A mini-demonstration of a simulated-antique hooded merganser, made for the “Doubtful Antiques” category at the PDFA show in Sacramento.
I browsed my library of hooded merganser photos and finally found a picture of the bird I wanted to base my pattern on. I also drew an alternate head shape based on a different photograph. The most important thing to me for this bird was to capture the head shape and overall attitude of the bird.
This is really meant to be a competition and display bird, so I wanted the bill extra tough in case it's banged up or dropped. After cutting the side profile of the head, I cut a finger joint into a piece of hard maple, drilled a hole for a brass rod, and epoxied the pieces together before bringing the head to final shape.
Now complete with the carving — the maple insert has blended in nicely with the cedar head.
To raise the grain, I take a propane torch and burn the entire decoy. As the char builds up, I scrub it off with a scotch-brite pad and steel wool. Since the wood and sap rings burn at different rates, it develops a textured, aged appearance — perfect for a piece of white cedar with a radial crack that wasn't suited for a working or competition bird.
Here I've base-coated the bird with Ronan Japan Colors — you can see the raised grain of the wood showing through.
After base-coating with Grumbacher Pre-Tested Oils, I distress the bird by rubbing the paint with steel wool and scotch-brite pads to remove paint from the high spots, focusing on the head, bill, and tail — areas that would normally take extra abuse. I also attached a brass ring with a small leather loop as an anchor attachment. There's always a moment of hesitation between painting and distressing — it feels odd to finish a perfectly good bird and then start throwing it at the ground.