CandiCame
Rocket Grunt
- Joined
- Apr 12, 2011
- Posts
- 26,765
Oooh those are gorgeous.
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those bowls are fabulous - the grain/patterning *sigh* beeyootifuls
Thats too much work
The wood is "spalted" which means it started to rot before it was dried and stabilized. The streaking is from fungus coloring the wood. Some turners create their own spalted bowl blanks by piling compost on one end of the log slice.
I've worked with spalted wood a few times but I'm slightly allergic to molds and the aftereffects aren't pleasant. I gave up eventually.
Somewhere hidden in one of my rat holes full of junk is a painting I did a couple of decades ago. I'm trying to find it but haven't been successful so far.
those bowls are fabulous - the grain/patterning *sigh* beeyootifuls
Oooh those are gorgeous.
Think of it this way, it's just a puzzle with a bunch of pieces you have to put together. The fun part is you get to make the pieces.
That's really all there is to it.
Would love to learn but I don't have that talent.
If you and Chilly were closer, I would be placing orders.
The bookcase in 133 wouldn't really be that hard to do. Most of the pieces are available in big box stores including the top trim. It would be time consuming to cut and fit, but not difficult. Sanding, staining and finishing would be the most trying.
I've done a similar cabinet/dresser out of oak plywood and trim. Never fully finished it and couldn't get the 8 or 9 drawers lined up quite right but it's in use and works as expected. Piled with stuff now, so no pictures.
The wood is "spalted" which means it started to rot before it was dried and stabilized. The streaking is from fungus coloring the wood. Some turners create their own spalted bowl blanks by piling compost on one end of the log slice.
I've worked with spalted wood a few times but I'm slightly allergic to molds and the aftereffects aren't pleasant. I gave up eventually.
Somewhere hidden in one of my rat holes full of junk is a painting I did a couple of decades ago. I'm trying to find it but haven't been successful so far.
May have been 10 years, but I've learned something on lit again. So you infect the wood with mould to allow colour I'm assuming in the most recent rings first, then guess it done and finally kill it off?
You let it sit on the ground and naturally rot.
My bowls were from a log pile that sat for a couple years before we got around to cutting them into firewood.
The beech they were made from went really quick. The dark circle is the centre that hasn't rotted yet.
When the wood dries the mould dies and the rotting stops.
Trick is to catch it at the right time before it falls apart
Do you let them sit in full rounds, or was it originally a length log you never trimmed up?
Full logs
If you get it right you can cut some pretty neat boards for table tops and such
Just stuff you need to keep an eye out for
Its not that far, and clean your box girl...that 2 stroke oil is plugging things up
Cabinet would be the same basic steps as this side table I made from stock boards and shelf trim, but with a lot more material, time and detailing.
(Crappy cell phone picture and lighting from Sun glare through the window)
Finished fixing my car. Who said it's not a girly thing?