Although I had already dressed the nodes while the culm was whole, more accurate attention can be given to each one as part of a thin strip.


I used my trusty 8" mill bastard file to flatten the nodes. This was a bit of an experiment for me. In the past I have used heat and pressure from a vice to squish the enamel side of the node flat. This method has given me fits, and I suspect that in an effort to preserve power fibers I am compromising the structual integrity of the node by applying so much pressure. So for these rods I am carefully addressing each node with the file instead of heat and pressure.


After dressing each node I straightened every strip using heat from a heat gun in preparation for another experimental process: the beveller.
Here's a preview of things to come


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