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#1
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In response to a request in rec.crafts.woodturning
This is a picture of a couple of things I did in dogwood. The one on the left was turned green while the other two were turned about a year later. The finish was just tung oil so I attribute the color difference to the difference between wet and somewhat dried. I really liked the one on the left and it was pure luck to catch the grain like I did. The one in the middle had those two bad spots that were totally hidden until I started turning. I finished it more as an exercise in fixing voids and cracks using epoxy with some coloring than anything else. In the end it wasn't all that bad but even though the log had aged a year, it warped while the green one on the left did not at all. This is about the extent of my experience with dogwood and I have little overall experience anyway. Just started two years ago and haven't done a lot the past year due to respiratory problems. I just had a dogwood that needed to be cut down right at the same time I started turning. -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#2
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Scratch Ankle wrote:
In response to a request in rec.crafts.woodturning This is a picture of a couple of things I did in dogwood. The one on the left was turned green while the other two were turned about a year later. The finish was just tung oil so I attribute the color difference to the difference between wet and somewhat dried. I really liked the one on the left and it was pure luck to catch the grain like I did. The one in the middle had those two bad spots that were totally hidden until I started turning. I finished it more as an exercise in fixing voids and cracks using epoxy with some coloring than anything else. In the end it wasn't all that bad but even though the log had aged a year, it warped while the green one on the left did not at all. This is about the extent of my experience with dogwood and I have little overall experience anyway. Just started two years ago and haven't done a lot the past year due to respiratory problems. I just had a dogwood that needed to be cut down right at the same time I started turning. The dogwood here in Georgia does not have prominent growth rings like that. Here is a picture of a bowl I turned from it. -- Gerald Ross Cochran, GA This is precisely the sort of thing that people who like this sort of thing will like. |
#3
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OOPS! For some reason, when I thought dogwood my mind pulled up that
picture and I quit thinking. SWMBO would probably ask when I started thinking but that's neither here nor there. This is Red Bud, not Dogwood. And I only had the one piece in dogwood which looked like Gerald Ross' picture. Well the wood looked like Gerald's -- I really butchered it which is probably why I can't find a picture of it. Seeing Gerald's picture made think about my post and the obvious thing was that there were three turnings there not one. One would think that would be an obviously clue that the picture was not of the one item I turned in dogwood, One would be wrong. So, like Emily Latella from the old Saturday Night Live show always said -- "Never Mind". [signs off shaking his head muttering about how this must be the male equivalent of SWMBO yesterday being given a senior citizens price for coffee] "Scratch Ankle" wrote in message .. . In response to a request in rec.crafts.woodturning This is a picture of a couple of things I did in dogwood. The one on the left was turned green while the other two were turned about a year later. The finish was just tung oil so I attribute the color difference to the difference between wet and somewhat dried. I really liked the one on the left and it was pure luck to catch the grain like I did. The one in the middle had those two bad spots that were totally hidden until I started turning. I finished it more as an exercise in fixing voids and cracks using epoxy with some coloring than anything else. In the end it wasn't all that bad but even though the log had aged a year, it warped while the green one on the left did not at all. This is about the extent of my experience with dogwood and I have little overall experience anyway. Just started two years ago and haven't done a lot the past year due to respiratory problems. I just had a dogwood that needed to be cut down right at the same time I started turning. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#4
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![]() So, like Emily Latella from the old Saturday Night Live show always said -- "Never Mind". [signs off shaking his head muttering about how this must be the male equivalent of SWMBO yesterday being given a senior citizens price for coffee] Good pics and other funny stuff.... Been there, done that... at least I think I have... hmmm, now I wonder....... |
#5
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Well,
whatEVER kind of wood it is, it sure is pretty ![]() K. |
#6
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Thanks. That one on the left was pure luck catching the grain like I did.
I've been quite impressed with the carving you have done. I do a little leather work which includes some tooling. While I do OK in leather, my experience trying to carve wood has not been very good. I'm really impressed with those boxes and they are creating an urge for me to try again. I might just do it. "Kate" wrote in message .. . Well, whatEVER kind of wood it is, it sure is pretty ![]() K. -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#7
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Thank you for your kind words
![]() It seems like my wood kind of tells me what it wants to be, then I just carve off the parts that don't belong. Sometimes I carve off parts that DO belong, then I have to alter the pattern to fix it. Seems to work out on it's own though. I hope to one day develop skills that are good enough to really take pride in it. You should certainly give it a try... it's a lot of fun. When I was very young I did a little leather work. . A three legged stool and a few belts. I enjoyed it but never really got into it as a hobby. Kate "Scratch Ankle" wrote in message .. . Thanks. That one on the left was pure luck catching the grain like I did. I've been quite impressed with the carving you have done. I do a little leather work which includes some tooling. While I do OK in leather, my experience trying to carve wood has not been very good. I'm really impressed with those boxes and they are creating an urge for me to try again. I might just do it. "Kate" wrote in message .. . Well, whatEVER kind of wood it is, it sure is pretty ![]() K. -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
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