Woodturning - BEST WORKING WOOD???
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- Опубликовано: 18 сен 2024
- This was such a joy to turn, although quite hard but with proper tool tehnique it doesn't need sanding....
Just Beautiful.
Enjoy
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Harvey Europe
www.harveywood...
Harvey USA
harveymachiner...
Harvey Turbo T-40 Europe
www.harveywood...
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KLINGSPOR CROATIA - www.klingspor.hr/
CLOTH BACK SANDPAPER - www.klingspor....
PAPERBACK SANDPAPER - www.klingspor....
SANDING PAD - www.klingspor....
SCOTCHBRIDE PAD - www.klingspor....
150mm SANDING DISCS - www.klingspor....
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CRAFT SUPPLY USA WEBSITE
woodturnerscat...
VICMARK VM120 CHUCK
woodturnerscat...
MOFFATT WORK LAMP
woodturnerscat...
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MY LATHE
drechslershop....
STEINERT WEBSITE
drechslershop....
AFFILIATE LINKS.
NEUREITER and WOODCUT tools I use :
M42 BOWL GOUGES - neureiter.idev...
SCRAPERS - neureiter.idev...
CRYOGENIC BOWL GOUGES - neureiter.idev...
WOODCUT PRO CUTTER - neureiter.idev...
WOODCUT PRO ADVANCE - neureiter.idev...
IRONS SHEAR SCRAPER - neureiter.idev...
WOODCUT BOWL SAVER - neureiter.idev...
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GURTOOL TOOLS
Bowl gouge - www.gurtool.cz...
Spindle gouge -www.gurtool.cz...
Calipers - www.gurtool.cz...
Sanding pads - www.gurtool.cz...
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www.tobi.si/en
CBN WHEEL
www.tobi.si/hr...
BENCH GRINDER
www.tobi.si/hr...
DIAMOND FILE
www.tobi.si/hr...
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disclaimer Methods that are shown works great for me and they are not only methods out there, if you find this or any other method not comfortble,please use some other way.
Thank you and enjoy
Very nice gives that autumn feel to it with the colors in it. Never seen it turned befor
Nicely done! Holly is a delightful wood for turning. Thanks for the video. Like the quiet operation of your production lathe.
I really enjoy your videos! Watching you handle scrappers and gouges is truly mesmerizing!
Always very nice to see you meeting the challenges the wood throws at you and overcoming them. Looks beautiful, thanks!
I absolutely need this Tomislav custom scraper, hope you are ok with weather and so on, cheers from Luxembourg 🇱🇺 🇭🇷
Lovely little dish. A lot more character than I’m used to seeing in holly. Love it.
The mark of a true craftsman!
Very nice, all the defects add character to the piece, great information on the band saw. thanks for another great video.
Holly can have a nice white color or some green streaks as well. It is supposedly by how it was dried but i have just let it air dry on the pieces I had. I hated how much I paid for a good faceshield about 15 years ago since it cost over 50$ and I'm a cheapskate. That changed when I turned a big piece of holly as a spindle and an unseen limb piece that wood overgrew flew out and hit me right at where my nose would have been. I stopped complaining about the price )
Well done dish and an excellent video. Thank you!
Nice turning, Tomi. Working on a knuckle-buster like that is not as easy as you make it look. Really show your artistic eye and your skill on a lathe.
Beautiful! I really like the natural inclusions being left in place.
I'll have to admit I was lost when you kept cutting and cutting into smaller and smaller pieces but knowing that you know what you are doing I kept watching and of course the project turned out amazing!
I am very impressed with your skill. Thanks for sharing.
Great work Tomi! Cute little dish, I love natural edge and non symmetrical pieces. Cool that you left the bandsaw disection of the log also, you know I love picking your brain as you go along😅
Wow. I'm going to have a look in my off-cut pile now for those smaller bits that may have been discarded. That really is a lovely piece.
Very nice piece. Thanks for sharing
Excellent, just excellent thank you
I think this type of bowl turning is the most exciting 😅 you don’t😮 know were your going or whats coming up next and at the end beauty is in the eye of the beholder 😊 ( and hope someone else likes it enough to buy it ) lovely job Thomo 😊 as you added the oil at 24,30 it looked like rhinos 🦏 face
Best working wood....... I haven't turned them yet, only used em with flat work; but Boxwood or Pear are the best working woods I've used 😁
That grain is really interesting. I was useful seeing you cut the log up first too. A very pretty dish
In South Carolina, we have 2 species of full-size trees, and another native (yaupon holly) that sometimes has some decent size. And, of course, dozens of exotics, st least one of which has naturalized. So a lot to choose from.
As mentioned in these comments, if you want pure white, rough out fresh and carefully dry quickly. Or just apply wood bleach. Most folk don't care.
My own favorites: Bradford pear and elm. Literal tons of the pear around. The sale of new trees has rightfully been banned, but still plenty out there for tree people as they tend to self-destruct. Turns like butter when green, then gets rock-hard and polishes up beautifully. Eventually turns a warm russet color, from a fresh pinkish salmon. Haven't yet found a way to chemically accelerate this process. Might give UV light a shot. Elm, though kinda plain, has the most wonderful texture in a finished bowl.
I'm mostly over bark, but holly does hold bark beautifully for natural-edge bowls. As for crack filling, I've discovered that fine, powdery Scotch snuff works great with CA glue. Something in the snuff acts as a natural accelerator and boom -- instant cure. Though I'm starting to question the longevity of CA in general. Epoxy, also mentioned in these comments, is probably more stable.
Beautiful bowl and excellent video, as we've come to expect.
Very cool piece. Would a make a lovely EDC tray. Keep up the amazing work. 👽
For anyone wondering; Tomi mentions about using the bandsaw the way you're comfy....... Usually we dony cut round stuff in that way. A round object can roll, as the blade spins it goes down into the table, this can catch a round piece and make it rotate. Because the parts we are cuttin are usually not perfectly round, if the blade makes it rotate the new kerf the blade is trying to cut won't match with the old kerf....... This can kink the blade (maybe break it) and can yank the part from your hands and towards the blade.
Ya could have the crotch section facing the blade, this will help to stop the rotation of the part. As Tomi mentions; work the way you're comfy....... I've seen a round part being cut, it rotated and the lad nearly lost a finger, the cut went into the bone in a flash. Be safe lads, listen to your gut....... If you're gut is tellin ya somethin ain't right, then find another way. It could even be chocked up in a vice and cut with a rough handsaw.
Not saying all this to imply Tomi is wrong..... When ya know what you're doin ya hold things a certain way and put pressure in certain places to anticipate what can happen. I just wanted to elaborate a little more on what can happen 😁 Tomi knows what he's doin.
I always use a sled to cut round pieces as I had one catch and break the blade. Luckily no damage to my fingers or to me personally, but now I try to be as safe as possible. It's difficult to grow new fingers!!
@@changefortanzania my background is hand tool flat work....... So all my blanks are chocked in a vice and cut with handsaws. I'm new to lathe work, but fairly versed with the use of machines, and quite proficient with hand work.......... I wouldn't dream of cuttin round stuff on a bandsaw. In a previous job, I was a "safety officer" of sorts, I would teach new employees how to use the machines, large industrial stuff........ I think me not wanting to cut round objects on a bandsaw is a leftover from my previous job, I wouldn't show others how to do that so in turn I wouldn't do it.
My mindset is about limiting risk....... But, honestly; when ya get used to a certain way of workin it becomes second nature to do it that way. There's nothing wrong with what Tomi is doin, when speed matters (as regards a wage) then ya learn fast ways of doin things, and that's what Tomi is showin. For us hobby lads speed is of little concern....... That's why I wanted to elaborate.
To show me lathe experience more; I'm still slightly "afraid" of it (only a 12inch 1hp lathe), and I've only made 4 tools, 2 boxes, and a bowl......... So dony see my words as someone who has time on a lathe, I'm a complete newb in that regard 😂 but, I know saws and other machines fairly well....... Cuttin round stuff can be dangerous to someone who lacks experience. A sled is a decent option, one of many options, as it limits risk 😁
🕶nice piece Tomislav. It’s interesting to see how you design on the fly. Thanks
Holly makes a very nice mock ivory for musical instruments such as pipes.
Thankyou. Lovely piece. I needed to see that kind of piece being made. I have a river near the house and often gather timber that gets washed onto the bank during flooding so mostly well matured having worked it way down the river over the years, just needing died out for a while. Mostly firewood but often look at some of it and wonder how it would turn. I have a bench saw coming in a couple of weeks so will start raiding my log pile for crotch pieces to make into things. It will be into the flooding season soon so I expect to have a lot of stuff to gather up.
Very nice Tomislav Holly will go silvery grey in colour when it gets older.
I have turned lots of Holly - it is a fine wood for turning. Apple is one of my favorites.
A very nice piece Tomislav. CA and Coffee Grounds fixes a lot of problems without trying to hide, but enhances the beauty. It's a shame so much is lost in the cutting to blanks.
I use a lot of coffee and CA and coffee and 5 minute epoxy. Nothing else I've tried looks and finishes as good.
Halving the log while it is green and removing the pith in the process, then sealing helps to eliminate so many splits during drying.
10:46 "Tm tm tm" Nice wood.
I got some holly from a friend. Wondering why it didn't look terribly white, I did some research - apparently to get the perfect white timber you need to kiln dry it immediately after felling or a characteristic fungus turns it to that greying off-white.
Tomislav, how large of a bowl blank are you comfortable turning on your screw chuck. I understand the quality of the wood will be a factor. I am not an aggressive turner like you, but I love to watch you do your magic. I bought me a dedicated worm chuck like you and Richard have and am really enjoying it.
Do you have an online store that I can look at? I really enjoy watching your videos.
Hi again Tomislav, can you please tell me where I can buy one of your signature refiners please?
Stinky wood. Not fun. I turned some green (not dried) elm a while back. It smelled like a portable bathroom at a football game. I managed to turn one bowl but decided the rest of the elm wood that I had cut would be better off far, far away. 😄
I've turned a lot of elm and never noticed the smell. But most of what I turned was quite dry. Elm is very versatile and has nice grain. Might be a different kind of elm?
Daj frende malo na balkanskom jeziku... Nas edukuj, ostali sve znaju
Upvoted by an english speaker.
@@tebscat ooo yeeees 👍