Hi all, first time, and yes you guessed in need of help. Looked around but crikey there is so much info on this tinternet thing ...sigh.
I make flat stands, well I suppose you would call it a wood slice. I use plywood and work at around 12mm thickness, cutting out a shape that looks like a slice from a tree. My Festool jigsaw though even with a clean cut blade set at around 45 degrees has great limitations in terms of what shapes I can create. They vary from say 15-25cm in length, and about half as wide, or circular with wavy edges. I then add a faux bark finish to the exposed angled edges, paint to look like bark and finally seal the stained surface of the slice with numerous coats of Liberon finishing oil. The last step is machine burnishing which does give a mirror and extremely hard finish.
I use these to display my Bonsai trees at exhibitions and the smaller slices are for accent/companion plantings. These are small pots with alpines etc. The larger slices are, or can be around 75cm long by 40-50cm wide.
What I would like to do is get around using my jigsaw and get past the limitations of it. I think, but not sure a bandsaw may be the answer.
I'd like to be able to cut a similar shape that say a natural burr or burl walnut slice may have; am I on the right thinking that a bandsaw would do this? I need to cut an angle on the edge (it looks wrong straight )as well as a random curved shape. There would be no straight cutting so a fence is of no use. I maybe thinking wrong so a nudge in the right direction would be really helpful.
I so hope I have posted in the correct section and explained myself correctly. Fingers crossed.
Mozzy.
I make flat stands, well I suppose you would call it a wood slice. I use plywood and work at around 12mm thickness, cutting out a shape that looks like a slice from a tree. My Festool jigsaw though even with a clean cut blade set at around 45 degrees has great limitations in terms of what shapes I can create. They vary from say 15-25cm in length, and about half as wide, or circular with wavy edges. I then add a faux bark finish to the exposed angled edges, paint to look like bark and finally seal the stained surface of the slice with numerous coats of Liberon finishing oil. The last step is machine burnishing which does give a mirror and extremely hard finish.
I use these to display my Bonsai trees at exhibitions and the smaller slices are for accent/companion plantings. These are small pots with alpines etc. The larger slices are, or can be around 75cm long by 40-50cm wide.
What I would like to do is get around using my jigsaw and get past the limitations of it. I think, but not sure a bandsaw may be the answer.
I'd like to be able to cut a similar shape that say a natural burr or burl walnut slice may have; am I on the right thinking that a bandsaw would do this? I need to cut an angle on the edge (it looks wrong straight )as well as a random curved shape. There would be no straight cutting so a fence is of no use. I maybe thinking wrong so a nudge in the right direction would be really helpful.
I so hope I have posted in the correct section and explained myself correctly. Fingers crossed.
Mozzy.