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- Apr 27, 2004
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- Lakeland, Florida
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- www.hockenberywoodturning.com
Al.....Although I haven't been to one of the symposiums (yet.....never say never!), I have seen many videos of the demonstrations there, and on commercial videos, and what is on YouTube. For the most part, these demos are always done with wood especially chosen for the purpose. In real life, we can't always choose wood that is best for a demonstration......usually unseasoned wet, easy turning, and plain grained. I am well aware that it's possible to true a block of wood to round in a single pass, if everything is in favor of that......it's very impressive, but not the same as what some turners face in our own shops.....dry, warped, hard, difficult to turn seasoned roughed bowls. I'd love to be able to walk into one of those demos, and pick the wood they will work with!ko
How do you select your wood? How do you cut it?
I agree Demonstrating turners like to pick the wood they are going to turn for demos both in size and species. They are working under a time constraint so size is important. More often than they like they get a surprise a few minutes into the demo.
Most of the bowl turners I know start with logs or fallen trees. They line up the grain when they cut their blanks. Many refine the grain alignment while roughing. Their roughed out blanks have lined up grain which warps symmetrically. A dried bowl with lined up grain is prettier when finished and whole lot easier to turn than one that has cattywampuss grain. Most experienced turners have more wood than they can ever turn so they choose wood to turn and wood to burn.
I watched Liam's O'neil pick out a 13" diameter dried cherry bowl from the host's pile of dried bowls and used it demonstrate how to return a dried bowl. He looked for balanced grain which makes and easy second turn. He then trued the outside from foot to rim in one pass with his side ground gouge. I still think he is the best turner I have ever seen.
John Jordan has a great tee shirt that says "Life is too short to turn crappy wood"
In "real life"work most of the demonstrating turners select their wood for everything they make.
kelly, I know from your posts you buy most of your blanks and have to work with what you get.
You might consider harvesting some local wood before it goes up the chimney or rots in a land fill.
When I do a demo I like wet wood for sure. No dust, cuts nicely, sprays water to off set the hot lights.
Generally this is the same wood I would use in a finished piece but smaller.
For demos I like 10" diameter bowl blanks and 7" diameter hollow form blanks. I need something I can finish
I rarely turn a piece at home that small but I do generally turn wet wood.
Al
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