess that I didn't foresee it happening that quickly, but I was pretty damned excited that it did!!

A touching thing which happened after my announcement that I would burn the spoons was a number of people writing to urge me to auction them instead.  As mentioned earlier, the spoons would never be sold, so I certainly would never entertain the idea of auctioning them in their condition.  I do make the occasional spoon for charitable donation, but these ones could never fit that bill.

Instead, a pyre was built, the spoons carefully placed on top and a match struck!!!!

The combination of lots of shredded paper and some very dry spoons meant things happened pretty quickly!!  I was barely able to snap these pics before the whole thing went up like a bomb!!


I did experience a bit of guilt and some remorse at condemning them to this fiery fate, but I also felt exhilaration that these spoons had raised so much money so quickly! Now, they were now being returned to ash which will be used to fertilize my garden and start new growth.

The whole event only took a few minutes, but what beautiful minutes they were!!  

So despite my anger and disappointment with the silliness at ITV, some good came of it all and some animals will enjoy the benefits!  

In future though, I would strongly advise Mr. Turner and the other cooks over at the James Martin Saturday Morning Show to stick to their soufflés and leave anything to do with lovespoons to the professionals!!

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Bookmark and Share                     Wedding Season is Almost Here!!


With wedding season almost upon us, now is the time to consider this super romantic double end lovespoon for the happy couple.  What better way to share that first ceremonial bite of wedding cake?  Forget the silly cake fights or serving it up on a paper plate with plastic forks...THIS has style and panache!!  The double end spoon has a long tradition and I have found examples throughout Europe.



Whether it be a super simple Swedish style double with a short handle an no ornamentation, or a more complex 'joke spoon' with opposing bowls designed to make the cake ceremony a bit more of a challenge, these spoons exude romance!  They are beautiful and elegant.


I'm delighted to be making these wonderful spoons and welcome your enquiries if you would like to commission one for a special couple!!



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Bookmark and ShareWEDDING SEASON!!


It's wedding season and lots of couple's with Norwegian/Scandinavian ancestry are contacting me to provide them with the beautiful traditional wedding spoons once used by newlywed Norwegians to consume a first meal together.  Tradition has it that the spoons were used by both partners of the couple to simultaneously eat a meal of porridge together.  This act would symbolically link them as a couple and would see the young woman's status be raised from 'girl' to 'housewife'.  Perhaps not the most exciting thing that could happen to a young lady in today's world, but a significant raising of social standing back then!  The spoons are noted for their identical, ornate panels which are linked by a course of decorated chain-link.  It is said that traditionally, the spoons were carved from a single piece of wood...a feat that would be most impressive in the amount of time consumed and material wasted.  I have been fortunate to access a half dozen or so sets from various time periods and carved at a variety of skill levels.  All have shown me that the chain was indeed carved from a single piece, but that the chains were attached to the handles with clever joinery.  As most of the traditional spoons were carved professionally during the long winter and then were sold on in the spring , it is likely that extra time and effort would have been willingly undertaken unless a good payout was expected.  To me it seems far more likely that joining them was the most common method of construction.
For me, joining the chain to the handles means the difference between being able to charge a couple of hundred dollars versus closer to a thousand for a single piece.  
I do stay as close to tradition as possible when I am making an 'authentic' set.  The handles are all decorated with lovely fret-work and chip carved detail and they all have either the traditional 'glibber' face found at the top centre or a carved initial.  The sides of the crown are decorated with little animals which are the source of some disagreement among experts.  They may be dogs/foxes/wolves or they might be horses; they may even be sheep or cattle.  Although they are all very similar, there are enough stylistic differences to make them a difficult thing to categorize!
The handles are further embellished with doming and swan-necked stems.  The more seriously the necks are cranked, the more time consuming the spoon becomes to make.  The spoons also get visually more 'active' the steeper the pitch on the neck/handle area.  Doming the face of the handle in BOTH directions also adds a LOT of work, but it makes the spoon even more dynamic!
Traditionally, the spoons also seemed to have been made in a variety of sizes.  While they never got excessively large (and were ALWAYS of a suitable size to eat with) smaller sizes were no uncommon.  Indeed, many couples like the delicacy of the small ones and find them easier to use than the normal sized versions.
 The chains can be made in a variety of ways, but the most common are those with these beautiful X crossed links.  Making the chain is time consuming and challenging, no matter how you slice it!  They are easy to break and difficult to keep track of, but the results are always worth the efforts!  The Norwegian style of link is stylish and elegant, its tactile in the hand and pleasant to look at.  Its also a very identifiable feature of the Norwegian wedding spoon tradition!

Although I try to keep one or two sets on hand for emergencies, it does usually take around 6 weeks to complete and ship a custom order door to door.  If you are thinking about a set of these for a wedding, please do try to give me as much advance warning as possible to avoid disappointment.  These spoons are entirely made by hand...one at a time...by me and me alone! 

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Over the years, I have been enormously fortunate to enjoy the enthusiastic support of a wonderful woodcarving magazine.  Funnily enough, it is called Wood Carving Magazine, which is both easy to remember and gets straight to the point!  I've published a number of articles in their pages ranging from design oriented articles like the one above, to examinations of particular lovespoon styles, to 'how to' exercises.

It can be difficult to generate interest in the carving community when you mention you are a lovespoon carver.  I'm not sure if the spectre of mass produced souvenir tat clouds people's judgement or if the art of lovespoon carving just simply isn't as popular as I imagine it to be...whatever the case, it can be hard to find magazines willing to take lovespoon articles on board.

So it has been a great pleasure to work with Wood Carving over the last couple of years to produce a wide range of articles on a variety of lovespoon topics.  If you are at all interested in lovespoons and the lovespoon tradition, I suggest digging into their back copies and seeing what you've been missing!



I am passionate about lovespoons and enjoy any opportunity to talk them up, but I have to tell you, seeing my ideas, thoughts and creations leap off a magazine page is REALLY exciting stuff!!  To know that other carvers are running with my suggestions and creating works of their own is also extremely gratifying!


I can't overstate the importance of support from publications like Wood Carving.  Not only does it validate what I do, it also inspires me to think of other ways I can expand the lovespoon tradition and reach more people.  Publications like this enable thousands of interested readers to be exposed to traditional and very non-traditional work in a way that will hopefully broaden their knowledge AND their interest.  That can only be good for lovespoon carving!!





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NORWEGIAN WEDDING SPOONS FOR SALE!!

With wedding season once again rapidly approaching, its time to get your orders in if you are hoping to have a set of these beauties for your big day!  I'm one of the few carvers who still makes these wonderful spoons (completely by hand) following the time honoured designs.  

I offer EXCEPTIONAL value and immaculate craftsmanship...my wedding spoons are second to none...and I can carve them at a variety of price points to suit just about any budget.

Spoons shown from left to right at 250 USD, 300 USD and 350 USD price levels.

I can carve them with or without initials, the traditional 'glibber' faces and kolrosing.  I can also carve them from a variety of beautiful timbers including birch and big leaf maple.  Whatever style and whatever timber, they will be exquisite!!

Contact me at:  lovespoons@shaw.ca today to order your set!!



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