Showing posts with label bowl. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bowl. Show all posts
Thursday, February 20, 2014
Priscillas Bowl Discussion Plans and Photos
Good Morning Everyone,
Im going to work on a project that I began late last year. Its a small bowl for a friend of mine and here is the story behind it:
Priscilla is a buddy of mine that I met in library school a few years back and over the past several years shes faced several life challenges. Shes met them with aplomb and she has moved to Saint Paul to begin her life anew. She bought a lovely home earlier this year and at one of our periodic coffees, I promised her a bowl when she got her new home.
I began the bowl several months ago. It was a medium-sized block of red maple and I laminated a foot out of jatoba wood to the bottom and began turning it. Well, the lamination failed and the bowl came off the lathe just as I was finishing the exterior. It hit the floor and the rim was damaged. Just about that time I had a number of challenges of my own and I had to sit the bowl aside. Ive dug it out of my wood pile and begun working on it again.
Plans
Im going to re-mount the block on the lathe and re-shape the exterior. Ill create a new foot and create a tenon on the bottom so I can flip it over and hollow out the interior. Im also going to add some detail to the exterior to match a ribbon rim that I originally cut into the top of the bowl. The rim needs to be undercut to emphasize it and the whole thing will need to be sanded to 400 grit. At that point Ill hollow it out and finish it.
Here we go:
The next two photos show the bowl blank mounted on the lathe. The dark brown spot on the bottom was were the original foot of the bowl was attached. You can see a ribbon on the rim:


Im about to drill into the foot area so I will have a place to re-mount the bowl a little later:


In this photo you can see a small nick in the rim where the bowl hit the floor. I really like the rim and I dont want to remove the ribbon so Ill deal with this by hand when Ive finished cutting and sanding the exterior:

Ive decided to add some scallops to the bottom of the bowl to match the ribbon on the rim. If you look carefully Ive drawn some pencil lines to mark the areas that Im going to cut out:

Here is the bowl at present. Ive created a foot, cleaned up the glue from the previous lamination, and cut and begun sanding the exterior. It will take me a day or so to finish the exterior of the bowl. This is a side view:

And this is the bottom:

I think this will be a lovely bowl as red maple is a wonderful turning wood and the blank has a lot of beautiful grain patterns in it.
More later,
VW
Read More..
Im going to work on a project that I began late last year. Its a small bowl for a friend of mine and here is the story behind it:
Priscilla is a buddy of mine that I met in library school a few years back and over the past several years shes faced several life challenges. Shes met them with aplomb and she has moved to Saint Paul to begin her life anew. She bought a lovely home earlier this year and at one of our periodic coffees, I promised her a bowl when she got her new home.
I began the bowl several months ago. It was a medium-sized block of red maple and I laminated a foot out of jatoba wood to the bottom and began turning it. Well, the lamination failed and the bowl came off the lathe just as I was finishing the exterior. It hit the floor and the rim was damaged. Just about that time I had a number of challenges of my own and I had to sit the bowl aside. Ive dug it out of my wood pile and begun working on it again.
Plans
Im going to re-mount the block on the lathe and re-shape the exterior. Ill create a new foot and create a tenon on the bottom so I can flip it over and hollow out the interior. Im also going to add some detail to the exterior to match a ribbon rim that I originally cut into the top of the bowl. The rim needs to be undercut to emphasize it and the whole thing will need to be sanded to 400 grit. At that point Ill hollow it out and finish it.
Here we go:
The next two photos show the bowl blank mounted on the lathe. The dark brown spot on the bottom was were the original foot of the bowl was attached. You can see a ribbon on the rim:


Im about to drill into the foot area so I will have a place to re-mount the bowl a little later:

This is the beginnings of the bowl foot:

In this photo you can see a small nick in the rim where the bowl hit the floor. I really like the rim and I dont want to remove the ribbon so Ill deal with this by hand when Ive finished cutting and sanding the exterior:

Ive decided to add some scallops to the bottom of the bowl to match the ribbon on the rim. If you look carefully Ive drawn some pencil lines to mark the areas that Im going to cut out:

Here is the bowl at present. Ive created a foot, cleaned up the glue from the previous lamination, and cut and begun sanding the exterior. It will take me a day or so to finish the exterior of the bowl. This is a side view:

And this is the bottom:

I think this will be a lovely bowl as red maple is a wonderful turning wood and the blank has a lot of beautiful grain patterns in it.
More later,
VW
Wednesday, February 19, 2014
Natural edge bowl out of western red cedar and an owie
Hi Everyone,
Well, weve finally got some snow yesterday and today and its high time we did! The prospect of a brown Christmas absolutely fills me with dread:

Lets hope we get more.
And bad news: Bob the Shop Squirrel seems to have disappeared. As he was with me for about 3 years, I suspect he has, well, lets just say hes moved on to greener pastures...
Now for the project
A friend of mine in Northfield brought me a large section of a tree trunk with the request that a bowl be made out of it and Critter and I split the log last month in preparation. The log in question was supposed to be box elder but a test bowl last week revealed it to actually be wester red cedar. Never fear! We can make a bowl out of this too! Onward and forward.
Heres are the photos to date:
Here is a photo of the section of the tree trunk. In looking at this section of wood, I decided to try to make a natural edge bowl. Even though the bark was removed, the sap wood on the tree is intact and could be preserved through out the turning. Doing this is a matter of orienting the shape of the bowl correctly. This rough cut surface is going to be the bottom of the bowl and the rounded underside will be the top of the bowl:

And so I cut out a turning blank out of this section and on the bandsaw and mounted the blank on the lathe. Here you can see it mounted between centers and the bottom of the bowl beginning to take on a round shape:

As I was turning, the roughness of the underside of the bowl began to be removed with the exception of a large chunked out area:

Here you can see it more clearly:

And so I began to remove and re-shape the bottom of the bowl in the hope of cutting away enough wood to remove that area but no so much as to make the bowl appreciably smaller than it is:

As I was turning I decided to flatten the bottom and create a foot. This made reshaping the bottom easier and visually the results will look fine:


After about 10 minutes of turning I had the bottom shaped and the big chunk removed. This resulted in a narrow foot but it is stable enough so Im going to proceed with the bowl. And you can see that the sapwood area has been preserved and is easily visible:

This is the outside of the log without its bark. You can see that the surface is irregular and as Im going to try to preserve the sapwood of the tree this irregular shape will result in an irregularly shaped rim:


This is the blank about 10 minutes later. You can see how the walls of the bowl are not the same thickness at the point. That will lessen as I hollow out the bowl:

Here is the bowl about an hour later. There is a lot of cross grain tearing inside of the bowl that will have to be dealt with:

Side photo. The sapwood layer is intact all the way around the bowl:




And here are several more photos of the bowl from different angles. Looks different than the usual round bowl:




Ok, the inside of the bowl will need a lot of attention in the form of sanding and smoothing it. Im confident it can be finished satisfactorily and Ill use a food safe varnish for the finish to protect it.
Ill send photos of the finished bowl in a couple of days.
Time for a bandaid,
VW
Read More..
Well, weve finally got some snow yesterday and today and its high time we did! The prospect of a brown Christmas absolutely fills me with dread:


And bad news: Bob the Shop Squirrel seems to have disappeared. As he was with me for about 3 years, I suspect he has, well, lets just say hes moved on to greener pastures...
Now for the project
A friend of mine in Northfield brought me a large section of a tree trunk with the request that a bowl be made out of it and Critter and I split the log last month in preparation. The log in question was supposed to be box elder but a test bowl last week revealed it to actually be wester red cedar. Never fear! We can make a bowl out of this too! Onward and forward.
Heres are the photos to date:
Here is a photo of the section of the tree trunk. In looking at this section of wood, I decided to try to make a natural edge bowl. Even though the bark was removed, the sap wood on the tree is intact and could be preserved through out the turning. Doing this is a matter of orienting the shape of the bowl correctly. This rough cut surface is going to be the bottom of the bowl and the rounded underside will be the top of the bowl:

And so I cut out a turning blank out of this section and on the bandsaw and mounted the blank on the lathe. Here you can see it mounted between centers and the bottom of the bowl beginning to take on a round shape:

As I was turning, the roughness of the underside of the bowl began to be removed with the exception of a large chunked out area:

Here you can see it more clearly:

And so I began to remove and re-shape the bottom of the bowl in the hope of cutting away enough wood to remove that area but no so much as to make the bowl appreciably smaller than it is:

As I was turning I decided to flatten the bottom and create a foot. This made reshaping the bottom easier and visually the results will look fine:


After about 10 minutes of turning I had the bottom shaped and the big chunk removed. This resulted in a narrow foot but it is stable enough so Im going to proceed with the bowl. And you can see that the sapwood area has been preserved and is easily visible:

This is the outside of the log without its bark. You can see that the surface is irregular and as Im going to try to preserve the sapwood of the tree this irregular shape will result in an irregularly shaped rim:

Time to hollow out the bowl. I always cut from the center and towards the rim and thats what Im doing here:

This is the blank about 10 minutes later. You can see how the walls of the bowl are not the same thickness at the point. That will lessen as I hollow out the bowl:

Here is the bowl about an hour later. There is a lot of cross grain tearing inside of the bowl that will have to be dealt with:

Side photo. The sapwood layer is intact all the way around the bowl:



And while I was working with the bowl on the lathe my hand brushed up against one of the pointed ends of the rim and you can see the results-Owww!

And here are several more photos of the bowl from different angles. Looks different than the usual round bowl:




Ok, the inside of the bowl will need a lot of attention in the form of sanding and smoothing it. Im confident it can be finished satisfactorily and Ill use a food safe varnish for the finish to protect it.
Ill send photos of the finished bowl in a couple of days.
Time for a bandaid,
VW
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