Glynne
Established Member
As I had been planing and thicknessing some African Black Walnut (post in Design), I thought I would have a dig around in my wood store and see if I could do the same with some other timber whilst the workshop was a mess.
First up were 2 boards marked as apple. I have no idea where I got these from but suspect it was my late brother-in-law who was keen woodworker and turner. On closer inspection!
Hugely bowed, cupped and warped but I eventually got to
I'm now thinking of some cheese boards?
The next piece was an off-cut from a trunk that I helped salvage from Cassiobury Park in Watford. I'm told it was Black Mulberry but as I was more keen not to get asked any awkward questions I may have got that wrong. Quite a yellowy tinge to this and I'm thinking of a box lid, but no idea what the box needs to be made of?
The next piece is holly (from Pugh's auction I think) and rock hard! Cupped quite badly but flattened OK. It does have some dark marking and I'm not sure whether this is because I have stored it flat?
The final piece (for now) is a small piece of Sycamore that a sawmill in Suffolk threw in when I bought some other bits. The idea was simply for a breadboard. However on planing this, the figuring is amazing. The board is flat (honest) and the rippling is brilliant. Too good for a breadborad I think!
Daft as it may sound, I really enjoy sorting through my timber and I'm just starting to realise I don't know exactly what I've got!
First up were 2 boards marked as apple. I have no idea where I got these from but suspect it was my late brother-in-law who was keen woodworker and turner. On closer inspection!
Hugely bowed, cupped and warped but I eventually got to
I'm now thinking of some cheese boards?
The next piece was an off-cut from a trunk that I helped salvage from Cassiobury Park in Watford. I'm told it was Black Mulberry but as I was more keen not to get asked any awkward questions I may have got that wrong. Quite a yellowy tinge to this and I'm thinking of a box lid, but no idea what the box needs to be made of?
The next piece is holly (from Pugh's auction I think) and rock hard! Cupped quite badly but flattened OK. It does have some dark marking and I'm not sure whether this is because I have stored it flat?
The final piece (for now) is a small piece of Sycamore that a sawmill in Suffolk threw in when I bought some other bits. The idea was simply for a breadboard. However on planing this, the figuring is amazing. The board is flat (honest) and the rippling is brilliant. Too good for a breadborad I think!
Daft as it may sound, I really enjoy sorting through my timber and I'm just starting to realise I don't know exactly what I've got!