Madman1978
Member
I was given a piece of wood. Not uncommon for me overall, but this piece is at least 100 years old! Yes it is Pine and it was salvaged from a church, I was told. However, Is this good to turn for pens? Knife Scales?
But do I have the blades that will last? lol This is some dense stuffIt's not the age of the wood but the shape it's in. That looks pretty solid to me. You mentioned the size. The only thing that might dictate to use it for pens is the tightness of the grain. The wood is pretty but if it's not a tight grain it might get turned off by the time your pen is to size. You could always cut it cross grain and that would make the end grains pop when the light hits it. Sounds like you have plenty to play with. Good Luck.
Smells like Pin Sol When I cut it lolI am always amazed at how much old growth pine weighs, just smells great too
The lowly Pine in full splendor! Very attractive.I've had lots of old growth heart pine like this.![]()
Crosscut is probably the prettiest way to use it.
BeautifulFor comparison here are some I made using straight grain.
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It's not the hardness that eats blades, it is the silica in the wood. Pine shouldn't have much silica at all.Dr. Mark Hyman But do I have the blades that will last? lol This is some dense stuff