These can be made with an electric drill using a rotary rasp attachment, which slowly hollows out the inside of antler butts. The bony domes on can be smoothed with the rasp... then holes were drilled for seasonings to sift through. Cork stoppers plug the bottoms and white enamel paint adds identifying letters.
Pencil holders can be carved from a piece of elk antler (a large caribou or moose horn would also serve this purpose). To make one, use a hacksaw to sever a section of the main beam, and hollow out the softer center with a rotary rasp. Glue a piece of felt on the holder's underside to prevent it from marring the desk top.
To make the band, simply saw thin chips from an antler... drill four 1/8-inch holes to form a square in each one... pull two strips of leather boot-lacing through the holes and crisscross them over each chip's face . . . and knot the double string of evenly spaced "buttons" into a circle, leaving "tassels" a couple of inches long. Start the bolo tie by cutting the beam of an elk antler diagonally to form an oval . . . again, make four 1/8-inch holes in the chip's face . . . then drill two more holes, running from the top to the bottom, for the tie to slide through. Make the "X" across the chip from a short strip of leather lacing, trimming any excess flush with the back side. Now, file the edges smooth, and do the same for the surfaces of two antler tips -- which will dangle from the tie's ends -- before drilling them with a single hole each. Thread the slide onto an appropriate length of lacing, add the tips, knot each end of the leather thong and you're done.
A gun rack can be constructed of two deer antler forks, which are secured to the wall with nails or wood screws. This same arrangement can also make a good coat and hat tree, provided you blunt the horn tips so that they won't pierce holes in your clothing.
These can really dress up a tabletop. They're made by cutting two 4-by-7-by-7-inch triangles (which will slide under the books) from metal that's somewhat thicker than a cookie sheet. After rounding the points and smoothing the sharp edges of each one, bend up an inch of the short side at a right angle. Now, cut two more-or-less matching antler forks, set them on the sheets against the bent sections, and bore 1/8-inch-diameter holes through the upright metal and well into each fork's base. Next, spray-paint the metal pieces black and let them dry...then use metal screws to attach the horns to the bases.
This can be made by turning a deer rack upside down and drilling one or more 3/4-inch (or candle-sized) holes partway through the antler at strategic points.
These types of chairs require plenty of antler material, a few well placed bolts, and more than the average person's share of perseverance and ingenuity.
These will add a rustic touch to doors, cabinets, drawers, windows, or -- for that matter -- almost any place around the house where knobs or pulls are needed.
These can be hot-selling items. To make one, cut a cross section of the diameter you want, drill a pilot hole in its center, then hollow it out and smooth all the edges with a rotary rasp. (Be sure not to use much force, though, or the ring may split.)
These may be a bit beyond the skill of some folks, but can be beautiful pieces of artwork if done well.
This can be fashioned by simply inserting a blade securely into an antler tip. I once saw a paper cutter whose handle and blade were shaped from a single piece of elk horn, but that would require so much patience and skill that I believe I'd choose a simpler project, at least for openers!