Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
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 | Display Modes |
#1
Posted to rec.crafts.woodturning
|
|||
|
|||
pictures of some recent work
For those that can't access ABPW.. here's a link to a facebook photo album, the
last 9 pictures are recent projects: http://www.facebook.com/album.php?ai...4&l=384887edca you don't need to join facebook to view these.. mac Please remove splinters before emailing |
#2
Posted to rec.crafts.woodturning
|
|||
|
|||
pictures of some recent work
On Mon, 15 Nov 2010 9:55:18 -0600, mac davis wrote
(in message ): http://www.facebook.com/album.php?ai...4&l=384887edca well I think it is very good looking work, and I like the satin kind of finish. What finish do you use - if I may ask. tom koehler -- I will find a way or make one. |
#3
Posted to rec.crafts.woodturning
|
|||
|
|||
pictures of some recent work
Mac,your work is relly amazing.Your mystery burl looks very similar to a
something I made out of spruce burl. Kevin "tom koehler" wrote in message net.net... On Mon, 15 Nov 2010 9:55:18 -0600, mac davis wrote (in message ): http://www.facebook.com/album.php?ai...4&l=384887edca well I think it is very good looking work, and I like the satin kind of finish. What finish do you use - if I may ask. tom koehler -- I will find a way or make one. |
#4
Posted to rec.crafts.woodturning
|
|||
|
|||
pictures of some recent work
On 11/15/2010 10:55 AM, mac davis wrote:
For those that can't access ABPW.. here's a link to a facebook photo album, the last 9 pictures are recent projects: http://www.facebook.com/album.php?ai...4&l=384887edca you don't need to join facebook to view these.. mac Please remove splinters before emailing Very nice. Are the goblets functional? |
#5
Posted to rec.crafts.woodturning
|
|||
|
|||
pictures of some recent work
On Mon, 15 Nov 2010 11:26:11 -0600, tom koehler
wrote: On Mon, 15 Nov 2010 9:55:18 -0600, mac davis wrote (in message ): http://www.facebook.com/album.php?ai...4&l=384887edca well I think it is very good looking work, and I like the satin kind of finish. What finish do you use - if I may ask. tom koehler Thank you, Tom.. I don't really use a finish, unless it's a soft wood like pine or redwood.. Hardwood gets sanded on the lathe and buffed with the Bealle System, softwoods get wet sanded with Natural Danish oil and then buffed.. mac Please remove splinters before emailing |
#6
Posted to rec.crafts.woodturning
|
|||
|
|||
pictures of some recent work
On Mon, 15 Nov 2010 15:42:23 -0500, "Kevin Cleary" wrote:
Mac,your work is relly amazing.Your mystery burl looks very similar to a something I made out of spruce burl. Kevin I knew what kind of tree it came from at one time, but senior memory has lost it.. A friend brought it from the states, where it had hung on the back fence of a fire department for years.. I hung it on a ceiling hook in the shop for over a year, changing hanging points once in a while, until I figured out how it could fit on the lathe.. It had 3 branches sticking out of it and was covered by a thin membrane of bark.. "tom koehler" wrote in message net.net... On Mon, 15 Nov 2010 9:55:18 -0600, mac davis wrote (in message ): http://www.facebook.com/album.php?ai...4&l=384887edca well I think it is very good looking work, and I like the satin kind of finish. What finish do you use - if I may ask. tom koehler -- I will find a way or make one. mac Please remove splinters before emailing |
#7
Posted to rec.crafts.woodturning
|
|||
|
|||
pictures of some recent work
On Mon, 15 Nov 2010 19:47:18 -0500, sbnjhfty wrote:
Very nice. Are the goblets functional? Thank you.. I would guess that they are, if you didn't put them in a dishwasher.. They're cocobolo, buffed with carnauba wax.. Should be food safe.. They were a commission from a winery.. 3 goblets about 11" tall, as close to identical as possible.. Did I mention that I don't do commissions anymore? mac Please remove splinters before emailing |
#8
Posted to rec.crafts.woodturning
|
|||
|
|||
pictures of some recent work
On Tue, 16 Nov 2010 2:58:40 -0600, mac davis wrote
(in message ): On Mon, 15 Nov 2010 19:47:18 -0500, sbnjhfty wrote: Very nice. Are the goblets functional? Thank you.. I would guess that they are, if you didn't put them in a dishwasher.. They're cocobolo, buffed with carnauba wax.. Should be food safe.. They were a commission from a winery.. 3 goblets about 11" tall, as close to identical as possible.. Did I mention that I don't do commissions anymore? mac Please remove splinters before emailing I do stuff that pleases me, and then if someone else wants it, okay then. My personal experience with commissions is that if you agree to make a specific thing for someone else, the thing that was formerly pleasurable now becomes a job on a deadline and no longer pleasurable. It would be a different thing, to do woodturning for someone else as a job, but then there has to be some kind of mental shift of gears so that you could do it without beating yourself up, mentally, about what the finished products look like (compared to what you'd like to be able to produce with a bit more time). There are many in this forum who are full-time turners. You earn your daily bread doing this. Is there some kind of disconnect, some way of separating the lathe work that is done quickly out of necessity for regular income - compared to what is happening internally when you do a personal piece? tom koehler -- I will find a way or make one. |
#9
Posted to rec.crafts.woodturning
|
|||
|
|||
pictures of some recent work
Hey Mac,can you put the pic's on the ABPW site ? I'm on webby & can't
even see them on FB. Jerry http://community.webtv.net/awoodbutc...oodWorkingPage |
#10
Posted to rec.crafts.woodturning
|
|||
|
|||
pictures of some recent work
On Tue, 16 Nov 2010 13:24:34 -0600, tom koehler
wrote: I do stuff that pleases me, and then if someone else wants it, okay then. My personal experience with commissions is that if you agree to make a specific thing for someone else, the thing that was formerly pleasurable now becomes a job on a deadline and no longer pleasurable. It would be a different thing, to do woodturning for someone else as a job, but then there has to be some kind of mental shift of gears so that you could do it without beating yourself up, mentally, about what the finished products look like (compared to what you'd like to be able to produce with a bit more time). There are many in this forum who are full-time turners. You earn your daily bread doing this. Is there some kind of disconnect, some way of separating the lathe work that is done quickly out of necessity for regular income - compared to what is happening internally when you do a personal piece? tom koehler 2 of my worst commissions were the 3 goblets and legs for a three-legged stool... The first piece is usually fun, but trying to make the other pieces the same is NOT fun.. I find that my style has become so free form that I have trouble making something to order.. An example was a favor for a charity, making a police nightstick for an event.. It took way too long to figure out dimensions, diameters, etc.. BORING... I'm too used to throwing a chunk of wood on the lathe and seeing what happens.. I lost a bid a few years ago on 200 slimline pens.. I was so relieved that I didn't have to make them! mac Please remove splinters before emailing |
#11
Posted to rec.crafts.woodturning
|
|||
|
|||
pictures of some recent work
I think that probably happens to a lot of us.I've just recently started
making some duck and goose calls and I'll be damned if I can make a matching pair. "mac davis" wrote in message ... On Tue, 16 Nov 2010 13:24:34 -0600, tom koehler wrote: I do stuff that pleases me, and then if someone else wants it, okay then. My personal experience with commissions is that if you agree to make a specific thing for someone else, the thing that was formerly pleasurable now becomes a job on a deadline and no longer pleasurable. It would be a different thing, to do woodturning for someone else as a job, but then there has to be some kind of mental shift of gears so that you could do it without beating yourself up, mentally, about what the finished products look like (compared to what you'd like to be able to produce with a bit more time). There are many in this forum who are full-time turners. You earn your daily bread doing this. Is there some kind of disconnect, some way of separating the lathe work that is done quickly out of necessity for regular income - compared to what is happening internally when you do a personal piece? tom koehler 2 of my worst commissions were the 3 goblets and legs for a three-legged stool... The first piece is usually fun, but trying to make the other pieces the same is NOT fun.. I find that my style has become so free form that I have trouble making something to order.. An example was a favor for a charity, making a police nightstick for an event.. It took way too long to figure out dimensions, diameters, etc.. BORING... I'm too used to throwing a chunk of wood on the lathe and seeing what happens.. I lost a bid a few years ago on 200 slimline pens.. I was so relieved that I didn't have to make them! mac Please remove splinters before emailing |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
PICTURES of a recent welding project | Metalworking | |||
PICTURES of a recent welding project | Metalworking | |||
PICTURES of a recent welding project | Metalworking | |||
pictures of recent work. | Woodworking | |||
some recent work | Woodturning |