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Default 3 Pages on Making The Nice One

Got it done during The Before Christmas Rush - the nicest turned
lidded box I've done to date. Finally got some time to put together
some pages on how it came to be, including some How To details.

http://web.hypersurf.com/~charlie2/T.../NiceOne1.html

charlie b
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Default 3 Pages on Making The Nice One

Great job, Charlie!

I bookmarked your site and found it to be a fantastic reference. Thanks so
much for taking the time to share your experience with the rest of us.

Bob

"charlie b" wrote in message
...
Got it done during The Before Christmas Rush - the nicest turned
lidded box I've done to date. Finally got some time to put together
some pages on how it came to be, including some How To details.

http://web.hypersurf.com/~charlie2/T.../NiceOne1.html

charlie b



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Default 3 Pages on Making The Nice One

Bob N wrote:

Great job, Charlie!


Thanks. So have you tried turned lidded boxes yet?

Thanks so much for taking the time to share your experience
with the rest of us.


I tend to jump around with my woodworking, working with
one type of piece, trying different methods until I find one
that works for me. When I've got it down pretty well I
drop it and go look for something completely different to
make. Problem was that when I'd get back to something
I'd done before I often had forgotten some of the details
of a successful method or procedure. So, while I was
learning how to make - let's say a Blurfle - I'd do Notes
To Myself. Doing them helps me understand a process/
procedure / method better. The first pass at doing
the instructions usually has critical holes in them. As
I follow the instructions I'll see the "holes" and since
the things I'd just learned are still fresh in my mind
they're easy to fill in. After 3 or 4 revisions I've got
a set of step by step instructions for making a
Blurfle. If, or when, I get back to making Blurfles I
don't have to go through the trial - and error - process
again. This frees me up to make entirely NEW mistakes

Once I've got a set of instructions that works for me
it doesn't take much effort to turn them into a few
web pages. Again, I do that for me. I "misplace" things
in the physical world. BUT - if they make it to my
computer and then to the Web, I can't lose them. The
fact that this stuff may be useful to others is just
gravy. I'll add some encouraging words to the instructions
and hopefully get someone to try something they didn't
think they could do.

Now if you go through some of these instructions you
may think to yourself "This guy must think I'm an idiot.
Why else would he include so much detail about things
that are so obvious?" Well, I've found that a lot of the
"basics", the "everybody knows that" common knowledge
is often what's missing in other instructions. I'd rather
have more information than not enough information.
A missing critical step can mean the difference between
success and failure. And, while success leads to success,
failure is often the end of trying.

So - if you use any of my "instructions" - please make
a note of any gaps, ambiguities or stuff that just seems
wrong. Send them along to me and I'll fix things and
get the revisions out on the Web. That way you and I
will benefit - and the next guy / gal as well.

charlie b
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Default 3 Pages on Making The Nice One


Really nice work, charlie. And while others may have seen a small,
double lidded box, I had not. I have seen nested forms, but again
nothing like you posted. It is great that you took the time to post
illustrated instructions - that is certainly more than I could ever do.


One thing I didn't see that I think would be important... what kind of
wood did you use?. It looks like Cocobolo or something along those
lines, but so many woods look the same on a web page.
Something close grained and hard, I'll wager.

Robert

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wrote:

One thing I didn't see that I think would be important... what kind of
wood did you use?. It looks like Cocobolo or something along those
lines, but so many woods look the same on a web page.
Something close grained and hard, I'll wager.

Robert


Could be cocobolo, but then again it could be either Honduran
or Brazilian rosewood. It looks very much by the chinese
furniture I inherited - which is supposed to be rosewood.
I got this stuff out of one of the "exotics" cut offs bins at
Global Wood Source here in San Jose ("Heart of Silly
Cone Valley"). Turned two lidded boxes out of one chunk
4x4 by maybe a foot long - with sapwood on one corner. I
had some stuff that I used a few years ago that works like
this wood - told that was "kingwood". Common names are
almost useless since they're often local names and some
wood suppliers play fast and loose with what they call the
wood they want to sell you.

Whatever it is, it's fairly dense, dulls edges moderately
fast and the chips smell vaguely like cinnamon. It takes
a really nice polish and people have mistaken them for
polished cabachon stones. Turns really nicely and you
can do some pretty fine turning with it - the Teenie
Weenie Tiny Top for example. Hard maple will let you
do really fine, delicate stuff as well.

The outside finial on The Nice One I think is Strawberry
Guava. I had two trees in the front yard that were
supposed to remain bushes I'm told. The previous
owner had let them go and I had the messiest trees
(next to female ginko) on the block - two thirty gallon
garbage cans worth of 1/2" to 3/4" red on the outside
mushy yellow orange on the inside berries. You couldn't
rake them, shovel them or even hose them up because
they turned to mush when you touched them. Finally
got around to cutting them down - but bandsawed up
some of the logettes. The stuff turns wonderfully
and the grain is very fine, the color uniform and bland.

charlie b


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Default 3 Pages on Making The Nice One

Charlie
Nice job on the pages. I know what you mean about the common names of woods.
One of the things I wanted from out trip to Thailand was some local wood to
turn. Just about impossible to find. However I got some "tool handles" at
one of the markets. They were each a trapezoidal piece of wood about an inch
thick, twelve or so inches long, and tapering from one and a half to one
inch. When I asked what kind of wood they were I was told mai pai. Helps me
not a bit but I figured I could get three or four pen blanks out of each so
I got five for 100 baht. Call it $3.50. What would I have to lose? Now I
know I should have gotten more. It looks like rosewood, turns like rosewood,
smells like rosewood and tastes like rosewood (never mind). Seems like
rosewood to me. Any one got rosewood pen blanks for sale at thirty cents
apiece?
--
God bless and safe turning
Darrell Feltmate
Truro, NS Canada
www.aroundthewoods.com

"charlie b" wrote in message
...
wrote:

One thing I didn't see that I think would be important... what kind of
wood did you use?. It looks like Cocobolo or something along those
lines, but so many woods look the same on a web page.
Something close grained and hard, I'll wager.

Robert


Could be cocobolo, but then again it could be either Honduran
or Brazilian rosewood. It looks very much by the chinese
furniture I inherited - which is supposed to be rosewood.
I got this stuff out of one of the "exotics" cut offs bins at
Global Wood Source here in San Jose ("Heart of Silly
Cone Valley"). Turned two lidded boxes out of one chunk
4x4 by maybe a foot long - with sapwood on one corner. I
had some stuff that I used a few years ago that works like
this wood - told that was "kingwood". Common names are
almost useless since they're often local names and some
wood suppliers play fast and loose with what they call the
wood they want to sell you.

Whatever it is, it's fairly dense, dulls edges moderately
fast and the chips smell vaguely like cinnamon. It takes
a really nice polish and people have mistaken them for
polished cabachon stones. Turns really nicely and you
can do some pretty fine turning with it - the Teenie
Weenie Tiny Top for example. Hard maple will let you
do really fine, delicate stuff as well.

The outside finial on The Nice One I think is Strawberry
Guava. I had two trees in the front yard that were
supposed to remain bushes I'm told. The previous
owner had let them go and I had the messiest trees
(next to female ginko) on the block - two thirty gallon
garbage cans worth of 1/2" to 3/4" red on the outside
mushy yellow orange on the inside berries. You couldn't
rake them, shovel them or even hose them up because
they turned to mush when you touched them. Finally
got around to cutting them down - but bandsawed up
some of the logettes. The stuff turns wonderfully
and the grain is very fine, the color uniform and bland.

charlie b



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