Hi Everyone,
(This has been a difficult day for me--my mother is having some very difficult problems right now and Im not sure how they will be resolved, if at all. Sometimes, when bad news comes my way, it helps to go down and work on wood for a while. So thats what I did earlier in order to get my thoughts focused on my mom. Please keep her in your prayers.)
I was contacted by an old friend of mine last month. Her parents 60th wedding anniversary was in July and she asked me to make them a bowl. That wasnt feasible so I offered to make them a plate instead and so todays posting is about how wooden dishes are made on a lathe and specifically how my friends parents dish is being made.
I purchased a large plank of black ash last month and Ive been making dishes and all sorts of other things with it. Its very thick and strong, and black ash is dense also and so it cuts and finishes very well. Heres a photo of the plank:
Next, I cut out a section of the plank, marked it and cut it into a circle on the bandsaw:
This blank is going to be mounted on the lathe with a faceplate. This screws directly onto the blank of wood with wood screws and then in turn is screwed onto the lathe:
The grain in the wood appears most prominently on the other side of this blank so the bottom of the plate will be turned first on the side in the photo above.
Next, I turned on the lathe and marked the center of this blank and also made marks for a tenon that I will turn so eventually the partially cut dish can be flipped over and re-mounted with the top side of the dish facing out (youll see what I mean in a second).



Now its time to put the metal to the board. Here is a photo of the tools Ill be using. Lathe chisels are long-handled tools made out of heavy steel to help dampen the vibration from cutting. In the photo, the first tool on the left is the basic roughing gouge (fondly named Bob after the father of a good friend of mine) that I use quite a bit for basic roughing out of wood and to flatten surfaces with. The chisel next to that is a 3/8 inch bowl gouge. This tool is used to create concave shapes, like the interior of a bowl or plate. Next to that we have a spear-shaped chisel called a parting tool. This will be used to cut the tenon on the bottom of the plate. Lastly, is a skew chisel, a fearsome looking thing and one of my most used tools. I use this to cut convex shapes and for smoothing. Heres the photo:

Time to begin. I like to turn the periphery first and leave the center intact. This helps to dampen any vibration caused by the spinning wood. Here you can see the edge begin cut and its early shaping:
0 komentar:
Posting Komentar