This because cutting them each separately can never be exact. Therefore I would have put the light and dark wood pieces on each other by wax glue or temporary adhesive and cut them together with bandsaw. By this method you get them exactly the same and can be glued together without epoxy
@@seniorblacky4786 This can be done very easily and we used it as children to make two or even multi-colored paper puzzles. In the simplest two-color design, a light and dark board is glued together with temporary glue, an ornament is drawn on them, and the parts are cut on a jigsaw or band saw, it is also possible to cut the parts with an oscillating rectilinear saw. All parts together must be an even number. Parts can be numbered sequentially around the perimeter. Then the dark parts are separated from the light ones and they are glued together into one disc, "odd" dark with "even" light and vice versa, "even" dark with "odd" light. Two inversely colored pieces will be created. The number of colors can be changed, but more than about 5 is already an overpaid circus fool. In any case, this method produces thin and uniform blind joints in the resulting blank for turning.
A wild design. I like it. Good imagination. Like the different woods accents. Keep on your path to get the jobs done.😊😊😊
شكرا❤❤❤❤❤❤
Not feeling it....its very rough. I would have cleaned up those pieces before gluing them together
The clean detail work is not there.
Why didn't he glue the segment to gether???
This because cutting them each separately can never be exact. Therefore I would have put the light and dark wood pieces on each other by wax glue or temporary adhesive and cut them together with bandsaw. By this method you get them exactly the same and can be glued together without epoxy
@@seniorblacky4786 This can be done very easily and we used it as children to make two or even multi-colored paper puzzles. In the simplest two-color design, a light and dark board is glued together with temporary glue, an ornament is drawn on them, and the parts are cut on a jigsaw or band saw, it is also possible to cut the parts with an oscillating rectilinear saw. All parts together must be an even number. Parts can be numbered sequentially around the perimeter. Then the dark parts are separated from the light ones and they are glued together into one disc, "odd" dark with "even" light and vice versa, "even" dark with "odd" light. Two inversely colored pieces will be created. The number of colors can be changed, but more than about 5 is already an overpaid circus fool. In any case, this method produces thin and uniform blind joints in the resulting blank for turning.