W.Y.
Member
I cut and glued the segments for this one last night and turned it on the lathe this afternoon.
Just a very plain no frills piece because I was not entirely satisfied with how some of my previous pieces turned out. I got a bunch of real nice hardwoods a while back and didn't want to waste it on mistakes so I made this one out of scraps but before I did I spent considerable time on getting my cutting sled adjusted. Not sure if it was by good luck or by good management but I got my sled cutting scary accurately . The twelve pieces in the bottom were not glued in two halves and then sanded to put the halves together . They fit so accurately that I just glued them up all at once and put the whole twelve together and snapped an elastic band around them and that was it. For the bigger rings I am still doing them in halves but the amount that they are out is no more than paper thickness and some are even closer than that. I only have to "kiss" the half rings on the sander to allow them to mate properly.
Sometimes in a case like this it pays to not get in too much of a hurry when embarking on a different art form because now as I progress I will have more confidence that things are going to turn out better than they did previously .
Just a very plain no frills piece because I was not entirely satisfied with how some of my previous pieces turned out. I got a bunch of real nice hardwoods a while back and didn't want to waste it on mistakes so I made this one out of scraps but before I did I spent considerable time on getting my cutting sled adjusted. Not sure if it was by good luck or by good management but I got my sled cutting scary accurately . The twelve pieces in the bottom were not glued in two halves and then sanded to put the halves together . They fit so accurately that I just glued them up all at once and put the whole twelve together and snapped an elastic band around them and that was it. For the bigger rings I am still doing them in halves but the amount that they are out is no more than paper thickness and some are even closer than that. I only have to "kiss" the half rings on the sander to allow them to mate properly.
Sometimes in a case like this it pays to not get in too much of a hurry when embarking on a different art form because now as I progress I will have more confidence that things are going to turn out better than they did previously .


