I wonder, if you have a few minutes, if anyone could give me a couple of bits of advice. I have two questions I have been wondering about.
1. What tips do you you have for cutting thin wood? I tried to make the pattern from this website, the portrait of a horse, on 1/8" oak plywood. I stack cut it with a second 1/8" blank behind it for strength, taped the fragile pieces in as I went for extra support, put my saw on a slow speed with a #1 blade, and still found it breaking on me! The saw blade, as it cut up and down on the wood, caused the wood to move slightly, which put pressure on the fragile veins of wood, and they snapped. I stayed "on the lines," felt like I was cutting carefully, but -- especially around the face -- found things breaking on me! I was able to salvage the piece -- fortunately, the person I made it for won't ever see the pattern and won't know what was missing -- but I have really struggled with this and don't know what to do. I have a porter cable scroll saw, bolted to a workbench, and it is the scroll saw rated best of the lower price models in the Woodworking and Crafts Scroll Saw magazine. Are there any other tips or things I should do? It makes me feel so frustrated when something I do breaks, after I have cut it on the lines perfectly!!
2. I just cut the "floral cross" pattern on this website. It worked out perfectly. I used 1/4" plywood oak for the backer and the same for the "design piece." I want the front to be darker, so I plan on staining it. I realize that it is going to take a long time -- I have to stain the edges (inside and out) of the "design piece," which I will do with a q-tip or something. I don't have a planer, and I am wondering if there is a way for me to go about getting thinner dark wood, so I wouldn't have to stain it, that is also reasonably priced. Do they have dark walnut plywood, 1/4" or 1/8" thick? Would a wood shop have what I need? Or do you have any other suggestions?