I have a carrier bag full of salvaged piano keys and they're just the right thickness for pens. This photo shows the variation in colour that you get in the ebony.
Looking at them now I should have switched the colour of the fittings on the 2 outside ones as that would have matched the wood better.
Finished with melamine lacquer.
I bought this blank at Harrogate a couple of years ago and it's been sat under my work bench since then until I got some inspiration for the shape.
It's burr chestnut. 19cm diameter
The finish is
Fiddes hard wax oil
I decided to try it after seeing Tracey Owen use a similar product at a demo. It's a little thick so I've thinned it with white spirit. It builds up nicely and only needs a couple of coats. It gives a nice smooth finish. It's aimed at use on flooring so durable and can also be used on kitchen worktops, so I assume it's food safe.
I don't do much pyrography as I'm not much of an artist (unfortunately, despite both my parent being art teachers!). This was requested so I thought I'd give it a go.
It's sycamore, 26cm diameter with the same hard wax finish.
I've never done any traditional style salt/pepper grinders but, again, these were requested
They're sycamore, 23cm and I'd been saving the lovely figured wood for such a project. The black in the top of one of the is from a piano key. The finish is chestnut lacquer. I've used the Crushgrind mechanism