Today were going to begin a bowl out of black walnut and this bowl is going to be a gift to a very special friend of mine and heres the story about my friend Holly and this particular piece of wood:
I have a wonderful friend named Holly who lives out on a farm with her family and a whole bunch of very friendly chickens in Afton, Minnesota. Several years ago during a strong wind and rain storm a large black walnut tree that was growing on her property, roots gave way and the tree came down. Knowing that I turn wood, Holly told me about the tree and offered to give me the trunk from the tree and so my youngest son and I went out to Afton to get it. As it came down in a rainstorm it was full of water and so it was very, very heavy. I cut the trunk into sections and then split one of the sections in half and made bowl blanks out of them. I tried turning a bowl from one of the blanks but it was just too wet for turning and so I treated the cut ends with Anchorseal and stacked them away.
Fast forward almost 2 years-the blanks are much, much lighter in weight, signifying that the wood is much dryer and ready to turn. I took a portion of one of the blanks and made a small flower vase several weeks ago (and you can see this on the blog). The wood was dry and the vase came out absolutely beautifully. Time to make Hollys bowl and take it to her and the chickens.
Discussion and Plans
I am going to do this project in slow, easy stages as I think this is a good way to illustrate this project. So my first posting today will be about getting the blank ready to be mounted on the lathe and Im also going to show the blank mounted on the lathe at the end of this posting. Subsequent posts will show how the blank is shaped and hollowed out and lastly how it will be finished.
Here we go:
Here is a photo of the bowl blank. Its a big thing, about 6 /12 inches at its deepest and about 9 inches wide and 11 inches long. In order to turn this on my lathe, its going to have to be cut down considerably. So the first thing I did was to find the center of the flat side of the blank. This will eventually be the top of the bowl and since the blank is deep and thick, I can screw down a large faceplate and use long heavy wood screws to do that with:

This photo shows the blank with the center marked out:










Now before I begin turning this there is one last thing to do and that is to cut away a small section of tree bark were the tailstock is inserted. This will let me screw the tailstock firmly into solid wood instead of the bark, which is spongy and crumbly. Never screw anything into bark:

While I was working, UPS delivered a wood blank from Wood Turning Blanks 4U in Braedon, Florida. This is a wonderful source of turning wood and Steve and Diane, the couple who operate this, do a superb job of processing wood from trees that have fallen in storms or had to be removed for some reason. This keeps these marvelous sources of turning wood from either being ground up for mulch or dumped in a field somewhere. You can check our their site at: http://www.woodturningblanks4u.com/. I wish they would move to Minnesota.
Anyway, this blank is going to be the basis of another future project that well do together. This is silky oak:

VW
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 comments:
Post a Comment