Pine Cone Pen

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19dobey

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Apr 17, 2016
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Is there a specific type of pine species to look for when wanting to make a pen from just the core of a pine cone itself? I was looking at getting Sugar Pine Cones, but want to do more research before I go and make a long trip for no reason. Any thoughts would be helpful.
 
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The bigger the pine cone the better and a larger pen will prevent you from turning too close to the core where there's no pattern. This pine cone came from the Ocala State Forest in Florida and was about 8 inches long after the squirrels chewed it to the core.
 
Totally depends on the look you want to achieve . I would suggest experimenting a bit with different diameters and species . A loblolly pine cone could give you a 3 inch diameter pen or something totally different at normal pen size . Don`t limit yourself to pines . Many spruce cones work well . Smaller cones such as larch can be stacked in a casting and look good .

My preferred diameter for a pen would be about an inch . At 1.25 to 1.5 inch I would be thinking of bottle stoppers , shaving brushes or S&P shakers . At large loblolly size it would be boxes or bells .
 
In my area the one that we can get is the cone from the long leaf pine tree. They are quite big up to 8-10 inches long and the core is a bit larger than the sugar pine(at least that is what I have found).

I prefer the cone only pen without the casting. I usually use ca to do any stabilizing that I need.
 
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