Walnut is such an interesting wood. So hard, but also brittle that it cuts different than others. That's actually a huge amount of heartwood for a branch. I'm kinda jealous, because my branches have way more sapwood. They smell great either way.
Здравствуй Рустик! Ваши изделия хороши, а работа впечатляет, много подчёрпываю для себя. Я из России и к сожалению не могу прочитать Ваши пояснения в видео, но на 6,53 секунде понял, что на финише Вы покрываете минеральным маслом, которое не кристаллизуется и остаётся всегда жидким, вымывается и приходится часто обновлять покрытие, лучше покрывать растительным маслом, на пример льняным. Спасибо за работу. Чашечка получилась супер, не затейлива и легка в изготовлении, но вся прелесть в том, как Вы её увидели в простой деревяшке.
Love watching this in fast mode!!!! Great job! i’m trying to make my first dough bowl and not doing so well. taking A LOT longer than i thought it would. i know, patience. 🙃
Well done!!! There is something special about building something with your own two hands and seeing the finished product. Keep up the good work. God Bless...
Well Mr. Rigby, 60 years from now , that walnut Bowl will be rare. All tools will be in museums, along with your draw knife. In the future all artists will be creating 3 & 4d or halo graphics designs. Artistry will live on. Oh and the walnut Bowl will sell for a lot more than $400.00. Have a good future.
Actually he is using power tools. Hand tools don't have an electric cord. People do still carve with hand (non electric) tools . Needless to say it does take a whole lot longer. It is a nice bowl Goose. Well done!
Mix some of the "fine" saw dust (From the bowl) with the epoxy, it will blend with your bowl and will look better, not as shiny as plain epoxy. Don't stop at 400, you've just got a good start. Sand to 1200, wet between sanding coats after 600, then use a food safe Walnut oil. Your finish will never really ever get hard. After oiling with the Walnut oil, let it sit for a couple of days and then sand with 1500. Please, throw away that chain saw cutter wheel, if you keep using it, it will hurt you at some point, it's just a matter of time. It'll remove a lot of wood, but it is a very dangerous cutter, please stop using it. Keep using the second one, much safer, much more control. I like the ones with holes in them, you can see what you are doing. You're making a bowl, 99.5% of all bowls have a flat spot on them. I know it's hard to do when you're carving and especially when you're sanding, but keep the bottom flat. Your bowl is a bit rocky. Nice job, keep at it, with each one you will get better and better.
Thank you. I’m not sure what you mean by a walnut hood, but the only problem with not finishing wood is that it leaves the pores open and the wood is more susceptible to absorbing moisture from environment around it and also dirt and stuff can get into it. It’s always best to put some sort of finish on it. To keep it natural color just use a simple oil based finish like linseed oil, odies oil or something similar. Just keep in mind wood should always be “sealed” with something.
@@GooseRustic I have one of those myself and have used it often. I hear more and more that it is not a good choice because the chains do break and literally fly off. I have been using saburrtooth grinder attachments that work even better.
Ever seen one of those chinese angle grinder/chainsaw blades come apart? Impressive. Get an abrasive and save the hand if you slip. Gets you to gouge, scoop and hook knife just as fast and way safer. Way smoother too.
Lovely bowl. I prefer hand tools but it is interesting to see power tools being used for the same task. BTW why did you use mineral oil, rather than a drying oil such as linseed, walnut or tung oil?
+Tony Y Thanks Tony. I've done a couple spoons with just hand tools, I give you guys a lot of credit, that takes some patience. As for the oil, I had the mineral oil on hand so I used it, that's pretty much it.
Because if you use this bowl for making dough or food uses, best to stick with wax or mineral oil, not tung. Linseed smells really bad due to additives. Walnut oil is pricey. Flaxseed oil is good but also pricey. Flaxseed is the edible equivalent of linseed oil, same plant.
William Branham Thanks, The chainsaw chain on the grinder has held up quite well. I've done a couple of these bowls as well as a large hickory and it's still working great.
Молодец дядька, у меня есть полено абрикосины( текстура -- пальчики оближешь) сейчас, только отойду от праздника ,и, поехал творить!( привет Белоруссии, сам из Гомеля родом).
I don't like this wood carving. Because it dose not have any of the talent that reg. wood Turner's have. That use there minds more than just get a pice of wood and a router and start diging out the wood.
Walnut is such an interesting wood. So hard, but also brittle that it cuts different than others. That's actually a huge amount of heartwood for a branch. I'm kinda jealous, because my branches have way more sapwood. They smell great either way.
That is one beautiful bowl!! Excellent job on the carving and on the finish!!! Truly a beauty to look at!!!!
Thank you very much!!
Здравствуй Рустик! Ваши изделия хороши, а работа впечатляет, много подчёрпываю для себя. Я из России и к сожалению не могу прочитать Ваши пояснения в видео, но на 6,53 секунде понял, что на финише Вы покрываете минеральным маслом, которое не кристаллизуется и остаётся всегда жидким, вымывается и приходится часто обновлять покрытие, лучше покрывать растительным маслом, на пример льняным. Спасибо за работу. Чашечка получилась супер, не затейлива и легка в изготовлении, но вся прелесть в том, как Вы её увидели в простой деревяшке.
Beautiful work! But do be careful with that Lancelot😊
Nice work, Rustic! It shows an approach to problems I have been having. I will check out your other videos!
Love watching this in fast mode!!!! Great job! i’m trying to make my first dough bowl and not doing so well. taking A LOT longer than i thought it would. i know, patience. 🙃
The end result is a beat thing. Nice work.
Well done!!! There is something special about building something with your own two hands and seeing the finished product. Keep up the good work. God Bless...
Wow awesome job man! Thanks for sharing👌👍
It looks even better than made on a lathe !!
Well Mr. Rigby, 60 years from now , that walnut Bowl will be rare. All tools will be in museums, along with your draw knife. In the future all artists will be creating 3 & 4d or halo graphics designs. Artistry will live on. Oh and the walnut Bowl will sell for a lot more than $400.00. Have a good future.
What a fabulous work of art. Well done
Excelentes trabajos,gracias por compartir.admiro su pacion por lo que hácen.
Excellent work mate!
Good work my friend!
Very clever ////nice to know it is possible to do this kind of amazing bowl with only hand tools.
Actually he is using power tools. Hand tools don't have an electric cord. People do still carve with hand (non electric) tools . Needless to say it does take a whole lot longer. It is a nice bowl Goose. Well done!
I'd like to see your work in normal mode ! I like the end results, very nice !
wow... what you did with the string was a great little trick
Mix some of the "fine" saw dust (From the bowl) with the epoxy, it will blend with your bowl and will look better, not as shiny as plain epoxy. Don't stop at 400, you've just got a good start. Sand to 1200, wet between sanding coats after 600, then use a food safe Walnut oil. Your finish will never really ever get hard. After oiling with the Walnut oil, let it sit for a couple of days and then sand with 1500.
Please, throw away that chain saw cutter wheel, if you keep using it, it will hurt you at some point, it's just a matter of time. It'll remove a lot of wood, but it is a very dangerous cutter, please stop using it. Keep using the second one, much safer, much more control. I like the ones with holes in them, you can see what you are doing. You're making a bowl, 99.5% of all bowls have a flat spot on them. I know it's hard to do when you're carving and especially when you're sanding, but keep the bottom flat. Your bowl is a bit rocky.
Nice job, keep at it, with each one you will get better and better.
I really like how this bowl came out
Thank you!
Beautiful bowl.
Delicious. Looking like a duckbill platypus when inverted 👌
Gonna have to try the blow dryer trick, nice bowl 👍
Wonderful and amazing.
my compliment
A very nice bowl there, well done great job .
Hi, can I use part of your video to my compilation of the most interesting woodworking projects ?
Just throw me some credit on the clip 👍
@@GooseRustic thank you
Awesome video!!
Excellent work!
Great job
Very Nice! Can you tell me- I made a walnut hood- I love the color of the natural wood without any finish. Is this dangerous?
Thank you. I’m not sure what you mean by a walnut hood, but the only problem with not finishing wood is that it leaves the pores open and the wood is more susceptible to absorbing moisture from environment around it and also dirt and stuff can get into it. It’s always best to put some sort of finish on it. To keep it natural color just use a simple oil based finish like linseed oil, odies oil or something similar. Just keep in mind wood should always be “sealed” with something.
sorry what is the tool your using to carve majority of the wood out with?
Thanks for watching, that tool is the lancelot attachment for an angle grinder. I got it from katools.com.
@@GooseRustic I have one of those myself and have used it often. I hear more and more that it is not a good choice because the chains do break and literally fly off. I have been using saburrtooth grinder attachments that work even better.
That is one nice bowl, now if I only had some walnut.
I have dead walnut trees at my house, wish I could sent you some
wunderbar gratulation
Ever seen one of those chinese angle grinder/chainsaw blades come apart? Impressive. Get an abrasive and save the hand if you slip. Gets you to gouge, scoop and hook knife just as fast and way safer. Way smoother too.
Rick Price just bought one of those chainsaw blades for the angle grinder.. what are you saying is a good replacement for it? Very interested. Thanks
Robert Chaparro - good for a quick ride to the ER. Hope you keep your fjngers. Watch the Stump Nubs video on it. He almost lost his.
Nice job on the bowl. It came out beautiful. Did you do this on a green wood or did you let it dry first?
Hey thanks Lloyd. The branches I used had been sitting around for a few months before I used them so they were kind of dry.
Beautiful. I enjoyed the whole video. Next door neighbor are cutting their tree's down and I'm having all the wood. Can't wait to make this bowl.
There’s nothing like free wood!
Lovely bowl. I prefer hand tools but it is interesting to see power tools being used for the same task. BTW why did you use mineral oil, rather than a drying oil such as linseed, walnut or tung oil?
+Tony Y
Thanks Tony. I've done a couple spoons with just hand tools, I give you guys a lot of credit, that takes some patience. As for the oil, I had the mineral oil on hand so I used it, that's pretty much it.
Because if you use this bowl for making dough or food uses, best to stick with wax or mineral oil, not tung. Linseed smells really bad due to additives. Walnut oil is pricey. Flaxseed oil is good but also pricey. Flaxseed is the edible equivalent of linseed oil, same plant.
Nice job. When setting upside down on the counter it looks like a two headed duck. Do you find the chain saw type blades hold up well?
William Branham Thanks, The chainsaw chain on the grinder has held up quite well. I've done a couple of these bowls as well as a large hickory and it's still working great.
Very nice
Beautiful, but small 🤷
The platypus shaped bowl.
手工一流 !👍
, good job ,bro
Splendido
Nice
very nice
You could put your weed in there
🤩🤩🤩👍👍👏👏👏
😁😁🙏
Ahh....the Lancelot blade. Maimer of woodworkers and carvers everywhere. VERY dangerous tool.
Very dangerous!! I’m on edge every time I use it.
Bello
lot of work for a tiny bowl- congrats
The tiny bowl isn’t the only thing I got out of the project 😉. What you learn from doing the little things ultimately helps you on the bigger things.
@@GooseRustic beauty is not correlated with the size of the object, I didn't mean to mock your effort
No worries, I didn’t take it as mocking. My response was more light hearted than it came across in text form. Just a little friendly banter.
👍👍👍👍😊
Decoración con palma
mantab
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐🌼
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐🌼🌸
Too small for all the work its very pretty but would not be big enough for me. I could eat all the biscuits it would hold.
Think of it as "portion control", then.
Hermosa ❤️
What's your point
🇧🇾Тожэ ищеш коментарий на русском?😁 ставь 👍
Молодец дядька, у меня есть полено абрикосины( текстура -- пальчики оближешь) сейчас, только отойду от праздника ,и, поехал творить!( привет Белоруссии, сам из Гомеля родом).
Здарова!
Молоток! Так держать!
I don't like this wood carving. Because it dose not have any of the talent that reg. wood Turner's have. That use there minds more than just get a pice of wood and a router and start diging out the wood.
I disagree. Why don't you make one this way and see for yourself.
Very nice