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Dr. Deb[_5_] Dr. Deb[_5_] is offline
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Default Been awhile, and it shows

On Sunday, May 7, 2017 at 8:58:59 PM UTC-5, Martin E wrote:
On 5/7/2017 4:14 PM, G Ross wrote:
Dr. Deb wrote:
I had had a piece of dogwood laying around the shop for about five
years. Its not a big piece, but then dogwood does not get all that
big. It was about 5 1/2-6" in diameter and about 32" long, and had a
crack running along it, lengthwise, that reached almost to the center.

Knowing that turning anything out of this (down log) would be
"interesting" at best, I decided to fill the crack with epoxy and
bright copper flakes. The result was a dark mahogany colored streak
with copper flecks in it.

I divided the log into two 5 1/2 x 16 blanks and turned two vases.
The first vase was 4 1/2 x 12. The second was 4 1/2 x 14.

As I said, its been awhile since I have been at the lathe, for
anything of consequence, and it showed. Catches redefined the shape
of both vases, but the second one was more like what I had in mind
when I started.

I might add, turning end grain on very dry dogwood is a "tad"
different than turning side grain on wet wood, of any kind. ;-)

Two lessons learned:
1) I need to move the lathe (all 560lb of it) to give room for the
longer boring bar to be used.
2) Practice, practice, practice. Put another way, "If you do not use
it, you lose it."

I have been neglecting my lathe because of shoulder surgery but am
getting back into it. Currently working on two kitchen utensil holders
made from Bradford Pear. Lots of end grain hollowing.
Last fall someone dropped off a section of log about 24 inch diameter
and 4 ft. long. It was white wood and I immediately thought it was
tupelo. The bowl blanks have dried and I finished a couple. I
instantly knew it was not tupelo, but magnolia, from the white and grey
coloring of the dried wood.

My Uncle Dave Hunt would have turned cowboy hats out of that ! We have
three or so here and they are something else. Beautiful.

Martin


We had a guy in the woodturner's club I used to attend, who turned cowboy hats out of cherry. Turning the hat is not so amazing. Oh, its a skill test, but several folks can do that. But this guy was demonstrating the turning of a hat, with the light behind the work piece to judge thickness, and when he finished, he had burned in a band on the hat and had a turned up brim.

But that was not the amazing thing. We are sitting there watching him and the light, through the wood is getting brighter, but he is not watching the hat, he is looking at us, as he is pulling shaving and giving the patter for the demonstrating.

Now, THAT, is a wood turner.