Preferred blanks for pen making

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Preferred blanks for pen making

  • Local/native wood blank

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Self made (inlay or sectioned) wood blank

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Self made (cast, including snakeskin, etc) acrylic blank

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Other/ anything I see is a potential pen blank

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    4

hilltopper46

Member
Joined
Jun 28, 2006
Messages
2,420
Location
East Troy, Wisconsin, USA.
What type of blank do you PREFER to use to make a pen?

Edit: yes, in answer to Ed's question (below) - what is your preference - forgetting for the moment about what sells the best.

There are only room for 6 choices or I would (wood?) have added a couple more!:)
 
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What do you prefer to make??? OR what do you make to SELL???

There is a difference. IF I could make and sell wood pens at the same rate that I can sell resins, I would enjoy doing that. I derive pleasure from other people finding my pens "pretty" enough to PAY for. So, I turn pretty much "anything that doesn't run faster than me!"

I picked "other", so thought I should 'splain what that meant!
 
I'm new at this, maybe around 100 pens, but I've turned mostly exotics, a few peices of acrylic, and a few burls. Haven't found anything locally thats really great. Actually I have some privet burl from a tree at my childhood home that was recently cut, gonna try that.
 
Haven't set up to do my own casting, I think that's my NEXT project. I was a purely wood guy until I tried a couple of the synthetics. It is SOOOOO much easier to get a good finish and a beautiful pen, and you can sell them more quickly for more money. I will continue to turn both and my personal carry pen is wood but I am really getting a kick out of Richard and Ed's plastiques!
 
I voted for using local/native wood blanks, but also buy acrylic blanks. Because that’s what I do!

Have been pleased and not so, buying acrylic blanks from both Berea & Hut. Some acrylics just don’t work for me and others give me a wow factor. Acrylics can give us, gift recipients, and buyers color options wood can not! Okay have not tried to dye a blank yet.

Would buy those exotic (imported) wood blanks if could walk into a store and select what I wanted.
Catalogs and web sites don’t do it for me. Feel the same way about stabilize wood blanks.

Using wood blanks regardless if native or imported, helps us learn about wood and it’s characteristics. Whether your selling or giving pens away people like to hear a little bit about the wood too! Just don’t bore them to tears.

So, like variety and open for trying anything.
 
I voted local/native woods but I will use just about any wood. I really don't like the smell I get from acrylics and the wife likes it even less. Since the shop is in the basement and on the same heating system as the rest of the house..... I'll do the occasional acrylic but not in the winter when I can't open the windows or door to the shop.
 
Our mission is to be sustanible. We try to use local woods and stay away from the others. The only exotic woods we use are from recycled lawn funiture[8D]
 
I like doing heirloom or historical blanks best.

The mechanics of making a pen is pretty much the same regardless of what type of blank you use. I find the process enjoyable and relaxing which is why I started making pens in the first place.

But if you start off with a historical piece of wood or a chunk of heirloom wood there is a special feeling knowing that the recipient will always treasure that particular pen above all/most others. And seeing the appreciation in the face of the new owner is a special event that is hard to duplicate and does not happen very often. [^]
 
I turn local woods that I have harvested and then cut into blanks. My favorites are spalted maple and cherry burl although I have turned many other woods including cherry, walnut,oak, elm, sumac, buckthorn, lilac, black ash, mountain ash, mulberry to name a few. A good part of the enjoyment of the hobby is harvesting and preparing the wood from my son-in-law's and son's farms.

Larry
 
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