"You have to wait for the sun to get up high enough, because if the sun is too low you just make a messy job," Shewchuk said. "You want to get the sun up nice and high so you get the fine lines in."
The whole process of creating his most recent McDavid portrait surpassed 70 hours, and the tracing is the lengthiest part of the process. But a rainy or overcast day can throw a monkey wrench into his work, and he can't do much during the unforgiving Alberta winters.
"It's a very long, long process," Shewchuk said. "It's all burnt with a magnifying glass and the sun. I can only do it when it is warm outside and the sun is out."
Shewchuk was injured playing hockey as a 16-year-old, where he was paralyzed and also lost significant hand function. But he began making wood artwork in his early 20s, and he's since produced pictures for family members and friends, including a Humboldt Broncos logo that he donated to the junior hockey team after their tragic bus crash in May.