Dan began doing marquetry as a hobby well before he knew it had a name. In time, he realized he could make money from this specialized craft. I have worked a few Shows with Dan and his technique is as old as marquetry itself. He first lays the background which will cover the entire piece using a vacuum press (usually using 1/4 plywood). While this is drying he begins to knife-cut the individual foreground pieces. These are then positioned on the foreground when it is taken out of the press and used as a template for tracing the desired shape. After this the background-veneer is removed using a 1/4" chisel and the foreground piece glued into place. In addition to this he adds details like names and facts using ink in a Calligraphic style.
Over time Dan has refined his technique through trial and error. I do not think there is a glue, finish, dye or chemical he has not tried. Below is his map of the United States and a detail from one of Africa.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj2t8OrHgOWKbby78htSLrf8Ka-JTTbcazFrjghPcqgZzTtQmXBuKV6A-JjkQI4y5T_7MQZwEvZ9y40F2U6vgQNz7jvt8ilmIDO3U9Rry0znvVz4tsB-tCGghrwmsLRGCEKZCgNdbp0wt-i/s280/map.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiPku7euF_lKJgSr4puRqzQNFoITpjn12sTyJXiFqTVRlMFVZ8jsNLqP5OiTh-X-7ymoHAn-cac3gxjOOgo8vvQb_sKWC4wuJvRLCU0eepkOXnXCKDikRsdw6GggKy4EGfoH-lcFD4-Ww9j/s280/detail.jpg)