Mike would you please take your personal vendetta against the AAW somewhere else.
Not to change the direction of the thread, but this notion above is why, 20 years ago, I stopped my AAW membership. To use a baseball metaphor, I'm a "utility woodturner". Put me in, Coach, I can cover 2nd base for the rest of the game. It was around that time that the AAW journal, in my view, solidified its focus on round shapes that could contain a volume, and increasingly those shapes were becoming a starting point for further off-the-lathe embellishment. Wonderful work, but not my interest.
I turn for art-sake, but I just as much, more, really, turn for turning-sake. When I need or want something round from wood, I find the approprite piece of wood, and shape it to meet the need. And this requires, well, mastery (I'm no master) of all the tools in the drawer. Many years ago a coworker presented to me an antique open display cabinet that was adorned with 20 or so 1-1/2" tall turned pegs- beads, coves, tapers, and tenons. Many were missing. "Can you make replacements?" Yep, and it was one of the most challenging projects I'd ever done, partly because of the deliberate need to NOT make all the replacement pegs the same. The 100 year old original was all hand made turnings, and my replacements had to blend in with all their fine nuances of difference, even though from 3 feet away all the pegs looked the same- none were. The AAW had nothing to offer a turner, new or experienced, to perform work like that. That is where I, the "utility woodturner", had to use all my skills, and all my tools, to successfully complete a task.
No display cabinet to fix up? Make a chess set, all turned surfaces, no saw blades. The pawns alone will open your eyes, test your patience, and exercise your skew and spindle gouge skills. Search back to a turned chess set featured inFine Woodworkingin the 1990s, that's the one I replicated in my early days.
[Edit, this was my chess set pattern source-, Oct 1990 American Woodworker-
If one really wants to master the potential of their tool collection, especially the skew chisel, find a local lace-maker and ask if you can make lace bobbins for them!! Be ready.
Back to the discussion at hand...
In 2022 I moved from Las Vegas to Tennessee. I bought a place with 5 acres, most of it covered in hardwoods. I hadn't done woodworking for 30 years or more, but I knew with all that timber I needed to get back into it. I bought the usual stationary power tools (table saw, bandsaw, planer, etc.) and a Wen lathe because I've always wanted a lathe. What I didn't anticipate how turning would grab me. As it turns out, I have little or no interest in flatwork.Let's answer a question here. What attracted you to woodturning? Please everyone answer.
In 2022 I moved from Las Vegas to Tennessee. I bought a place with 5 acres, most of it covered in hardwoods. I hadn't done woodworking for 30 years or more, but I knew with all that timber I needed to get back into it. I bought the usual stationary power tools (table saw, bandsaw, planer, etc.) and a Wen lathe because I've always wanted a lathe. What I didn't anticipate how turning would grab me. As it turns out, I have little or no interest in flatwork.
Mike would you please take your personal vendetta against the AAW somewhere else.
I started turning after chancing on Peter Child’s book in a library. The combination of being able to make things, an interest in tools and equipment, in design, and understanding the process was and remains attractive to me.
I started this debate for the purpose of changing the AAW so that it better serves the needs of the bulk of its members. The posts of Steve Tiedman and Reed Gray illustrate the failings of the AAW. There’s going to be a new Board and a new editor for American Woodturner. In my last post I suggested how you could make a difference. Not much sign though that anyone is interested.
I agree. I believe there was/is a lot of value in this discussion, but at a certain point the potential for going off the rails outweighs the benefits. I'm going to lock the thread to further replies, something I very rarely do. I also recognize the wealth of knowledge presented here, and encourage anyone coming to this thread after it is locked read through all of the posts. Further discussion can be done so privately.Sounds like it's about time to wrap up this thread before it starts going in circles and causing more anger.