Thread: templates
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Darrell Feltmate Darrell Feltmate is offline
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Default templates

templates were fairly common among the older turners who turned duplicates
all the time. Spindle turners tend to use them more than bowl turners.

--
God bless and safe turning
Darrell Feltmate
Truro, NS
http://aroundthewoods.com
http://roundopinions.blogspot.com

"Tom Nie" wrote in message
...
TWW

See my earlier post re a CAD program. Trying to match to the template
instead of going with the flow is excellent training. But I've found you
can't reduce turning to exact numbers on curves. You have to develop a
feel for the curve and the tool's contact otherwise you end up with a
bunch of hiccups along the curve and a whole new design when finishing
time comes.

Print the image, cut it out, place it over black construction paper, then
set it behind your work for reference.

See CharlieB's "Got in the zone again" post and the link.

TomNie

"TWW" wrote in message
oups.com...
Richard Raffan wrote a book called 'Turned Bowl Design'. I got a
used copy from Amazon. I assume the book copyrighted in 1987 is
out of print by now.

The reason I am posting this is the book talks about using templates
as guides to doing bowls. I just did 6 rough bowls using a template
made from cardboard. I drew a picture of the bowl shape I wanted and
cut it out. The negative of the bowl (Raffan's term) is the template.
He also says be sure to turn off the lathe before touching the
template to the bowl you are trying to create.

Perhaps the real experts can make all their bowls look alike but it
appears templates can be a real help to the rest of us. I have seen
pictures or videos where people drew on bowls logs with crayons but
have never seen any source besides the book where templates were
mentioned.

Has anyone else seen any mention of templates?