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Wood Turning How To

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For most wood workers, the next project begins with the plan and follows with the lumber merchant. Especially for the cabinet maker, a plan determines the board feet needed of specialized, cut and planed, air or kiln dried boards. Careful sorting determines the very finest to be purchased with the best grain for strength and beauty. Of course all this means a premium price coupled with the anxiety of making a bad cut or being wary of a glue spill along with a host of other concerns that might mar a fine finish to an expensive board.



At the other end of the wood working lives the wood turner. A chain saw becomes an essential tool as the turner of wood becomes a seeker of material to turn. Not for him the fancy boards from the hardwood specialist. Instead he looks for the nearest tree that will yield its own section for turning.

You see, most cabinets start with material less than three quarters of an inch thick while the turner looks for wood at least three inches through. Most pieces will be less than a foot long. Log sections start to look like prime material. So a mystery begins.

The turner gets a bit of firewood, perhaps from his own pile or maybe by borrowing from a friend. Then the questions start to flow.

Why do you need the log? You don't burn wood.

What are you going to do with it? What do mean make a bowl?

So a piece of wood goes on the lathe and shavings start to fly. Mysteriously a bowl begins to form from that piece of cast off maple or oak. When it begins to look like a bowl for certain, the sanding commences until the wood looks like glass. Then a finish is applied and magic happens as the wood leaps to color and shimmer like the living thing it once was. The turner is hooked and so will be his friends.

For he takes the bowl and shows it to the person who gave him the wood. The person tells a friend who has just had a tree knocked down in the front yard because the poor old birch got salt from one too many winters and finally died. It had been a play place for the kids and flowers had grown around it and there were too many memories for it to be burned or chipped. A phone call goes to the turner. Would he like it? Could he use it? Does he want to come and get it? Of course.

The turner knows a buddy who has a chain saw so they arrive the next evening with a van that has only carried groceries and hockey gear. Soon the back is filled with birch logs. Who knew there could be so much wood in one tree? The lathe is in for a work out.

Many bowls come from the birch and they are getting better and prettier now. Our turner is wondering just how beautiful a bowl he can make. Each cut is little better and the finish a little finer. One bowl full of memories is given to the person who first gave the old birch. Word gets around after one of the neighbors sees the bowl and hears the story. Another phone call comes and bud vases start to come from a small oak that had to be cut.

Soon the turner is looking for trees that need to come down for one reason or another. He starts to haunt the phone crews who need to clear power lines. Now he has his own chain saw and people call him to clear a tree that blew down in the last storm. He sees the tree as a series of bowls. When he returns home from work, logs have mysteriously appeared in the driveway. No names have been left; no one has seen anyone arrive with the log, but bowls await. Maybe a lamp or a set of table legs.

The wood is almost free. It is too good to be burned, but no one else wants it. Some hard work and it is on the lathe. Some pleasant time and wonderful work and a new piece is admired. Not bad for a piece of firewood or landfill scrap.
Wood Turning How To
While throwing wood at your face at 75 miles an hour and attacking it with sharp tools may not sound relaxing, it has proven so for thousands of people. Called wood turners, they have joined an age old profession, one recorded on the walls of the Egyptian pyramids and practiced through the ages. Yet for most modern turners it is not a profession, but a hobby to relieve the stresses of modern life.

This is not a new phenomenon. During the sixteenth century European aristocracy sought relief from the pressures of life with the use of the lathe. There was great competition amongst royal families to create ever more intricate and fantastic objects from exotic materials such as ivory and ebony. As early as the sixteenth century the Hapsburg emperors were keen hobby turners, while in Russia Peter the Great (1672-1725) pursued it with a passion and in France Louis XVI (1774-1792) was both an enthusiastic turner and an encourager of others.

Today  has all the earmarks of a stress free hobby. Entry cost is low for a wood working hobby, safety levels are high, and the rewards are great. Fellow turners love to greet a newcomer and to show them the ropes so comradeship grows quickly as do results. Instructional videos, turning clubs, demonstrations, books and web sites abound. Not surprisingly, it is one of the fastest growing areas of woodworking today, particularly among hobbyists.

Starting up one has the pleasure of setting aside a part of the garage or basement to receive the tools and shavings. A lathe, grinder and some chisels are bought and anticipation sets in. Wood from the firewood pile of yourself or a neighbor is ready to go.

Picture coming home at the end of a hard day at work. The boss was hard to get along with, no one else seemed to get anything right, and everything you did felt like it was done on Monday morning. The shop door beckons. The lathe calls. A piece of wood is placed on it and the turning starts. Shavings begin to pile on the floor. With every shaving a little more of the workplace disappears form mind and memory, replaced with the sweet sound of shavings flying off the tool.

Concentration is needed here. The wood is spinning fast and the tools are sharp. A delicate touch is needed to keep one line straight and the next curved just so. All thoughts of work disappear as the wood calls. Questions arise not about the last contract or the next proposal but about line and curve and balance.

A fine cut leaves a surface that needs to be felt and wondered over. As you feel it and look at it you realize that no one else has ever seen that surface. It has been revealed for the first time in existence to your eyes and yours alone. The time has come to admire the beauty of the wood.

Results come quickly here at the lathe. There is no wait for glues to dry and varnishes to cure. Most pieces are sanded and finished as the lathe turns.

And what of the results? It may be a beautiful bowl to admire and to have admired by all who see it. It may be a gift for a friend or loved one. On the other hand it may be nothing more than a round piece of wood or a pile of shavings on the floor. More than one turner has made a bowl that is more like a funnel than something to serve salad. But where is the stress?

Not for us the expensive kiln dried, flat surfaced boards of the cabinet maker. Instead, most turners use the cheap woods destined for land fill and fire place. Never a mistake is made, only kindling and some of the prettiest kindling ever seen. In fact, what started as fire wood remains as fire wood. No one's livelihood is in danger, no contract has fallen through, no one is hurt. Pressure leaves and peace settles in.

There is of course the stress that may arrive when shavings and dust make their way into the house. However, a nice candlestick, salad bowl, or other gift does much to return to stress free turning.

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•Wood Turning How To, by Darrell
Darrell has sinced written about articles on various topics from Metabolism, Guide Guitar. Darrell Feltmate is a juried wood turner who enjoys making his own tools for turning bowls, vases, ornaments and other pieces. His work is offered at various art galleries and a few craft fairs a year. He offers free turning instruction, tips and techniqu. Darrell's top article generates over 1300 views. to your Favourites.
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