Nut Bowl

Signed-In Members Don't See This Ad

PreacherJon

Member
Joined
Aug 28, 2019
Messages
881
Location
Indiana
I was commissioned to make a nut bowl. I assume for the Holidays, when everyone puts out whole nuts in the shell—a big one. I didn't have anything dry this big and thick. So, I had to go to a stacking. 10" x 4 1/4"

Walnut and Maple.
 

Attachments

  • Nut Bowl 01.jpg
    Nut Bowl 01.jpg
    488.5 KB · Views: 45
  • Nut Bowl 009b.jpg
    Nut Bowl 009b.jpg
    459.1 KB · Views: 42
  • Nut Bowl 009a.jpg
    Nut Bowl 009a.jpg
    539.1 KB · Views: 37
  • Nut Bowl 08.jpg
    Nut Bowl 08.jpg
    374.6 KB · Views: 33
  • Nut Bowl 07.jpg
    Nut Bowl 07.jpg
    389 KB · Views: 31
  • Nut Bowl 06.jpg
    Nut Bowl 06.jpg
    445 KB · Views: 30
  • Nut Bowl 05.jpg
    Nut Bowl 05.jpg
    456.9 KB · Views: 30
  • Nut Bowl 04.jpg
    Nut Bowl 04.jpg
    448.8 KB · Views: 31
  • Nut Bowl 03.jpg
    Nut Bowl 03.jpg
    521.1 KB · Views: 32
  • Nut Bowl 02.jpg
    Nut Bowl 02.jpg
    357.6 KB · Views: 43
Signed-In Members Don't See This Ad
Nice segmenting. Came out real nice and am sure it will be well used. Have a question for you. Did you ever consider of relieving the inside by either cutting out the center some with if you have a scrollsaw, or a powered jigsaw. Or do some forstner bit work? Looks like alot of material to hollow out.
 
Nice segmenting. Came out real nice and am sure it will be well used. Have a question for you. Did you ever consider of relieving the inside by either cutting out the center some with if you have a scrollsaw, or a powered jigsaw. Or do some forstner bit work? Looks like alot of material to hollow out.

First... I have never turned a bowl, only admired the work of others here.

That said, what John says makes sense to me. If you are gluing it up in stacked layers, why not cut the center out first?

Scroll saw, jigsaw, router on circle cutting jig. You could even save those middle cutouts for a smaller bowl or something else.

I'm sure that I've missed something, but am genuinely curious.
 
I agree with JT and David - lots of turning away wood that could make something else. Most of my bowl turning friends have coring jigs that allow them to remove the center of the bowl in a single piece, allowing a matching bowl of smaller size to be turned from the removed center - but they are pretty pricey if you only do an occasional bowl. They also require you to be making a curved bottom due to how they cut.

Either way, I like your piece! Very pretty!

Kevin
 
Nice segmenting. Came out real nice and am sure it will be well used. Have a question for you. Did you ever consider of relieving the inside by either cutting out the center some with if you have a scrollsaw, or a powered jigsaw. Or do some forstner bit work? Looks like alot of material to hollow out.
Well, I would need a coring tool. They don't work well on a small lathe and are expensive. (not enough torque)... No matter what you've got to be able to hold on to the piece. This is as large as I can go and would not be able to twice turn it with the size of the bottom the client wanted. So... this piece had to be turned all at one time with already dried wood.
 
Rather than a coring tool you could have cut rings and glued that stack together. You would have the cutout centres to use in another turning and there would have been less wood being turned into shavings. A tossup as to the value of doing it for an occasional project. There are always different methods one can employ when turning. Some no better than others and some better. We make the choice depending on what is at hand and our comfort levels. Keep playing and enjoying.
 
Back
Top Bottom