January 1, 20179 yr Popular Post this is a vanity was for the same customer as the credenza... it had a matching tri-fold mirrored medicine cabinet and lighted valence to match but the customer painted them ivory... (they got edited out) I believe one set of hinges was jammed back (by customer) some how leaving the gap you see in the doors... this wood I spalted...
January 1, 20179 yr 4 hours ago, Stick486 said: it had a matching tri-fold mirrored medicine cabinet and lighted valence to match but the customer painted them ivory... (they got edited out) That should be a capital offense! Nice work. John
January 2, 20179 yr Author 26 minutes ago, Ron Altier said: How do you spalt wood? Spalt Your OwnA Recipe for Creating Spalted Wood Since the question of spalting comes up time and again, I will share a description of what I use when the natural ingredients aren't available. A "brew" of some kind is required when the conditions for natural spalting do not exist. There are a lot of ways to induce spalting. Like everything else in woodturning, nothing is "tried and true". You will have to experiment. Some wood spalts. Some wood just rots. Others (cherry and walnut) don't do much of anything. This spalting brew has everything necessary for almost anything to grow in any wood that wants to spalt. Use it on maple, birch, beech, sweetgum, oak, alder, holly, pecan and just any hard wood you wish. 1-qt water 2-scoops Miracle grow 2-cans beer, drink one and put th other in the spalting brew. 1-qt horse manure, doesn't have to be fresh, but the ammonia odor should still be present when it gets wet. 1-qt dried oak leaves There is nothing sacred about any of the ingredients as long as we have the nitrogen, organics, ammonia, sugar, malt extracts, tannins, and leaf molds - everything necessary for all kinds of things to grow in the wood. The only additional ingredient is heat. You can use packaged steer manure from the garden store and add a half cup of household ammonia. Don't use the sudsing type because it contains detergents which will kill the growth. All leaves contain some amount of tannins, oak leaves contain more than others. Wood chips will not work because you need the leaf mold. You can use chunks of rotten wood to replace the leaves, but the spalting is different with more of an area discoloration than the lines we are looking for. The large black areas look good in oak, but not other wood. Put the wood in a trash compactor bag (they are heavier than the others) when it is fresh cut and still wet. If the ends have dried, saw off a slice to open up the wet wood. It works better in wood cut in the spring when the sap is up and the free-water in the wood is at its highest. Apply a liberal amount of the brew on each end, and seal the bag. Now we will need that last ingredient, warmth. Store the sealed wood indoors under an old electric blanket during the winter months when the outdoor daytime temperature is below 65-degrees. Otherwise, outside is fine. Check it after 2 months. You will be looking for a black slimy mess on the wood, with things growing out of it. Mushrooms are good. Clean it up and split it in half if you can. If it isn't what you want, put the halves together and back in the sealed bag. You can use chunks or shavings of spalted wood instead of the brew, but it takes forever, and sometimes doesn't start because it is dead. The brew is faster, more reliable, and gives better spalting. You could just seal the wet wood in the bag without adding anything, but some will spalt, and some won't. And, when all of the ingredients are available in nature, then you don’t need a brew to start the process. Just throw the wood under a tree, let the grass grow up around it, and nature will take its course. Covering it with some leaves will help. Put something under it to get it off the ground, otherwise it will rot on that side. Spalted wood isn't exactly rotten, but it's on its way. Spalting occurs in an early stage of the decay process, when various colonies of fungi stake their claims to a piece of fallen wood. The characteristic blue-black lines that run through spalted wood actually represent the lines of demarcation between incompatible colonies of micro-organisms. But the specific biological facts aren't what interest most woodworkers in spalted wood, it's the fact that nothing else looks quite like it. One way to get your hands on spalted wood - obviously - is to go on a field trip and gather your own naturally occurring specimens. You can also give Mother Nature a hand and "spalt your own". Either way, it helps to have a little background information. Fortunately, there's no shortage of information on spalted wood, how to work with it, and how to make it. Here are a few resources: If you access to Fine Woodworking's article archives (Taunton Press charges a nominal monthly fee for access to hundreds of articles) a good place to start is with sculptor Mark Lindquist's "Spalted Wood", which appeared way back in issue #7. It's still one of the best overviews of the natural spalting process, how it plays out in various species, where to look for spalted wood, and how to prepare it for use. "Spalting, a Fungus Amongus" by Andrew Hilton covers everything from how spalting works to working with spalted wood to making your own - and it's free. If you don't happen to have a hardwood forest handy, you'll be glad to hear that creating your own spalted wood isn't a difficult process. Read "Intentional Spalting" from the Woodweb Knowledge Base for great discussion of various methods for encouraging and controlling the spalting process. "Producing Spalted Wood", published by the Forest Service's Forest Products Laboratory, offers a good overview and includes more technical information on the types of fungus involved in the process.
January 2, 20179 yr This lady is the acknowledged expert on spalting and this in addition to what Stick wrote (very good by the way) may answer a few question and fallacies you have heard. Sara Robinson PhD
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.