Hey folks,
I have a juniper that I will be doing some work on and there is a heavy lower branch that I was going to remove but am now considering jinning. I have never attempted to Jin a branch before and was hoping someone would be able to tell me what is involved or perhaps provide a bit of a "how to"
Cheers,
Kez
Creating jins
- alpineart
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Re: Creating jins
Hi kez , making a jin or shari look natural is not as easy as it sounds . I would do a few practice runs on a similar type of plant ie juniper pine or any softwood type material using a branch and cutting it back, peeling the layers of fiber or carving with any type of tool .
When doing a branch cut around the branch at the trunk with a concave cutter or branch cutter so you dont rip the bark on the trunk , then peel the bark from the trunk outwards this will prevent any tearing if not completely cut down to the wood in any area . Cut the branch stub 1/3 of the way through all around and snap it off . This will give you a jaggered end to start with .Using your jinning pliers squeeze/pinch the cut end and grab a section of material and roll it back , small pieces at a time is better than 1 big piece .
If you roll it back to the trunk and it is too thick trim it off and take another smaller bite with the pliers . If you dont have jinning pliers normal pliers or multi grips work just as well the just dont roll like the purpose jin pliers , long nose pliers are just as good as the real deal . If you don't have any pliers the stub can be carved with a stanley knife or similar starting at the trunk and working forward detail cerving can be done once the stub has been peeled or carved .
Practice on another piece of material is worth the effort . Hope this helps .
Cheers Alpineart
When doing a branch cut around the branch at the trunk with a concave cutter or branch cutter so you dont rip the bark on the trunk , then peel the bark from the trunk outwards this will prevent any tearing if not completely cut down to the wood in any area . Cut the branch stub 1/3 of the way through all around and snap it off . This will give you a jaggered end to start with .Using your jinning pliers squeeze/pinch the cut end and grab a section of material and roll it back , small pieces at a time is better than 1 big piece .
If you roll it back to the trunk and it is too thick trim it off and take another smaller bite with the pliers . If you dont have jinning pliers normal pliers or multi grips work just as well the just dont roll like the purpose jin pliers , long nose pliers are just as good as the real deal . If you don't have any pliers the stub can be carved with a stanley knife or similar starting at the trunk and working forward detail cerving can be done once the stub has been peeled or carved .
Practice on another piece of material is worth the effort . Hope this helps .
Cheers Alpineart
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Re: Creating jins
thanks mate,
That is exactly what I needed. Will find some material to practice on before giving it a go on the stock
Cheers,
Kez
That is exactly what I needed. Will find some material to practice on before giving it a go on the stock
Cheers,
Kez
- Jason
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Re: Creating jins
Great explanation! Going to copy that down right nowalpineart wrote:Hi kez , making a jin or shari look natural is not as easy as it sounds . I would do a few practice runs on a similar type of plant ie juniper pine or any softwood type material using a branch and cutting it back, peeling the layers of fiber or carving with any type of tool .
When doing a branch, cut around the branch at the trunk with a concave cutter or branch cutter so you dont rip the bark on the trunk , then peel the bark from the trunk outwards, this will prevent any tearing if not completely cut down to the wood in any area . Cut the branch stub 1/3 of the way through all around and snap it off . This will give you a jaggered end to start with .Using your jinning pliers squeeze/pinch the cut end and grab a section of material and roll it back , small pieces at a time is better than 1 big piece .
If you roll it back to the trunk and it is too thick trim it off and take another smaller bite with the pliers . If you dont have jinning pliers normal pliers or multi grips work just as well the just dont roll like the purpose jin pliers , long nose pliers are just as good as the real deal . If you don't have any pliers the stub can be carved with a stanley knife or similar starting at the trunk and working forward detail cerving can be done once the stub has been peeled or carved .
Practice on another piece of material is worth the effort . Hope this helps .
Cheers Alpineart

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