First Acrylic

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Seer

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Joined
Jan 3, 2009
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1,760
Location
Glendale,Arizona
I got this acrylic from Rocklers just could not resist it. Turned so much easier than I thought it would though and I am happy with the result. One side if you look carefully looks like an abstract painting with an eye at the top and the nose and mouth at the bottom, thought it was cool.
Silver with Black on a Sierra Black TI.
 

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hunter-27

Passed Away Aug 14, 2013
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Joined
Oct 17, 2007
Messages
4,608
Location
Chadron, Ne, USA.
Beautifull blank, not sure how I like the "bulging" center in the shaping but who the heck am I to criticize.
 

Sabaharr

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Joined
Mar 7, 2009
Messages
598
Location
Slidell, LA
I have stopped to making nothing but acrylics lately. THey seem to sell fast and are easy to finish. I just can't seem to get a decent finish (one that I will accept) on a piece of wood. I have hundreds of wood blanks accumulated just waiting for a kit, but every time I try one they just don't finish out well. I haven't given up, just concentrating on what I seem to be able to do well and leaving the hard part for when I am better at it. I still do a few wood pens a week, but they are accumulating with unacceptable finishes and rising overhead cost with no return. Looks like I will drown in the acrylic lagoon until I can get my CA to be OK.
Stephen
 

jkeithrussell

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Joined
Oct 20, 2008
Messages
1,277
I have stopped to making nothing but acrylics lately. THey seem to sell fast and are easy to finish. I just can't seem to get a decent finish (one that I will accept) on a piece of wood. I have hundreds of wood blanks accumulated just waiting for a kit, but every time I try one they just don't finish out well. I haven't given up, just concentrating on what I seem to be able to do well and leaving the hard part for when I am better at it. I still do a few wood pens a week, but they are accumulating with unacceptable finishes and rising overhead cost with no return. Looks like I will drown in the acrylic lagoon until I can get my CA to be OK.
Stephen

Try rounding over some common woods -- like walnut, cherry, maple. You can do this between centers and there's no need to drill a hole. Sand them to 600 or so, and practice your CA finish. That way, you don't waste any tubes or pen kits, and you can practice all you want at very little cost. Experiment with different variables -- thin/medium CA, with and without BLO, with/without accelerant, different lathe speeds, etc. I have done that on a great many blanks trying to work through the same problem that you described.

I've come close to giving up wood blanks for the same reason. But acrylics, to me, just don't have the uniqueness and the versatility that you get with wood.
 

nava1uni

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Joined
Mar 30, 2008
Messages
4,936
Location
San Francisco, CA, USA.
Really beautiful pen. I like working with acrylic and its ease in finishing. However, I love working with wood for it's different type of beauty. It has a depth that comes through when finished and what it is like to turn and how it feels underneath my fingers.
 
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