Woodturning (rec.crafts.woodturning) To discuss tools, techniques, styles, materials, shows and competitions, education and educational materials related to woodturning. All skill levels are welcome, from art turners to production turners, beginners to masters.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Posted to rec.crafts.woodturning
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 575
Default Idle musings re turning every piece of lovely wood we find.


I live in S.E. Florida on a river near the Atlantic. I'm blessed with
every kind of driftwood imaginable. The same with so many varieties of
fallen and trimmed tree logs and branches. As found, many stir my sense
of beauty ...whatever that is!

I like to think I am a decent hobbyist woodturner, a fair shadetree
machinist, a jackleg sculptor of welded objects and a self styled (as my
eye beholds) judge of taste and discrimination about three dimensional
wood art.

Many of the pieces of wood I find are beautiful or very interesting as
found, but I always want to put them on my lathe or incorporate them in
a welded sculpture. It is very hard for me to leave them alone and enjoy
them as is.

Too often after I give in and turn even a few coves, beads, tapers etc.
or combine the wood with various chunks of metal, my interference has
really added nothing to the inherent beauty of the wood and in many
cases detracted from the elegance presented by nature and its elements.

You and I turn wood of course, and it's natural for us to put every
piece of wood we find on our lathes and turn it. At least just a little
bit. Sometimes we feel a need to add even further decoration.

Just wondering if any of you have the same problem or even consider
leaving well enough alone to be a problem. Woodtuners turn wood. Is it
in the province of a woodturner not to turn every piece of lovely wood
he or she finds? If so, when do you decide and and how do you manage
it?

Sometimes I leave a chunk of driftwood or an unusual branch alone and
put an angel wing or something, but never a finial, on top. Sometimes
they turn out pretty good, ....sometimes neither pretty nor good.


Turn to Safety, Arch
Fortiter


http://community.webtv.net/almcc/MacsMusings



  #2   Report Post  
Posted to rec.crafts.woodturning
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 4
Default Idle musings re turning every piece of lovely wood we find.

Arch,
You know the rule...First do no harm. Nature has taken months and often
years to "work" a piece of wood that once was a living part of a tree or
shrub and create this thing we call driftwood. Water,salt,sun,wet,dry,rain
and wind have each had a hand in working the wood. So we need to give the
driftwood an opportunity to show us its artistic self.
Then, and only then, we may try and improve what nature has presented to us.
I live further up the coast from you, in Jacksonville....also with a river
near the ocean. There is an abundance of driftwood to admire. I am reluctant
to treat driftwood as raw material "wood" as, for instance, I do a fallen
black cherry tree or an aging redbud that had to be cut down.
I do turn some driftwood however. Two of my favorite pieces are a lidded box
and a pen turned from a smallish piece of driftwood cedar. The interior wood
of the cedar was dark and rich, a reddish walnut color. It still retains a
mild cedar aroma.
I think one difference in our approach is that I was a late comer to
woodturning but a long time lover of trees and wood and for twenty eight
years a lover of driftwood. So my first reaction to a piece of driftwood is
to first try and find the beauty in nature's creation and if nature has
demonstrated a crass eye then I undertake to"improve" what nature has done.
Maybe what we do to things in the shop depends on what we bring in ourselves
to the shop.Bob Tidwell


  #3   Report Post  
Posted to rec.crafts.woodturning
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 575
Default Idle musings re turning every piece of lovely wood we find.

Hi Bob, Many thanks. Your's and others's thought provoking or humorous
responses make some of my musings worthwhile.

Musing about it, seashells should be the ideal embellishment for
driftwood, but growing up near Tallahassee, I saw too many tacky gifts
decorated with shells at Stuckey's and B Lloyds' garish roadside tourist
traps. I have an aversion to turning cypress knees for the same reason.
Guess I'm not fully immune since I have turned a couple of clocks from
cypress slabs.

BTW as an OT aside, some of you will remember those awful yellow and
purple signs at intervals beginning 5 miles ahead of the store like
Burma Shave ads. Then on arrival there was the inevitable stuffed gator
or a sad and hopeless gaunt old black bear caged out front. Inside were
the shell and knee gifts and the world's thinnest and greasiest burgers,
watery orange juice and moon pies that children just had to have so they
could throw up in the car later ...and did you buy a few of those funny
(not funny to me) outhouse humor post cards that insulted blacks,
southerners and women?

I'm sure mid-westerners, and westerners and all parts of the USA had
comparable roadside tourist traps and suffered the same insensitivity of
the times. "primum non nocere" ...Not!

Sorry for the soapbox, I got carried away.
Now back to the fascinating driftwood that washes up on Jax beach and
_UP_ the St. Johns river.


Turn to Safety, Arch
Fortiter


http://community.webtv.net/almcc/MacsMusings



  #4   Report Post  
Posted to rec.crafts.woodturning
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 401
Default Idle musings re turning every piece of lovely wood we find.

Arch wrote:
Hi Bob, Many thanks. Your's and others's thought provoking or humorous
responses make some of my musings worthwhile.

Musing about it, seashells should be the ideal embellishment for
driftwood, but growing up near Tallahassee, I saw too many tacky gifts
decorated with shells at Stuckey's and B Lloyds' garish roadside tourist
traps. I have an aversion to turning cypress knees for the same reason.
Guess I'm not fully immune since I have turned a couple of clocks from
cypress slabs.

BTW as an OT aside, some of you will remember those awful yellow and
purple signs at intervals beginning 5 miles ahead of the store like
Burma Shave ads. Then on arrival there was the inevitable stuffed gator
or a sad and hopeless gaunt old black bear caged out front. Inside were
the shell and knee gifts and the world's thinnest and greasiest burgers,
watery orange juice and moon pies that children just had to have so they
could throw up in the car later ...and did you buy a few of those funny
(not funny to me) outhouse humor post cards that insulted blacks,
southerners and women?

I'm sure mid-westerners, and westerners and all parts of the USA had
comparable roadside tourist traps and suffered the same insensitivity of
the times. "primum non nocere" ...Not!

Sorry for the soapbox, I got carried away.
Now back to the fascinating driftwood that washes up on Jax beach and
_UP_ the St. Johns river.


Turn to Safety, Arch


Fortiter


Not a soapbox message, but it involves Florida. This week my neighbor
returned from
a trip to FL. He rang my doorbell and said he brought me a chunk of
palm tree to turn.
It was NOT palm tree--appeared to be maple and long cut and dried. I
thanked him, and cut into it and even made a bowl blank from it but it
was cracked through and through. But a nice thought to bring a 40
pound piece of wood back just for me. It was not driftwood so it
wasn't pretty.


--
Gerald Ross
Cochran, GA

It's deja vu all over again.




Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
what's the best looking piece of art made of wood that you have ever seen? [email protected] Woodworking 11 October 28th 07 11:21 PM
Idle musings about our medium Arch Woodturning 10 October 8th 05 02:35 AM
Find Vendor for One Piece moulded Marble Soap Dish Vince Home Repair 5 September 9th 05 12:22 PM
Musings re lathes & wheels. Turning wood or potting clay. Arch Woodturning 1 August 27th 04 04:12 AM
Pioneer CT1250, both wheels are turning in idle Peter Electronics Repair 1 February 3rd 04 10:51 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 08:47 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 DIYbanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about DIY & home improvement"