Oh, man.... That is TOTALLY cool!!!!
How did you make your 1/4 x 1/4 pieces. I really want to try that one.
This one will be for sell one person can only have so many peppermillsWowsa John, what an amazingly beautiful Pepper Mill, I love how it turned out using those two woods. Is it made to sell, or, is it a keeper?
Len
I stacked 12 alternating layers 1/4" thick glued that together then cut that stack into a thick 1/4" and sanded down to exactly 1/4". Flip every other layer and glue back together. It is much like making a small end grain cutting board.Very beautiful, indeed !!!
Now to figure out how you arranged "what" pieces !!!
I stacked 12 alternating layers 1/4" thick glued that together then cut that stack into a thick 1/4" and sanded down to exactly 1/4". Flip every other layer and glue back together. It is much like making a small end grain cutting board.
Yes Mal rotate 180 degrees would be the same. It is not as difficult as it looks the only hard part is not losing the alignment when clamping.@John Eldeen
Expressed that way, it sounds tantalizingly simple !!! . But a real conversation piece for guests at mealtime !!! . Include a lathe as the host !!!
When you say "Flip every other layer and glue back together.", would "rotate 90" do the same as "flip" ?
As opposed to pens... Great result! I really admire the precision of your segmenting.Thank you all for the kind words
This one will be for sell one person can only have so many peppermills![]()
It can be trying at times to keep 4 pieces straight when glueing. Can't imagine 144!Yes Mal rotate 180 degrees would be the same. It is not as difficult as it looks the only hard part is not losing the alignment when clamping.
Lucky for me this is my hobby and not my job so I don't count alot of the labor.An impressive mill, but I'm think way too much labor to factor into the cost.
It is truly only 12 peices at a time and with the proper jigs it is fairly easyIt can be trying at times to keep 4 pieces straight when glueing. Can't imagine 144!
Understand, but I turn and make things for sale as a hobby too, the hobby must pay for itself or I can't afford it... I do count the labor, even if it is a labor of love.Lucky for me this is my hobby and not my job so I don't count alot of the labor.
If I am understanding what you say it would look like thisJohn, I hope you are not going to curse me for this, but I wonder if when you are stacking the checkerboards on top of each other in the final glue up, what if rather than simply alternating the panels, you rotated them say 15 degrees each, and make a vortex type pattern? I wonder how that would look turned? Probably would not be as nice as what you have here.. If you were to try this, I would suggest you drill a hole in the center of each square panel and insert a rod so they stay aligned as you do the rotations...