I saw it mentioned in the most recent AAW magazine article.
I stand correctedDonna, Washington actually (Gig Harbor), a not long drive from here.
Folk have dropped by to pickup sample packs and found them to be reasonably friendly folk. I know Dave Schweitzer has dropped by.
Ralph
My limited experience with the starter pack, you carve or work the piece while 'dry'. Then soak it in water for about an hour. Take it out, and bend/shape it using forms, clamps or anything you can find to keep it in that shape while drying. Once the wood is dry, it will retain that shape.What do you need to do to bend the wood (heat, steam, soak, just bend it, something else)? Once bent does it stay bent or does it require something to stabilize it?
If I understand correctly, then, the compression is in line with the wood fibers, from top of the tree to the stump. This makes sense as the goal is to make an accordion of the fibers to allow for bending. It's also very interesting because the physical properties of wood supposedly mean it doesn't compress hardly at all in this direction. Do you know how much they are able to shorten the wood fibers under pressure? If it's a lot, I may need to go add a couple more posts to hold up the second floor of my garageThe wood has been crushed under heat and pressure. When they release the pressure the wood only expands to about 80 percent of it's original length so the cells overlap.
If I understand correctly, then, the compression is in line with the wood fibers, from top of the tree to the stump. This makes sense as the goal is to make an accordion of the fibers to allow for bending. It's also very interesting because the physical properties of wood supposedly mean it doesn't compress hardly at all in this direction. Do you know how much they are able to shorten the wood fibers under pressure? If it's a lot, I may need to go add a couple more posts to hold up the second floor of my garage![]()