Great video. I have probably sold 500 or so wooden utensils over the past couple of years. All of them from 1/4" -3/8" thick flat stock we cut on our mill. I have never thought about turning them on my lathe. However, guess what I am going to try tomorrow. Thanks for sharing
Well I tried it yesterday and it turned out beautiful. I used a lovely piece of Black Walnut heading to the burn pile. I can see many more in the future. @@hayesrutherford9415
I really enjoyed that. Thankyou. I like that table you did the sanding on with the tool rest. If you're up to it sometime please show in more detail what it looks like. I think you had a strap that you stood on to hold stick in place.
I was going to ask what wood you were using, but hearing that you're from Priest Lake (I grew up in Kellogg area) I kinda figured you were using White Pine (which I can't get in Texas). Really appreciate the info because I'm starting to make these myself, but mostly as gifts not to resell (maybe someday). Thank you
I thoroughly enjoyed your tutorial and it has given me a lot of inspiration, many thanks.
Thank you Ray. More videos to come, I've been so busy building a new house by my self..
Thanks your sharing
Thanks for watching!
Great video. I have probably sold 500 or so wooden utensils over the past couple of years. All of them from 1/4" -3/8" thick flat stock we cut on our mill. I have never thought about turning them on my lathe. However, guess what I am going to try tomorrow. Thanks for sharing
Good to hear and I hope it goes well. Thanks for stopping by.
Well I tried it yesterday and it turned out beautiful. I used a lovely piece of Black Walnut heading to the burn pile. I can see many more in the future. @@hayesrutherford9415
I really enjoyed that. Thankyou. I like that table you did the sanding on with the tool rest. If you're up to it sometime please show in more detail what it looks like. I think you had a strap that you stood on to hold stick in place.
Thanks for watching, I will try to do that. I have made a number of accessories that fit in the banjo and that might just be the subject of a video.
Great video! I really like that jig you use for sanding.
Thanks Curt and thanks for taking the time!
Great informative video. Thank you for sharing. Do you make long wooden spoons? I would love to see a video on that subject. Thanks again.
I have made some large utensils for a number of different chefs. Great idea for a video, stay tuned. I'm building a new house which is interfering!!
Hayes, i enjoyed your easy to follow vide.
Thank you. That's good to hear and thank you for taking the time.
Great video i love turning spatulas 👍and subd 👍
Thanks so much! Lets all grow this woodturning community together!
Great demo!
Much appreciated
I was going to ask what wood you were using, but hearing that you're from Priest Lake (I grew up in Kellogg area) I kinda figured you were using White Pine (which I can't get in Texas). Really appreciate the info because I'm starting to make these myself, but mostly as gifts not to resell (maybe someday). Thank you
Not white pine, birch and residential maple from local tree service.
Lovely work. What kind of wood are you using?
Hard maple. There were a couple madrone and one cherry that didn't make it into the photo. Thanks for stopping by!
how thick is your wood at the start, they look really good
The wood is about 7/8" thick which allows for a fair amount of curvature when sawing out the blade but can vary. Thanks for taking the time!
Can you tell us what one of these spatulas would typically sell for?
I put those on my local FB bulletin board at 12.00 and about 1/2 sold in a few hours.
I like it, I like it a lot❤
Thankyou, much appreciated.