Richard Raffan turning beads-for-beginners from scrap wood.

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  • Опубликовано: 22 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 62

  • @clarencegreen3071
    @clarencegreen3071 10 месяцев назад

    I've been turning almost 20 years. Richard, I owe you a lot because, via your books, you got me started. Even though I'd been a woodworker forever, I knew nothing about turning. I didn't even know what I didn't know, but isn't that always how it is? Thank you, Sir!

  • @ValioMadre7
    @ValioMadre7 Год назад +8

    My favorite turner, without a doubt. Can't go wrong watching & studying Richard Raffan's videos & books. They continue to help me big time. Thanks,

  • @mirandareisdorf4665
    @mirandareisdorf4665 11 дней назад

    This man has become ungovernable

  • @marcusfairly2688
    @marcusfairly2688 Год назад

    My granddaughter loved the first dozen beads. I think this will an ideal warm up exercise for a while.

  • @pouldes
    @pouldes Год назад

    Inspired me again . Tagua nuts with African Blackwood. Please keep them coming. Thank you Richard

  • @observersnt
    @observersnt Год назад

    Simple but excellent advice. Masterful workmanship that exudes old school thoroughness.
    Very good filming, no gimmicks, stupidity or background music
    Thank you

  • @dianadougherty7187
    @dianadougherty7187 Год назад +1

    Thanks Richard. I so look forward to your videos. I hope you never run out of ideas.

  • @michaelquataert
    @michaelquataert Год назад +1

    This is just WAY too much fun! Thanks for the inspiration, Richard.

  • @elgardog
    @elgardog Год назад

    As usual a great video for beginners Richard, I was guilty of jumping in at the deep end, as you mentioned in one of your previous videos. Thank you for your time spent making these great videos.
    Dave UK

  • @dtork47
    @dtork47 Год назад

    Great video and practice idea, gonna save even more scraps now! Thanks again Richard.

  • @NathanNostaw
    @NathanNostaw Год назад +2

    So good to have found a turner who knows how to use a gouge correctly and how to best use cutting edges. I haven't turned in years and am picking heaps of little tips from these videos.

  • @leftymcshea6876
    @leftymcshea6876 Год назад

    DIY #2 maul wooden drive center! Love this stuff Richard! Please keep em coming. 👍

  • @peterkelly8953
    @peterkelly8953 Год назад

    Thanks Richard. This is VERY helpful

  • @tomcoker9882
    @tomcoker9882 Год назад +1

    Great idea on how to use up all those little cut offs that are just too nice of wood to throw away, other tan gluing them up into other larger chunks to make weird looking turnings. Thanks again Richard for another informative video. Cheers, Tom

    • @richjones5432
      @richjones5432 Год назад

      Lovely to hear that I am not the only one with a "Bag for Life" half full of bits that are too beautiful to throw out. Wood turners disease stage 1 ????

  • @ValentinaFaussone
    @ValentinaFaussone Год назад

    This is exactly what I was looking for: a skill building exercise for me as a beginner.
    Thank you a lot for posting it. I would love more videos with the same purpose.

  • @brianhawes3115
    @brianhawes3115 Год назад

    You had mentioned this wiles cutting up a log and I got home early and “ practiced” this with the skew, and low and behold after eight or so the run backs were gone and I could finally concentrate on the horizon, thanks a bunch for your lessons

  • @BackBeat52
    @BackBeat52 8 месяцев назад

    This is amazing! Thank you so much! This helps out with getting over fears of messing up and things like that. I'm so excited to try this out!

  • @bradbyers7505
    @bradbyers7505 Год назад

    Thanks for the demonstration. When I was new to turning I heard stories of production turners who left their lathes running just as you did. Now I get it! Thanks again.

  • @glencrandall7051
    @glencrandall7051 Год назад

    Those certainly were quick and easy. As simple or as complex as you choose to make. Thank you for sharing. Have a great day and stay safe.😀😀

  • @anaarias1627
    @anaarias1627 Год назад

    Hi, thank you for sharing. Great way of doing something in a different way. So awesome 💯😎

  • @dannyboy9784
    @dannyboy9784 Год назад +2

    Great tip Richard for the new turners to practice not to put to much pressure on the tool, very informative real live advice.

  • @robandsharonseddon-smith5216
    @robandsharonseddon-smith5216 Год назад

    Superb. Such a simple idea. Thank you for these videos. Please keep them coming.

  • @johnnyb95678
    @johnnyb95678 Год назад

    Richard, another great video that shows we don't need a lot of stuff to be able to practice and improve our skills. Plus, this gives me some more great ideas on stuff to make out of scraps. I also really appreciate to tip on making my own drive center. Thank you!

  • @morningsong7885
    @morningsong7885 Год назад +1

    Or for a personalised beaded door curtain, that would look terrific, I think, and provide for ample exercise 👍🏻 Another great piece of advice, thank you Mr. Richard 🙏🏻☺️

  • @mirco.0414
    @mirco.0414 Год назад

    Great video again!Thanks a lot! Very nice to see how easy pratice can be.

  • @jontoolman
    @jontoolman Год назад

    Thank yougor sharing. Always very informative!

  • @jackthompson5092
    @jackthompson5092 Год назад

    Great lesson Richard.

  • @geraldguyette470
    @geraldguyette470 Год назад

    Richard , thanks for the idea , I saw something like this awhile ago and you brought it back to mind . I think I will get some blanks and begin . gooday

  • @jamescarter8813
    @jamescarter8813 Год назад

    This is a great skill building project that I will use when I teach. The wood drive chuck is always a great idea to make anything cheap. If any U.S. people are wanting a metal drive Crafts Supply USA has one the Apprentices Dead Center

  • @pointer2null
    @pointer2null Год назад

    Excellent idea - I've got a friend who wants to learn woodturning. Last time we made a mushroom and a small bowl from firewood. They were a little course to say the least, but it was just a 'play' to see what turning was like. She wants to come again for another evening on the lathe and I've been trying to think of what to do which will still be fun but more 'educational' and still simple enough for someone who's on their second time at the lathe. (Why a mushroom - because it's good fun, easy to do and can be made from any old 'stick')

  • @DiemenDesign
    @DiemenDesign Год назад

    Nice short video, good idea to use up scraps, and as you said, tool practise.

  • @josephpotterf9459
    @josephpotterf9459 Год назад

    Thanks Richard always a good lesson .

  • @tagi3d
    @tagi3d Год назад

    Great way to teach my kids, thanks!

  • @joeppppppppp
    @joeppppppppp Год назад

    6:25 love these kind of tricks

  • @nathanielmoeller6828
    @nathanielmoeller6828 10 месяцев назад

    This is amazing! Thank you!

  • @NathanNostaw
    @NathanNostaw Год назад

    Just this arvo I was messing around with a clunky collet chuck to try turning small parts similar to beads (without a center bore). But tapping the stock into the spindle Morse taper is exactly what I need to do. Cheers.

  • @im4dabirds
    @im4dabirds Год назад

    thank you

  • @mickwall8
    @mickwall8 Год назад

    Excellent! I'd suppose that would work well for light pulls too... Ah yes, should have watched to the end first.....

    • @RichardRaffanwoodturning
      @RichardRaffanwoodturning  Год назад

      When I started turning I sold a lot of light pulls with blanks mounted in a cup chuck. ruclips.net/video/D3znG7-ksIw/видео.html

  • @peterheseltine7292
    @peterheseltine7292 Год назад

    brilliant

  • @tallerpinocho
    @tallerpinocho Год назад

    very recomended for begginers. Its easy and fun. ----- Mr. Raffan I supose you have a lot of suggestions and ideas for videos.... Please can you add to the list "working with very hard woods". Beads, finials, any piece you considered, but will be very interesting a bit of information about how you treat this works. Thanks and regards form Spain.

    • @RichardRaffanwoodturning
      @RichardRaffanwoodturning  Год назад

      Woods that take the edge off a tool often contain silica or dust particles. When I turned a lot of teak, some took the edge off the tool in a minute and I never turned the grinder off, whereas more usually an edge woul last much of the day. I soon noticed that the 'hard' teak glistened, whilst the easy to work boards didn't. I point out a silica seam in the maple log to blanks video ruclips.net/video/P87WTDVhJfk/видео.html.

    • @tallerpinocho
      @tallerpinocho Год назад

      @@RichardRaffanwoodturning thanks a lot!!

  • @LewisKauffman
    @LewisKauffman Год назад

    Thanks!

  • @robhoward9504
    @robhoward9504 Год назад

    Very nice, where do we send requests on what to turn for the next lesson?

  • @harveyalison34
    @harveyalison34 Год назад

    Many thanks Richard, great simple project 😊 Do you have any tips for turning small spheres without holes eg for board games?

    • @RichardRaffanwoodturning
      @RichardRaffanwoodturning  Год назад +1

      Size a cylinder projecting about 150mm (6-in) from the chuck and do them freehand using either gouge or skew chisel. You soon get good at it. Getting them exactly the same same size is a different matter.

    • @harveyalison34
      @harveyalison34 Год назад

      @@RichardRaffanwoodturning Thanks Richard, I’ll give that way a go. I do need to make 32 the same size for a current project, but as you say, practice makes perfect! I may have a few hundred ´spares’ by this time next week 😂

  • @boazjoe1
    @boazjoe1 Год назад

    Catch sounds like alien lasers

  • @puritanbob
    @puritanbob Месяц назад

    Since I am a beginner it would be nice to learn what that tool is called and what its features are before launching into using it.

    • @RichardRaffanwoodturning
      @RichardRaffanwoodturning  Месяц назад

      I do tell you what the tools are called. At 1:20 I tell you I'm using a little gouge. At about 3:56 I name and show you the skew chisel. You might find my Essential Turning Tools video helpful ruclips.net/video/qAz1FfAtqmE/видео.html

  • @outlandishprofessor
    @outlandishprofessor Год назад

    Great idea for practice and for a use for "scraps." Question: Who manufactures that cone drive center?
    Thanks!

    • @RichardRaffanwoodturning
      @RichardRaffanwoodturning  Год назад

      They should be available from anyone selling or manufacturing metal or woodworking lathes. I can't remember where I got mine.

    • @ericvalko6095
      @ericvalko6095 Год назад

      I typed MT1 drive center into Amazon. Scroll a bit and you will find it.

  • @burnleyize
    @burnleyize Год назад +4

    Well, that’s pretty good, but for folks like me, I have learned to enjoy square “ beads” around a neck.

  • @Cigokar
    @Cigokar Год назад

    Great tips, but the second wood 'squeal' with no audio touch ups and high fidelity headphones is enough for me to stop the video right there. Ear's still ringing

  • @robandsharonseddon-smith5216
    @robandsharonseddon-smith5216 Год назад

    Thanks!