GOUGE MODIFICATION - PINCHING
There are three popular modifications made to carving gouges:
Pinching, reversing, and miniaturization. On this page I will
discuss pinching.
Pinching is a modification intended to allow a gouge to make a narrower
cut, and hence carve smaller details. The idea is simple enough;
this V is too big, so let's squeeze it to make it narrower. This
makes sense until you realize that the way you control the width of a
cut with a gouge is to control the depth; a Staedtler 1V or 2V,
unmodified, will make a cut so small that you wonder why anyone would
need to make cuts any smaller. In fact, they'll make cuts so
small that they readily fill up with ink when stamping and don't appear
in the image anyway. The whole pinching idea originally arose
from the use of Speedball #1 gouges which, due to a slightly rounded
bottom of the V, won't cut an especially small groove without popping
out of the rubber altogether and skipping across the surface of the
rubber.
If the reason you have arrived at this page is because you've been
carving with an unmodified Speedball gouge and want to be able to carve
smaller details, take this bit of advice: Buy a Staedtler 1V and
just forget about the whole pinching idea.
That said, a pinched gouge actually is handy for some tasks. For
one thing, it's better than a regular gouge at making grooves that are
all exactly the same width. Once pinched, the sides of the V are
more nearly parallel, so variations in the depth of the cut don't vary
the width by much. I personally use a pinched gouge to "sign" my
stamps, cutting the letters "KIRBERT" right into the rubber. The
pinched gouge leaves very visible lettering while a regular gouge
leaves grooves that are too shallow to be seen as clearly.
Unlike the other modifications described in these pages, pinching does
not primarily involve grinding a tip to a different shape.
Rather, it involves bending a
tip to a different shape! Both Speedball and Staedtler nibs are
made of hard steel alloy, which means they don't like to be bent.
In order to bend a nib successfully, it needs to be hot -- hot enough
to render the steel malleable. That's really hot; it means the
nib needs to be glowing red.
Hence another reason this modification is associated with Speedball
nibs more than Staedtlers. Staedtler gouges come with handles,
and the nibs are theoretically not removable from those handles (some
have actually succeeded in removing them, but most carvers don't even
try for fear of damaging their prized gouges). Since the handles
are plastic, getting the tip cherry read hot is likely to cause
melting. It is possible to do it by heating the very tip very
quickly, doing the pinching, and then dunking the tip in cool water
before the heat has a chance to make it to the handle, but that's not a
job for the faint of heart. Besides, Staedtler gouges carve so
well without being pinched that most owners wouldn't even consider this
mod.
Speedball gouges are another story. They are readily removed from
their handles, so you can easily hold one with a pair of tongs or
pliers or hemostats or whatnot while heating it.
The task of pinching a nib is simple enough: Holding the base of
the nib with pliers or something, get the tip cherry red hot --
possibly on a stove set on "High" -- and then, using another pair of
pliers, squeeze the tip. You need to squeeze very quickly, as the
tip is tiny and will cool down in a matter of seconds once removed from
the heat. It will also cool down very quickly once it comes in
contact with a cold pair of pliers, but fortunately this cooling is
mostly out at the sides of the tip and you're hoping most of the
bending happens down in the V. Once bent, dunk the nib in cold
water; letting it just air-cool may "temper" the steel if you got it
hot enough, making it a bit softer. In fact, the best course of
action is to reheat the tip red hot and then directly dunk it; this
will both relieve any residual stresses in the steel resulting from the
bending and it will ensure full hardness.
The whole job is not really all that difficult, but the results are
inconsistent. If you don't get the nib hot enough or let it cool
down too much before pinching it, the result is that the nib will crack
right along the bottom of the V. Sometimes it's hard to notice --
until you try carving with it. If it's cracked, just take it off
the handle and throw it away, it is well and truly ruined.
Fortunately, Speedball nibs are cheap, just grab another one and try
again!
Ideally, you'd like all the bending to occur right at the very bottom
of the V. That way the bend would get "crisper", which would
result in a real improvement in its capacity for cutting very fine
grooves, and it would also leave the sides of the V straight, which
keeps it relatively simple to resharpen. Unfortunately, it's more
likely that the bending will occur in both the bottom crease of the V
and in the lower portions of the sides of the V, resulting in a
slightly bowed V. If these results are not entirely to your
liking, you might just try grabbing yet another Speedball nib and
trying again, perhaps trying to get it hotter yet before pinching this
time.
There's also the question of how far to pinch it. Pinching it to
the point where the two sides are flat against each other would be
bad. Some have suggested positioning an X-Acto blade in between
while pinching to make sure it doesn't go that far, but getting and
holding that thing in position and doing the pinching without the nib
cooling off too much in the meantime may be a bit much, even for two
people working together.
Even a pinched nib will need sharpening now and then, which means the
same process described on the sharpening page. That means you're
going to need to fit a ceramic knife down the middle of that V.
Ceramic knives tend to be kinda thick -- they are ceramic, so making
them thin would invite snappage -- so you might want to take this into
consideration. If the sides of the V get bent a bit, the ceramic
knife won't fit flush against them, but believe it or not you can still
hone this curved inside surface by sliding the edge of the ceramic
knife up and down the side. This works reasonably well. You
will also have to be fiddling a bit when honing the outside, of course,
rolling the nib a bit to hone the curved surface.
Among carvers, a pinched nib is commonly referred to as a "#0" or a
"#0.5".