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Maxprop
 
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"Kevin" wrote in message

Hello all,

I've been turning now for a bit over a year and it has been a most

enjoyable
passtime. Last night I started to clean up the shop a bit and and as in

the
past when cleaning up, decided to hang on to the failed turnings on my
shelves. I really should call them errors rather then failures as I

learned
a bit from each of them. There are the ones where the wood was a bit on

the
punky side and the tennon tore loose; the ones where bark inclusions
magically appeared and decided on their own that I didn't want the bowl to
be as high as I'd planned, not too mention the ones I've just set aside as
the end grain just proved too darn stubborn to just go away.
Does anyone else keep reminders of this sort around their shop? I can

only
hope that the distribution of the number of the bowls when plotted across
time will show a marked bias to the early days and then taper off
assymptotically as time and turning goes on.
Thanks



Firewood. Initially I kept a few of the disasters which took soooo long to
turn, but ultimately they, too, found their way into the tinder box. It has
become somewhat of a ritual to gently place a turning mistake on top of
glowing embers and watch it reach kindling temp and flame into oblivion.

That and the fact that my wife will burn them if I don't.

Max