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Bradford pear source

Very prone to cracking , just like any fruit wood, remove pith ,cut over size and seal right away. I love Turning Bradford pear especially for anything that has a lot of detail, like basket illusion pieces, cuts well, polishes easily and has pleasant pinkish/ reddish brown color when dry.
 
Not sure what you are saying about removing the pith. These are small branches and logs up to about 16-18 inches diameter.
 
Not sure what you are saying about removing the pith. These are small branches and logs up to about 16-18 inches diameter.
The pith is the heart /center stem going all the way up the tree, its the first area that cracks will develop from . You should also try and select logs with less branches coming out as the branch areas will be prone to cracking as well , below is a cut diagram , the pith / heart gets thrown away and the rest gets used 1775433729548.png
 
The pith is the heart /center stem going all the way up the tree, its the first area that cracks will develop from . You should also try and select logs with less branches coming out as the branch areas will be prone to cracking as well , below is a cut diagram , the pith / heart gets thrown away and the rest gets used View attachment 86952
Great picture.
 
Familiar with the pith. Just wondering that you were suggesting. As Alan stated, thanks for the picture. Any way to copy it for future reference? Next is to find a place to store the wood.
 
John - if using a Windows computer just Right Click on the photo and save it. On an iPad just press on it and save to photos. I have maintained a folder on my computer of wood turning web finds for about 25 years. Now have more than 3 GB in 80 folders of various categories. I export from my iPad to the computer by emailing to myself.
 
Bradford Pear turns very well, it also finished very well… color is nice… you do have to be careful with bark inclusions that may be weak when you can avoid those…
 

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