Stigmorgan
Established Member
So I've started working on a piece of my dry cherry wood (the green stuff I've got needs to wait a while as the first bowl I did from it has gone the way of the banana) I've sanded it back quite a lot but there are some whitish marks and patches that I cant seem to sand out and I'm not sure if they are a result of maybe the tool not being sharp enough or if its just the way the wood has grown.
The pics and vid are after I turned it from the worm screw to the tenon, I rounded it off on the wormscrew and sanded it on the tenon, would love your c&c.
Here a shot of my cherry banana I expected it to move a little but didn't think it would be quite so much as I expected the wax finish would help hold onto the moisture, unfortunately there's not enough thickness in the base of this one to put it back on the lathe and fully flatten it back out.
The pics and vid are after I turned it from the worm screw to the tenon, I rounded it off on the wormscrew and sanded it on the tenon, would love your c&c.
Here a shot of my cherry banana I expected it to move a little but didn't think it would be quite so much as I expected the wax finish would help hold onto the moisture, unfortunately there's not enough thickness in the base of this one to put it back on the lathe and fully flatten it back out.