Popular Post lew Posted August 20 Popular Post Report Posted August 20 Some little roughed out bowls and a slightly larger one. Little ones are from the mystery cemetery wood and the larger one is from an auction win at the local turners club- looks like it is red oak. Fred W. Hargis Jr, Al B, HandyDan and 4 others 7 Quote
Popular Post lew Posted August 27 Popular Post Report Posted August 27 A little more work on the medium sized bowl. Definitely red oak. Found a couple of cracks buried deep inside but I think CA will fix it. Outside finished with Yorkshire Grit then a coating of mineral oil. Inside will get only mineral oil once sanded. Gonna be either a bread bowl or a popcorn bowl- what ever Mimi decides. Probably get gifted to someone. Gerald, Fred W. Hargis Jr, Gordon and 4 others 7 Quote
FrederickH Posted August 28 Report Posted August 28 Lew, how were the diagonal cuts made around the rim? Grandpadave52 1 Quote
lew Posted August 28 Report Posted August 28 @FrederickH Rick, I have one of these tools. They make smaller versions. I'm still learning how to use it effectively. FrederickH, Gerald and Grandpadave52 3 Quote
Popular Post lew Posted October 15 Popular Post Report Posted October 15 The adventure continuuuueeesss. I was cruising the Internet a while back and found a vessel of illusion by Trent Bosch. The idea intrigued me and with more research, I decided to give it a try. Things are not going as planned. The first failure was when the vase collar was inadvertently undercut too far and the collar fell off. But pressing on undeterred, I decided to use the collarless vase- left side of this image- The original, and current, idea is to have the "top" (rite in above picture" be installed inside the vase. The "top" is larger than the opening- thus the "Illusion" The top must be very thin The outside profile of the top must match the inside profile of the vase. It takes some try and retry to get the profiles to match. Using a profile gauge and cardboard templates I shaped the top of the lid's profile. Reversing the lid, to thin its walls, gave me an in-depth understanding why turners love their vacuum chucks. Now I wish I had one. But, a jam chuck, of sorts, will have to do. Using double sided sticky tape and painter's tape to keep the lid in place allowed me to thin the wall to what I thought should be the correct thickness. A Vacuum chuck would have made removing, checking thickness and replacing really easy. Now, I wish I had one. The lid was just a little too thick. Remounted and, wouldn't you know it, now it's a little too thin Making the new lid will have to wait as I need to pack up all the tools for Easy Wood Tool demos the next 2 weekends FrederickH, Fred W. Hargis Jr, HandyDan and 2 others 5 Quote
Grandpadave52 Posted October 16 Report Posted October 16 Oops; still gonna be very cool Lew. Love the spalting of the vase body. lew and Fred W. Hargis Jr 1 1 Quote
HandyDan Posted October 16 Report Posted October 16 We always seem to keep the funnel making craft alive and well. Hope things go better next time. Looking good though. Fred W. Hargis Jr, Grandpadave52 and lew 2 1 Quote
Popular Post Fred W. Hargis Jr Posted October 16 Popular Post Report Posted October 16 This isn't exactly on my lathe anymore. It's something I saw in a Tim Yoder video and though I might want to make one. But before committing any nice wood to it, I tried to do one out of poplar to see if it was withing my meager turning skills. So this is my prototype "box with a drawer" as Tim named it. The good thing I think I could do one if I chose, but truthfully after looking at my prototype I kind of lost interest. It just seem to have any practical use...at least to me. Now if I were to finish one the drawer would have a nice knob on it. The drawer is made by turning it round and carefully fitting it to the hole in the box, then drill the center out (I'm not good enough to hollow that out with a bowl gouge or something. Anyway here it is: FrederickH, Gerald, lew and 4 others 5 2 Quote
Grandpadave52 Posted October 16 Report Posted October 16 That is really cool and unique @Fred W. Hargis Jr practical use or not. Definitely looks like a challenging project. Well done sir. Fred W. Hargis Jr, Gerald, lew and 1 other 3 1 Quote
Popular Post HandyDan Posted October 16 Popular Post Report Posted October 16 You do have the skills and the box is quite unique. Way to go! Love it! Grandpadave52, Fred W. Hargis Jr, Headhunter and 2 others 4 1 Quote
lew Posted October 16 Report Posted October 16 What @HandyDan said! You DO have the skills!!! Fred W. Hargis Jr, Gerald and Grandpadave52 2 1 Quote
FrederickH Posted October 16 Report Posted October 16 Will the drying out of any part of that affect the fitting of the lid? Fred W. Hargis Jr, Grandpadave52 and lew 3 Quote
lew Posted October 16 Report Posted October 16 24 minutes ago, FrederickH said: Will the drying out of any part of that affect the fitting of the lid? Actually, the lid will need to be boiled to make it flexible enough to be bent and fitted thru the opening. The vase part was twice turned so it is pretty stable. The vase still need lots of sanding before I can put things together. I want to ebonize the lid so it is a contrasting color. The lid is white oak so ebonizing and bending hopefully work out. Fred W. Hargis Jr, Grandpadave52, Gerald and 1 other 4 Quote
Popular Post RustyFN Posted October 16 Author Popular Post Report Posted October 16 Rough turning some cedar bowls today. lew, FrederickH, Grandpadave52 and 3 others 4 2 Quote
John Morris Posted October 16 Report Posted October 16 Sure like those EWT stickers on your lathe Lew! Fred W. Hargis Jr, lew and Grandpadave52 3 Quote
lew Posted October 16 Report Posted October 16 3 hours ago, RustyFN said: Rough turning some cedar bowls today. Those sure have some pretty grain, @RustyFN! Grandpadave52, Fred W. Hargis Jr, RustyFN and 1 other 4 Quote
Grandpadave52 Posted October 17 Report Posted October 17 Agree with Lew, some very pretty grain. Bet it smelled really good in your shop too. Fred W. Hargis Jr, lew and RustyFN 3 Quote
RustyFN Posted October 17 Author Report Posted October 17 25 minutes ago, Grandpadave52 said: Agree with Lew, some very pretty grain. Bet it smelled really good in your shop too. Yes it did. I love when I leave the shop for a little bit and then go back in and get that big whiff. Headhunter, Grandpadave52, lew and 1 other 4 Quote
RustyFN Posted October 17 Author Report Posted October 17 I forgot to add the first pic is 9” bowl and the other is 15”. I cored the smaller one out of the big one. Fred W. Hargis Jr, Grandpadave52, lew and 1 other 4 Quote
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