What would happen if one turned a piece of wet, green wood to its final shape, then left it to dry? Accepting the normal warpage as a desired effect, doing nothing more than sanding and applying finish? Is that an acceptable technique?
Cracking is what I thought might be a problem.the risk is that in addition to warping they might crack...badly
Sure. it is very often done regularly with "natural edge" bowls so that you have bark (or the surface that had bark on it) as the natural wavy rim - almost always turned green and allowed to warp - bottoms I'd suggest having a raised bead so once dry you can cut away parts of it to give it 3 "feet" to stand on and they are less likely to wobble... If you turn them thin enough they'll often warp without cracking (since the tinner wood will "bend" rather than "break" much like the difference between 1/8" plywood and 1/2" plywood, for example... )What would happen if one turned a piece of wet, green wood to its final shape, then left it to dry? Accepting the normal warpage as a desired effect, doing nothing more than sanding and applying finish? Is that an acceptable technique?
Absolutely! Couple of things to keep in mind if you decide to turn green:What would happen if one turned a piece of wet, green wood to its final shape, then left it to dry? Accepting the normal warpage as a desired effect, doing nothing more than sanding and applying finish? Is that an acceptable technique?
All of these were turned from a tree cut days before. Not a crack in the batch. In the 38 years of turning, the only time I have twice turned is some cremation urns so I could get a round hole for a threaded insert. ALL the other work is once turned green wood. You must consider species, drying techniques and even and identical wall and base thickness. The stack of salad bowls are 18” in diameter.the risk is that in addition to warping they might crack...badly
Please excuse me Monte but I can't resist commenting when someone says "be sure not to leave the pith in".Be sure not to leave the pith in the blank as that is where it will normally crack from when drying. I tend to dry these in a shop microwave to speed along the process.
This is a northern red oak crotch bowl with 3 piths.

I just watched a couple of your YouTube videos. Glad to see you here! And thanks for the info.I once turn all of my bowls, plates and platters. I just love the warped shapes. I do use a recess on them. My favorite is Pacific Madrone because it warps in totally unpredictable ways. I have found that with it, I need spring harvested trees, which around here is March through May, but later than that, I get more cracking. I turn the walls to about 1/4 inch thick. I do round over the rims. I use the LDD soak, which is kind of messy, but it makes the bowls easier to sand out. LDD is liquid dish washing soap and water in equal parts, soak for 24 hours or more, rinse off, wrap stretch film around the rim (big box stores in "moving" supplies", and let it dry. Some do sand them wet, but it seems to take more time. They are dry in a week at most. I let them sit on the concrete floor of the shop for a day or 5, then up on wire racks to finish. It takes at most a week for it to finish moving and drying. It REALLY helps to have a lathe with 15 or ro rpm speed for sanding. Any faster and you can't keep the abrasives on the wood as it spins. I had my Robust slowed down to that speed range, my Vicmark 240 already goes that slow. Final wall thickness can vary a bit from wood to wood. Walnut and maple, mostly big leaf out here can be 3/8 inch thick. I would not leave them thicker. Oh, I power sand too, just more "efficient", and my "articulated arm for sanding", a video I did, is a must because the arm takes all the weight of the sander off so you can actually spin the piece by one hand and hold the drill on the sanding arm. You get a lot of comments about why is it so out of round and after you explain it, many go "oh, it so organic"!
robo hippy
I saw your video on using dish soap and how you wrap it in plastic.I once turn all of my bowls, plates and platters. I just love the warped shapes. I do use a recess on them. My favorite is Pacific Madrone because it warps in totally unpredictable ways. I have found that with it, I need spring harvested trees, which around here is March through May, but later than that, I get more cracking. I turn the walls to about 1/4 inch thick. I do round over the rims. I use the LDD soak, which is kind of messy, but it makes the bowls easier to sand out. LDD is liquid dish washing soap and water in equal parts, soak for 24 hours or more, rinse off, wrap stretch film around the rim (big box stores in "moving" supplies", and let it dry. Some do sand them wet, but it seems to take more time. They are dry in a week at most. I let them sit on the concrete floor of the shop for a day or 5, then up on wire racks to finish. It takes at most a week for it to finish moving and drying. It REALLY helps to have a lathe with 15 or ro rpm speed for sanding. Any faster and you can't keep the abrasives on the wood as it spins. I had my Robust slowed down to that speed range, my Vicmark 240 already goes that slow. Final wall thickness can vary a bit from wood to wood. Walnut and maple, mostly big leaf out here can be 3/8 inch thick. I would not leave them thicker. Oh, I power sand too, just more "efficient", and my "articulated arm for sanding", a video I did, is a must because the arm takes all the weight of the sander off so you can actually spin the piece by one hand and hold the drill on the sanding arm. You get a lot of comments about why is it so out of round and after you explain it, many go "oh, it so organic"!
robo hippy