Jenx
Established Member
- Joined
- 27 Sep 2007
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After deciding I'd like a little go at turning wood a few weeks ago - I finally got a little lathe off the dreaded "fleabay" - drove from Aberdeen to Devon to get it, shot over to Axminsters to get some tools, and came back up the road, full of enthusiasm and service-station coffee.
After finding 'here' .. I got a copy of the Keith Rowley book, which seems to be the 'bible', and screwed a log onto the electric wood-whisk, and poked some sharp things at it.
Having never turned anything other than a corner in my life before...
I tried one of those honey-blobber things, and then a bowl.... the result of which was this :
Before it was oiled :
and the underneath of it :
Now, I appreciate that its kinda 'agricultrual' and the base of it looks way too heavy... but for a first ever go, I wasn't too despondant with what I ended up with... although it didn't look anything like I thought it was going to when it started out !
The Book said " beware the Skew Chisel, for she is the tool hardest to master", well when THAT was written, obviously the BOWL GOUGE had yet to be invented, because it truly is the tool of the devil himself ! I really struggled to get any degree of control over it at all. !
( not that I had any over the skew either ! )
Anyways... I'm having great fun - it'll be something brilliant to do whilst the bike's off the road for winter and I hold you all responsible for this new-found interest in a material I previously only thought was any use for making rough supports for water tanks in people's attics !
I feel this is the start of a very very slippery slope, which seems to be referred to once or twice elsewhere !
All the best to everyone..
Alun
After finding 'here' .. I got a copy of the Keith Rowley book, which seems to be the 'bible', and screwed a log onto the electric wood-whisk, and poked some sharp things at it.
Having never turned anything other than a corner in my life before...
I tried one of those honey-blobber things, and then a bowl.... the result of which was this :
Before it was oiled :
and the underneath of it :
Now, I appreciate that its kinda 'agricultrual' and the base of it looks way too heavy... but for a first ever go, I wasn't too despondant with what I ended up with... although it didn't look anything like I thought it was going to when it started out !
The Book said " beware the Skew Chisel, for she is the tool hardest to master", well when THAT was written, obviously the BOWL GOUGE had yet to be invented, because it truly is the tool of the devil himself ! I really struggled to get any degree of control over it at all. !
( not that I had any over the skew either ! )
Anyways... I'm having great fun - it'll be something brilliant to do whilst the bike's off the road for winter and I hold you all responsible for this new-found interest in a material I previously only thought was any use for making rough supports for water tanks in people's attics !
I feel this is the start of a very very slippery slope, which seems to be referred to once or twice elsewhere !
All the best to everyone..
Alun