The Neighbor's Bowl

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HandyDan
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The Neighbor's Bowl

#1

Post by HandyDan »

The next door neighbor had some maple trees cut down a few years ago and I've been drying this piece to make a bowl for them. It turned nicely as Maple usually does. Love that wood. I made a nice rim on this one too but curved up to the lower edge to make sanding easier. Let me know what you think. Added a few burn lines too. It has a few drying cracks, pictured, that I super glued. Sucked the glue in to the thin crack with the vacuum cleaner which worked well. This one is 6.5 inch diameter and almost three inches deep.

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Re: The Neighbor's Bowl

#2

Post by Cherryville Chuck »

It finished beautifully. Something that was mentioned on the old forum was that a possible source of turning wood are the companies that take down problem trees. Fire wood can be too.
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Re: The Neighbor's Bowl

#3

Post by Herb Stoops »

That is beautiful, Dan, I agree on the color of maple, good job turning. I sure like your work.
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Re: The Neighbor's Bowl

#4

Post by old55 »

Very nice Dan.
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Re: The Neighbor's Bowl

#5

Post by Stick486 »

nice...
you make it look like it was cake and pie...
Forget the primal scream, just ROAR!!!
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Re: The Neighbor's Bowl

#6

Post by Biagio »

Dan, great stuff!
Interesting pattern in the base of the bowl. How was the blank cut relative to the long axis of the branch/trunk?
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Re: The Neighbor's Bowl

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Post by HandyDan »

Biagio wrote: Fri Aug 27, 2021 2:36 pm Dan, great stuff!
Interesting pattern in the base of the bowl. How was the blank cut relative to the long axis of the branch/trunk?

The usual log sawn lengthwise down the middle removing the pith.

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Re: The Neighbor's Bowl

#8

Post by Herb Stoops »

Dan,I was wondering this too. Is your blank turned with the long grain perpendicular to the bed of the lathe? Do yo have a picture of the blank mounted on the lathe before it is turned?
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Re: The Neighbor's Bowl

#9

Post by HandyDan »

This is an image found on the web but is how it sits in the lathe. The bark side is the bottom on most bowls.

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The bark side would be the bottom when turning a natural edge bowl. The bark is left on the rim.

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There is also an engrain bowl and is turned from a slab cut off the whole log. The pith is then the bowl center.

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Re: The Neighbor's Bowl

#10

Post by Herb Stoops »

Thanks ,Dan for the pictures. They do good to explain everything. I see video's of people turning with the grain turned crosswise like the 1st pictures and it would scare the daylights out of me.
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Re: The Neighbor's Bowl

#11

Post by HandyDan »

It is best to cut the corners off or even cut out the biggest round you can get on the band saw.
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Re: The Neighbor's Bowl

#12

Post by DaninVan »

No kidding! LOL!!
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