Vince_Hoffmann
Member
I don't post here very often, and I haven't been showing off my latest works... but over the past week I've made a variety of pine cone pens that I thought you all would enjoy. I have several sugar pine trees nearby which provide me with a fairly steady supply of large, closed cones which I pluck and set out to dry for a couple of months before working them over. 2 months ago, my wife and I went up to the northern California coast to do some camping and abalone diving when I came across an interesting tree... a Knobby Pine, which only grows along the coast. These trees had the most beautiful LARGE cones which dried closed on the branch. I plucked half a dozen and turned 2 pens from them. Here are some of the results with a blank shown for reference: (I apologize for the large pictures)
Sugar Pine cones are dark, very seedy, and are very hard requiring at least one re-sharpening per session.
Knobby Pine cones are lighter in color, much softer, and less seedy. When I make a pen with a cap, the pine cone has to be at least 8" long in order to have enough material to make both parts. otherwise, they lend themselves quite readily to single-piece pens such as the Wall Street and Patriot styles.
Sugar Pine cones are dark, very seedy, and are very hard requiring at least one re-sharpening per session.


Knobby Pine cones are lighter in color, much softer, and less seedy. When I make a pen with a cap, the pine cone has to be at least 8" long in order to have enough material to make both parts. otherwise, they lend themselves quite readily to single-piece pens such as the Wall Street and Patriot styles.


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