Wood spoiler":ykzevahp said:I liked the bowl and I like the band of decoration. It appears a "sophisticated" detail that I expect you will have commercial success with.
The only dislike to me was leaving the dovetail. Given you had the outer foot it would have been nice to reverse the bowl and blend away the dovetail recess leaving just the one foot
gus3049":102pqbb0 said:Wood spoiler":102pqbb0 said:The only dislike to me was leaving the dovetail. Given you had the outer foot it would have been nice to reverse the bowl and blend away the dovetail recess leaving just the one foot
Good point! Sadly, it was too big for anything I have at the moment to reverse it with. I'll have to try and make some cole jaws or find a way of taping a bowl to a lump of mdf - or something.....
Thanks, Ill try that - next time. The bowl just went to someone that came to buy some roses - got a good price tooWood spoiler":odis9r61 said:gus3049":odis9r61 said:Wood spoiler":odis9r61 said:The only dislike to me was leaving the dovetail. Given you had the outer foot it would have been nice to reverse the bowl and blend away the dovetail recess leaving just the one foot
Good point! Sadly, it was too big for anything I have at the moment to reverse it with. I'll have to try and make some cole jaws or find a way of taping a bowl to a lump of mdf - or something.....
An alternative method.
If you are making a larger piece you can leave a 10 mm nib in the centre of your dovetail. Bring up the tailstock and mark centre. When you have finished the inside the bowl put a rough block (usually a parted off remains complete with jaw size dovetail all ready to fit in the chuck and kept for the purpose) covered with router Matt or similar and clamp the bowl with the tailstock . You can then gently blend out the dovetail leaving a natural curve to the foot. When done you can then work away your centre nib with spindle gouge or skew until you are left with an inverted cone. This can then be snipped off. I use wire cutters. And then remove from the lathe and sand. I use a foam pad and circular discs on the pedestal drill. Don't snap off the cone as it can tear into the bowl leaving a torn wood hole.
hope this helps
monkeybiter":oy64ypcd said:Before I got a chuck I turned a lot of stuff stuck to an MDF faceplate with double sided tape [the thicker woven tape] Pressed against the faceplate with the tailstock for most of the time, then backing off to shape the centre portion [or more] I'ts surprisingly strong.
gus3049":1dbkvpyv said:or find a way of taping a bowl to a lump of mdf - or something.....
myturn":y447i09v said:Oh well, in for a penny.....
The side profile lets it down Gordon, it looks like a bedpan.
Have a read of Richard Raffan's book The Art of Turned Bowls and in particular the section on ogee and asymetreic forms.
I use this book as my inspiration but it's one thing knowing what you want to achieve and another thing achieving it. I spent a whole day working on an asymetrically curved shallow bowl and I was still not happy with it even then. I knew what shape I wanted to achieve but it just wouldn't happen :? So it ended up as another "close but no cigar" turning.
Perhaps they did and will be disappointed when it doesn't hold water! :lol: :lol:gus3049":254ltujh said:I didn't realise you were old enough to remember such things. never mind, the customer who bought it this afternoon obviously didn't make the connection!!
myturn":3o2mp6mg said:Oh well, in for a penny.....
The side profile lets it down Gordon, it looks like a bedpan.
.....
myturn":3pklqnon said:Perhaps they did and will be disappointed when it doesn't hold water! :lol: :lol:gus3049":3pklqnon said:I didn't realise you were old enough to remember such things. never mind, the customer who bought it this afternoon obviously didn't make the connection!!
Wood spoiler":1t1yt8tn said:Maybe I am guilty of too much pedanticism, especially knowing you need to be commercial in your work.
Jonzjob":33eorimk said:Was it you at that show Gordon :roll: :roll:
For me, as long as the method of mounting, a dovetail for instance, is finished properly and to the same standard as the rest of the piece then what is the problem? Most people would look at it as a part of the overall piece and not "Oh yeh, that's where 'e stuck it on 'is lathe" It also gives me somewhere to put my initials so that it can be identified in the future and sell for a large fortune as being a JJ original 8) 8)
Enter your email address to join: