Get Twisted on Multi Axis Wood Turning
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- Опубліковано 5 січ 2023
- This is a fun multi axis turning. A 3 sided vase.
Made from a very pretty piece of Walnut.
If you found this video entertaining
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The video is for entertainment purposes only
You are watching how I do things and not suggesting others should do it the way I do.
You need to know your machines and how to use them. Follow how the manufacture says to use them safely.
Look up other turnings I have done:
Dizzy Twister Turnings Segmented Turnings
Feature Rings Staves
20 minute bowl
Great gift or a craft show sales
Star bowl Block bowl
Tumbling bowls Emerging Bowls Black Locust Vase
Droop Bowl Offset Bowl Barrel of Blocks Star Bowl Bowl in a Bowl
Droop Bowl Lathe modifications Lacquer Shellac Friction Polish
Abrasive Paste Polishing Paste Wipe on Poly Black Locust Hollow Form
Multi Axis Square Bowl Siberian Elm Hollow Form
Dodecahedron Soccer Ball Sphere Olive Wood Turnings Illusions Segmented Vase
Tangent Stave Turning - Навчання та стиль
Things like this remind me of others in HS Trigonometry, “What do we need this for?” I loved math, and I’m so glad I paid attention 35 years ago!
Thank so much. I do love math as well.
In the 7th grade I was put in an advanced math class with 8th graders. Made me feel pretty good.
When I got to high school I got an algebra teacher who really did not care about how anyone was doing. He seemed to favor the girls. My sister who is 5 years older than me said she had him and could see the same thing. That about ruined it for me. But then I found geometry and trig.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
For all those people who asked the question, "why do I have to take all that math, I'll never use it". This is why. Thank you for reminding us that there is science behind many of our art pieces. This turn out so beautiful.
Thank you Thomas. Yes math is very important in our lives. I figured out in the 7th grade I really loved math.
Real nice. Don't worry about the floor, you should see mine.
Thank you Dennis I appreciate you watching.
Gary
No apology needed... you haven't seen my shop! Beautiful turning Gary. I've read some about multi-axis turning and watched some of Barbra Dill's turnings that are mostly multi-axis. As always thanks for the great video!
Thank you Mark. I may have another one in the works. Hope it works out.
Take care,
Gary
Very interesting work. Looks beautiful.
And your math teacher loves you very much. If he/she is dead, than Rest in Peace. 🙏🏻
Thank you very much. I did have some great math teachers. All but algebra. I never did get that.
But using trig and geometry in my work made it easier to understand and learn as much as I could.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
That is so cute.Love your work and videos. Keep up the good work.
Thank you very much Jack and thanks for watching,
Gary
A great result from good math and a deft touch.
Thank you very much...hmmm a Deft touch...very clever 😁
Take care,
Gary
Hi Gary
What a neat little vase.
On the maths side of things I was ok until at high school they introduced Algebra,why call a banana A and an orange B couldn’t get to grips with it at all,then they pulled Geometry out hell that flew way over my head,I guess I was lucky to turn fifteen and was able to finish up school the day of my birthday and start a carpentry apprenticeship that I had set up with a local building firm. Oh the joys of dealing with feet and inches I loved it.
Guess what came next Metric measure! That took a bit of getting used to ,but proved to be much easier.
So thats my take on geometry,thankfully we never got into trigonometry,but being a self employed builder for 65 years I was glad when they pre cut roof members made roof trusses it took all the guess work out of it for me.
Happy near year to you and yours really enjoy your videos.
Thanks for sharing your maths
Regards from a very wet N Z
I was in advanced math in the 7th grade so when I went to high school they put me in Algebra. I hated it but I think the teacher was one of the reasons. When I found geometry I got my love of math back.
Using it in my work as a wood pattern maker it was very important and now I still use it in what I do. And I served a 5 year apprentice ship where I found out how important it was. People used to say once you become a journeyman the learning really starts. I have to say that was true.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Good job! You have made a part of the Wankel engine!!!!
Thank you and you are right. I never really gave that a thought. I remember when Mazda came out with one. I bought a new Mazda back then but not the rotary.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Gorgeous Gary.
I saw Billy's video as well and trying this again is on my list for this year.
Take care my friend.
Cheers, Huw
Thank you Huw. Lots of fun to do.
Take care,
Gary
This is so great. Thinking outside the cylinder
Thanks so much. A great way to put it! Outside the cylinder...very clever
Another really cool piece
Thank you Dave and thanks for watching.
Gary
this is the first time i've seen someone make a triangular vase. It is very beautiful!!
Thank you very much and thanks for watching.
Gary
I love when someone does a piece and mentions where they got their inspiration from ... it shows their integrity and appreciation for the other and that it led to them attempting their own version, which I'm sure is just as impressive ... you in turn have now inspired others ... thank you for sharing 👍
Thank you very much Barry. Everything we do has come from somewhere.
I did a very cool turning last year. It was tangent staves. I saw in a old wood turning magazine and mentioned it. Only to find out it had been done in a very very old Popular Mechanics magazine.
All were slightly different including mine. I like to use someone's ideas and try to put my own touch on it.
Thanks for watching and your comments.
Gary
Great concept. Wish I would have payed more attertion in trig class 53 years ago.
Thank you Garth. If I had not used it through out my working career I doubt I would have remembered it.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
I enjoy your work! Very informative!
Thank you very much George!
Bonjour ThePapa1947,
c'est du beau travail, merci pour les explications.
Hello ThePapa1947,
nice job, thanks for the explanation.
Thank you very much. I appreciate you watching and commenting.
Happy New Year,
Gary
Thanks. You’ve inspired me to try a multi axis turning.
Thank you Jon. Have fun!
I was introduced to Deft in high school shop class 40 years ago. Shop class has has a great impact on me.
Seems like a bunch of us used it in high school shop. Good stuff!
Nice work Gary..👍👍
Thank you Greg!
Try putting a twist in one ... always fun!
Yes I will do that as well.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Great video again!😊
Thank you Jeffery and thanks for watching.
Gary
Wow!😊
Thank you very much Morgan.
I appreciate you watching and commenting.
Gary
Nice job Gary. Basically you've produced a tapered 3 sided vessel. Next challenge is for you to twist it (and taper it) by making the axes1,2; 2,3 and 3,1. Must admit I've only done a parallel twisted vessel to date. Not yet attempted to taper it as well. Can't see why that shouldn't be possible. Thanks for the encouragement!!
Thank you Ray, that is on my list but it will have to wait its turn...lol
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Awesome Buddy, thanks for sharing ❤
Thank you Tony and thanks for watching,
Gary
That's a beautiful piece
Thank you Ben and thanks for watching.
Gary
Very well done Gary. Deft on walnut, that sure works well too. This little project is a nice way to kick off 2023.👍👍Thank you for sharing. Have a great 2023 and stay safe.🙂🙂
Thank you Glen. I did have fun making this one and it was the first for the New Year.
Happy New Year to you as well.
Gary
Very nice piece
That walnut is so pretty
Thanks so much Luie. After I trimmed this off the bigger piece I almost thought I should not have. But it would not have worked out.
A very strange and beautiful piece I think I got at a yard or garage sale. Who knows I have pieces all over the place that came from yard sales.
Take care,
Gary
Nice Gary, I was lost until you drilled the hole and I could see it from the top. 🙂 then it all made sense.
Thank you very much Laura. I think the sneak preview may have made it harder to see. But that was a cool look as well.
Take care,
Gary
What a lovely little vase. More years ago than I care to remember I had a Mazda RX3 and the ends looks like the piston from a wankel engined. Talking of woodwork at school, I remember my first day walking into the classroom 62! years ago and, right across the top of the blackboard were the words: accidents don’t happen, they are caused 🌞
Thank you Ray and funny thing is I had a 1971 Mazda I bought new. When I tell people they assumed it was the RX3. Nope
That was the same year that I smelled the Deft in the paint room. Wow were those fumes strong LOL
We may have had the same shop teacher or they were brothers because I think we had that sign.
They did not want to let people take shop class all 4 years but they let me if I was willing to be an assistant to the teacher helping the freshman. I got to work on anything I wanted in-between.
Take care,
Gary
Good video. I might try it was well. Thank you 🎉
Thank you very much. They are fun to do and worth a try.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Gary as always a beautiful piece. Scary turning a piece that's off centers. You are awesome thanks again
Thank you Linda. Happy you liked it.
Take care,
Gary
Happy to see you using equations in your layout. I'm a carpenter/builder and use Trigonometry all the time. Ran into an old trig teacher and thanked him because of how much easier it makes my job.
Thank you very much. I used Trigonometry about every day at work as a wood pattern maker. Could not get by without it.
It is a lot handier than most people think.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
I don't recall this shape from trigonometry, but later in life I learned that it is called a trochoid. It is the same shape as the piston used in the rotary or Wankell engine which at one time was believed that it would revolutionize the internal combustion market. Once used in one model of Suzuki motorcycle, and several models of Mazda autos, including their mini pickup and the RX-7. Probably more than you wanted to know, but there it is, the once and future trochoid.
Thank you Carson. Yes that is the same shape. I had a Mazda back in 1971 about the time the RX3 came out but mine was not a rotary.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Multi-Axis turning is very interesting and something to look forward to trying in the future. Thanks for the new and interesting videos.
Thank you Kent and thanks for watching.
Gary
Love it! I am recovering from torn rotator cuff surgery after taking a tumble in the shop, so watching videos and learning new tricks! Note to shop folks: don’t use your arm to break your fall! Fall on your bottom!
Sorry to hear this. Also do not use your fact to break the fall either. I had both hands full once and managed to do that. Not hard fall but cut my eyebrow.
Great video Gary. I want to try this one.
Thank you Chris. I think you will do great.
Take care,
Gary
Gorgeous!!!!
Thank you very much Candace!
Very nice job 👏
Thank you Jerry and thanks for watching,
Gary
This vase is simply beautiful! I love that finish on that wood. It’s not flashy, it’s satiny and that goes perfectly well with that wood.
Thanks Mary. For sure some things look best with a more satin finish. But then somethings really look good with lots of shine. At least for me they do.
Take care,
Gary
Very cool!!!! Can't wait to see what's next!
Thanks so much Dianne and thanks for watching,
Gary
Very nice, oh and HAPPY NEW YEAR!
Thank you Harry and Happy New Year to you as well.
Gary
Salut Gary beau projet j’adore bravo 👍👏👋
Thank you very much and thanks for watching.
Gary
Just watched it again, Gary. It's still a trochoid and still fascinating. Expecting my lathe in two weeks, followed by six months of trial, error, ambulance rides and emergency surgeries, but by this time next year I might actually be turning out similar works that would pass for hand carved.😇. Keep those chips flying, I've got two weeks left to cram. And again, thank you ever so much for loving this craft enough to share it with the great unwashed We.
Thank you very much Carson. I am sure you will really enjoy the lathe.
Hope those ambulance rides are not going to be from using that lathe.
Take care,
Gary
Super nice!
Thank you Stuart!
Hi Papa
Realy cool looking vase
I would like to try that one day. Happy New Year
David Wise
Hi David, they are pretty easy and do not take much wood. I am sure you will give it a try when you are ready.
Happy New Year!
Gary
Looks awesome
Thank you very much!
Beautiful! Gotta try this!
Thank you James. Lots of fun and I am sure you will enjoy doing it.
Gary
It came out very nice indeed, Gary! You go ahead and use your trig... I'll stick to my no math method... lol.
Thank you very much Billy. We had one foundry we built patterns for that insisted we used trig to lay out the angles on some large angled cable guides. I have very expensive protractors but nope...use trig. And for sure it is the most accurate way to do it.
I bet I could have used Segment Calculator 2 or WoodTurnerPro and got those numbers. But that is cheating LOL
Great job, so nice
Thank you very much and thanks for watching,
Gary
Thank you very interesting video when I get a little better I'd like to try it sometime
Thank you Jim and I like how you are thinking. Get some hours in and I am sure you will be able to do this.
Best of luck,
Gary
Another lovely piece and excellent video. The instruction is always appreciated. Thanks, as always!
Thanks so much Josh. Happy you enjoyed it. They are fun to do and I will do more. But with bigger pieces. At least in the XY of it.
Take care,
Gary
Beautiful piece Gary. Thanks for sharing.
Thank you Dave and thanks for watching.
Happy New Year,
Gary
Thank You Gary...My first reaction before watching is GREAT!!! The unlimited possibilities with different axis positioning opens up so many wonderful possibilities!!! Also- Totally Confuse A Tuffy!!! BUT TONS of FUN watching!! YES that is a beautiful piece of Walnut & a fun turning to watch......💥💥💥....TM
Thank you very much TM. I sure had a lot of fun making it and happy you liked it.
Take care,
Gary
WOW WOW AND WOW that's a awesome piece. weldone gary. beautiful walnut.
Thank you Manjit!
Nice job Gary happy new year to you
Thank you Daemon and Happy New Year to you as well.
Gary
That is very nice! I was not expecting the shape to come out so good the surprise surprise you did! Thank you again for sharing
Thank you very much Lynda, when I drew the lines on the end I could see what it would like. Still a pleasant surprise after it was all turned.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
I’ve also used the Deft Lacquer for years. It’s a great product and the spray tip is by far superior to those that spray a round spray pattern. I really like the vase you turned it boggles my mind how that works but I watched it so it does. I’m tipping my hat to you sir.
Thank you very much Dale. Yes Deft is the best I have used.
When I first started using it you could only get it as a brush on. If you wanted to spray in a gun then you thinned it down. Which I used to do as well.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Gary,
Of all the off-center turning videos I’ve watched over the years, this is the first one I’ve liked. The tri sided vase you made has some appeal to me beyond the gorgeous walnut wood. This is the only thing I’ve seen made this way that I would consider making. Thanks for finally showing something practical.
Stuart
Thank you so much Stuart...now I want to go make another one LOL. Actually I do but out of a bigger piece with more taper.
Take care,
Gary
@@ThePapa1947 I’ll be looking for that video 😃
Hi Gary,,,
I tried a couple of offset turnings that ended up in a scrap bucket! Lol
In reading the comments I see some talk about the old calculators. I still don't know how to use all the functions on a calculator am,,,,, am I in trouble? Lol
We didn't use much trig for calculations and pipe fitting as you did being a pattern maker.
He has some huge patterns,,, some as long as 80 ft and 20 ft wide by 4 to 6 ft high. They were all done in sections and sent up to the foundry to be cast as road grinder beds.
Pattern makers are a whole different breed! Lol
Happy New Year and thanks for the video.
Tom
Thanks so much Tom. We did some very large patterns for earth moving equipment. I did on for a tunnel boring machine. On the drawing the 10 foot long pattern I made looked like a spot on the completed machine. Crazy stuff.
If I had not had that calculator it sure would have been much harder. Funny thing when I got started we did not have the fancy ones with all the trig functions and the one I had cost about $89 and that was a heck of a lot back then.
I still have the $5.00 one that is as smart as it gets...or what I needed. Wow was that cool to help with laying out patterns.
Take care,
Gary
You should do a chalk talk on useful trigonometry for turning.
Thank you Jim. I had a lot of very useful formulas I used at work for sure.
I remember when calculators came out with the scientific functions. When I saw what the tangent function would do I used it almost everyday at work. It felt like magic. Before that I was dong a math class through mail(no computer online stuff back then.) for my apprenticeship in pattern making. I remember doing square root problems with a basic calulator and at the time was $70.00. That was a lot of money back then.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
@@ThePapa1947 I remember my 1st calculator - a Texas Instruments SR-11. It only did the 4 basic functions and square roots. There wasn't even a memory. The display was LEDs and it would kill your battery. Still I thought it was so much easier than a slide rule. That's what $100 got you in 1975.
Very nice Gary.
Wes @ Piedra Designs
Thank you Wes.
Take care,
Gary
Very unique and beautiful
Thank you so much David and thanks for watching,
Gary
Nice looking vase. As always you make things work. Have a prosperous new year. Thanks Tim
Thank you Tim and Happy New Year to you as well.
Gary
What a cool looking vase Gary ! After I copied your offset goblet I think I can do this one as well . Thanks a million for the video . Happy New Year .
Thank you very much Jon. I am sure you will do fine.
Happy New Year,
Gary
Great unusual turning. Enjoyed another challenge.
Thank you Doug and there just might be more challenges coming.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Great idea and a beautiful vase 👌
Thank you very much and thanks for watching.
Gary
Very Nice
Thank you very much!
A very, very pretty little vase! Love the wood, and the shape. Thanks for another great video!
Thank you Pauline. Happy you liked it and thanks for watching,
Gary
A great looking piece Gary and well turned and finished 👌 👍
Thank you William and thanks for watching.
Gary
Great project...I love the shape and the grain!
Thank you very much Carol. That piece has gorgeous grain. I cut this off a piece I have had for years. The other end is much wider .
It was an odd piece I got at a yard sale or garage sale. I have other odd pieces I got at other sales and need to make something out of one of them. Still have not figured out what kind of wood it is.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
A very beautiful vase Gary.
Thank you Jack and thanks for watching.
Gary
Hi Gary...
Three sides and tapered... I really enjoyed watching this video...
Take care my friend...All the best.....Andy
Thanks so much Andy and thanks for watching,
Gary
Beautiful of course. I also enjoyed your math and working technique. Send some rain this way. Haha. Thanks for sharing your work.
Thank you Travis. Would you like a side of heavy winds along with that rain LOL. We are tired of both.
Take care,
Gary
I love that vase. It is so simple but also elegant. Great job.
Thanks so much Dana and thanks for watching,
Gary
So nice design with a different way. Cheers mr Gary 👍
Thanks so much Sony! Take care,
Gary
nice job this is how we made handles for screwdrivers chisel to keep them from rolling off bench. nice finish.
Thanks.. nothing worse than a screw driver that rolls away.
Thanks for watching.
Wow awesome job. That peice is amazing. Another way to turn that I will have to learn. Keep up the great work Gary.
Thank you very much and thanks for watching.
Very interesting piece of turning Gary and really looks good
Thanks Ronnie I appreciate you watching and commenting.
Gary
That's a really great piece of art. I did very poorly in trigonometry, but this kind of work could inspire me to pursue it again. As always, your videos are part instruction and a lot of encouragement for us to try these projects. I really appreciate that about you Gary. Thanks, and see you next week!
Thank you very much Mark. This is very easy to layout once you see what is going on. Also very fun to turn.
I have to get on the move I usually have next weeks turned by now. Maybe I can get something going tomorrow.
Take care,
Gary
Beautiful vase, Gary. I love the walnut. Take care. Rob😊
Thank you very much Rob.
Happy New Year!
Gary
I have enjoyed every one of your videos. You explain every step so well. Keep it up. A brother from over the pond ❤
Thanks so much Robin. happy you enjoy my videos.
Take care my brother,
Gary
Nice piece! I've never done an off-axis turning. This may be my inspiration.
Thank you Jim and this is a good one to start on.
Best of luck,
Gary
I was looking for a twisted turning but was intrigued when you said you were matching the numbers 1-1 2-2 3-3. Very interesting take on multi axis. Looking forward to trying this
Thank you Kevin. Twisted is also fun to do.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Lovely piece Gary and that walnut is sure beautiful! I like that multi axis turning and I may have to try it sometime! Spray lacquer is one of my favorite finishes and although I can't use deft because it is not available locally, the stuff I use is awesome, well done and thanks!
Cheers Al
Thank you Al, I suppose most lacquers are pretty much the same. I just have history with the Deft. But it sure is getting expensive.
I use to buy it by the gallon and use a spray gun. But that is just added work to clean it up.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Good to see you turning, Gary. I was wondering where you were going with this. You never disappoint. That looks great! Thanks.
Thank you very much and thanks for watching,
Gary
Very nice mid century modern piece. I initially thought a base might be nice, but I like it better with out one.
Thank you very much Happy you liked how it turned out.
Gary
Gary a lovely piece of wood and a great turning, you always have great passion when doing something a little trick. Beautiful job mate
Thanks so much Alan. Yes I do like to do tricky things. Always fun to challenge one's self.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Really nice, Gary. No steady rest for this one. When I saw this pop up, the first thing I thought of was Billy's video. Another tip. When you draw your circle, you can use the radius to step off six equal spaces on the circumference. I'm sure you knew this but the math was probably more fun. I like the lazy man's way for me. lol
Bill
Thank you Bill. Yes I mentioned stepping the dividers around.
The way we made segments at work was to draw the radius and set dividers or trammels(some rings were 6 foot diameter) on the radius and make points then draw straight lines to the center. This gave the length of the segments. All cut on the bandsaw and then sanded on the disk sander. Way to large for the yet to be invented Wedgie Sled.
So for sure I knew that trick. Works ok for marking segments but not for creating exact lines. Especially if you are bisecting using the point of a set of dividers.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Wow, that was a great use of geometry. The vase is perfect and absolutely beautiful. I minored in math but only used linear algebra in my profession as an analytical chemist.
Thank you James. I used the geometry pretty much every day in my job. If I had to use algebra I most likely would not have had my job very long LOL.
Now my son who is a mechanical engineer. knows his math!
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Beautiful piece Gary. I guess I should have taken trigonometry in school. If I ever get good enough to attempt something like that. I will have to do some research lol. You always come up with something good to turn. Thanks for the video
Thank you Chris. I did not take trigonometry in high school but when I started my pattern making apprenticeship I had to take it at the local community college.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
What a very pleasing shape and lovely wood grain!! I really like it. The cross section looks like a Wankel (rotary engine) piston cross section. Very cool! Thanks for the trig lesson as well.
Cheers, Rick
Thank you Rick and for sure it does look like one. I had a 1972 Mazda but it was not a rotary.
Take care,
Gary
very kool ,im going to try that for sure
Thanks Greg and let me know how it goes.
Take care,
Gary
@@ThePapa1947 do you have an email address i can send pictures too ?
@@gregeastman6662 look in my About page.
Great job, Gary and well explained! Such a subtle difference from top to bottom but it makes all the difference in the world. Plain round would have been, well, plain and round! This has a bit of elegance and combined with your great finish, she's a beauty! I wish you only the very best in this new year, my friend!
Phil
Thanks so much Phil. I will have to do it again with a wider piece and get more slope. But this worked out ok. It sure changed once I got th finish on. Sure bugged me that I could not find that file with the first coat going on....hmm maybe it never existed...dang I just heard the music for The Twilight Zone in my head LOL.
Wishing you the best as well my friend,
Gary
What a beautiful piece of walnut, Gary! It certainly was in the hands of a Master. Your math skills are amazing, my friend. Trigonometry? I thought that was Hebrew for "Boy am I confused". Thanks for straightening me out on that. I can't wait to slip that into a conversation with someone! Should get me some strange looks, wouldn't you think. Of course I already get a lot of strange looks from people! LOL! Great video, buddy! Really enjoy learning from you!
Take care,
.....Gord
Thank you very much Gord. I guess when it comes to this type of math I am a bit of a nerd. When it comes to counting out the Smarties I share with my wife I seem to loose all my math skills LOL
Actually at work I used to subtract fractions in my head. I mean like 3 1/16 minus 2 3/8. I taught it to all the apprentices that would listen to me.
Take care my friend,
Gary
not bad very nice
Thank you Delbert!
I'm fascinated by the shape the end profile reminds me of the triquetra, an ancient Celtic knot formed by the intersection of three vesica piscis. While some might find deep religious roots in these symbols, to me they are more representative of ancient mathematical proofs all the way back to Euclid. Amazing, because it never occurred me that this could be done on a lathe. Thanks again for another great video!
Thank you very much Michael! I never thought of it looking like at Celtic knot but you are right. Thanks for bringing that up. I find that shape very interseting.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Your shop floor and mine look about the same just now. Drives me nuts to work in a mess but just when I was going to stop and clean up, a chunk of neglected oak caught my eye and I was off and running on the next turning. I truly love getting ideas and techniques with your patternmakers spin (pun intended) on things. Thanks, as always.
Thank you very much Michael. You had me worried when you said the Oak caught your eye. Then I put it all together. I have the same issue. I finish one thing and I want to get going right away. I did pick a few things up today while I had something fun running.
Maybe pick a piece of wood to turn tomorrow.
Take care,
Gary
Gary, I have never tried multi axis turning… it looks like an interesting process. The finished product looks great. That Deft makes it look very good👍
Thank you Skip. They are lots of fun to do. Yes I do love my Deft lacquer!!!
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Top job Gary. It came out fantastic. Enjoyed watching the clip as always. I can only sit back and enjoy you tube at the moment as had a slight accident and damaged the tendon on my index finger so I'm out of action for a while as it repairs. Decided to go back over a few old clips and make a list of projects for when I'm able to get back into it. Bandsaws can bite even when you have a healthy respect for them.
Sorry to hear about your accident Bruce and hope all heals well and quickly.
Have fun with that list of things you ar making.
Take care,
Gary