Wow, Gary .. just WOW. What a beautiful bowl, what a lovely story. If only the tree knew what was going to be made from it, and that you cared for the wood for 60 years, and then how it would be repurposed, using your enhanced skills to make something wonderful to treasure for even longer ... that tree would be so happy! - isn't this what we all aspire to and why we love what we do in our own small way. Brilliant!
David thank you for putting the story and my feelings for this piece of wood into a wonderful story. It is exactly how I feel. I have wondered about the tree and where it was growing and why it was cut down. I have some nice Walnut from a tree our friends needed to have taken down. Every piece I turn I think about how that tree looked(it was a beauty) Everyone that gets one of the turnings gets the story as well. Thanks again, Gary
Those segments reflect the light beautifully, Gary! I think this should permanently be on a turntable with a little spotlight pointed at it. What a fitting use for those old boards and I mean, OLD! LOL! That was a lot of segments! And with your math, each and every one fits perfectly! I love the design you used, very stately and, of course, the finish is impeccable! This is one for the Ascher family museum! Great job, professor! 😊 Phil
Thank you Phil. That would be cool to have them on a turntable with spot light. Once I got them cleaned up and sanded the one side they looked new and made me feel much younger...I wish LOL It is sitting in the prime spot on a shelf behind me right now along with some of my other favorites. I actually enjoyed brushing the lacquer on this one. But it sure does make lot of powerful fumes compared to spraying. Back in high school we had a paint room and about all that was used was Deft Lacquer and when in there your started to feel like you could float. I think Deft did that to get us all addicted to the stuff LOL Thanks for watching my friend, Gary
Thank you very much Jim. Sometimes the perfect piece of wood is must sitting there waiting to be used. Sort of one of those Catch 22 moments. Do I leave it how was and make a new wood frame for it. Or make it into something that you can look at with out setting hot cups of coffee on it LOL. Sure happy I made this. Thanks for watching, Gary
What a wonderful way to preserve your history. I'm sure future generations will cherish it. I can imagine it being taken to Antique Road Show in a hundred years!
Thank you very much Kristi. I had to chuckle as it got its start 60 years ago. But not as a segmented bowl. Sure hope we can find a picture of that stand some day. I know there has to be one. At least when I brought it home from high school shop class. Thanks for watching, Gary
Thanks for sharing this nostalgic turning! I recently finished my first segmented piece, largely inspired by your many amazing videos. It’s also a nostalgic creation; made from three boards cut from trees that came from my dad’s farm in Michigan. Cherry, ash, and walnut rings; layered to form an urn for my dad’s eventual funeral. He’s 97 now, still lives in his own place, and is still a good driver! Anyway, keep up the good work. I hope you’re still turning when you’re 97! If you’re interested, I could show you a picture of the urn.
Thank you very much Mike. What you have made is very special and sure I would love to see it. You can find my email in my About Page. Thanks for watching, Gary
Thank you Luie. I was not sure how I would feel cutting them up. But I am sure glad I did. The grain is amazing with its new shape. Thanks for watching, Gary
After 60 years of looking at the flat grain of those boards, now you get to enjoy the shimmer of the side grain. What a beautiful piece with so much priceless history behind it!
Thank you very much Leigh. I debated to tell the story of the boards but really felt compelled to do so. Just wait till you see what I do to our 1904 upright piano. Well I will have to wait as well because not exactly sure what it will be. I would give it away but nobody wants and old piano and my wife wants me to make her something for her out of it and not just burn it all up. Thanks for watching, Gary
What a great way to keep your memories of one time in your life alive. People don’t understand why we save stuff. It’s just for what you did there. Way to go, also that finish shines beautifully. Keep on doing what you do.
Thank you Dale, happy you liked it. So this might be the year I take apart our 1904 upright piano. I will make something from some of it. Nobody wants them anymore and it would only go for scrap. So I will try and make something for the memories of it. Thanks for watching, Gary
Mama Mia! Now that is an awesome piece of work! So cool with all those segments! It is absolutely gorgeous! Now you can have that for another 60 years! The memories will never fade! Bravo!
Thank you very much James. The piece of wood was first made in SW Portland , lived in NW Portland. Then it moved to SE Portland and when I got out of the Army it moved back to another part of SW Portland which is called Garden Home Oregon. So there is a little bit of history. Oh I forgot about when our daughter had it. That may have been down in Southern Oregon where she went to college.. But neither one of us could remember if it was there or maybe Hillsboro Oregon when she got out of school Thanks for watching, Gary
Nice job looks Awesome Gary, Great momento piece to be remembered for years to come, it’s great to prolong old stuff that would be done away with for something Beautiful to be made into 😎
Thanks so much Kimsey! Coming soon in a theater near you...Papa turns a piano LOL Well we have a 1904 upright piano we can not even give away. So I think we will take it apart and I will look for some turning stock in there. There should be a non turning project for sure. but will need to wait for warm weather and no rain! Thanks for watching, Gary
Thank you very much Sue. I just had to do something with them. Back then segmented turnings were not really thought of for bowls. But was used a lot in the wood pattern making trade. Matter of fact I became a wood pattern maker and did some huge segmented turnings. One was 6 foot in diameter and ended up about 3 foot deep. Thanks for watching, Gary
BEAUTIFUL as usual Gary!! Thank you for using our pastes on top of your lacquer!! I dont know if we told you Gary, our pastes were featured in this winters THIS OLD HOUSE magazine, the crew used it on top of a table they built. Keep up the great videos Gary!!
Nice proportion. Sure came alive. My first project was 1967 and we still have that little 2 deck corner table. Yep I’m a 47 too. Should start a club. Lol
Gary, you repurposed that shelf into a beautiful piece of art. If you haven't already done so, I encourage you to write down the story of the history of the wood. Tuck it inside so that the story isn't forgotten!
As Lawrence Welk would say, "Van Nuys, Van Nuys!" (Very nice, Very nice!). Like everyone else, I love the history behind that wood. I would have just told everyone that I wanted to make sure that the wood had dried properly. Ha ha ha!
Thank you Dave and that is a good idea. But if I told my friends that I would hear. Yeah it dried and aged like you but you got white hair and lots of wrinkles in those years LOL But I hang around a bunch of old guys who can be pretty brutal. But so am I when it comes to kidding friends.
Magnificent, Gary! Your reminiscences took me back to 7th grade shop class, also 60 years ago. The complexity and precision of your work is a joy to watch. Then there's that hand-brushed finish! Wow!!
Oooooooooutstanding, Gary! Another fine wood turning brought to you by ThePapa1947. The wood has a very nice chatoyance and comes out nicely on the video.👍👍👍👍👍🐈🐈
Thanks so much John, I have only had a few times where I use the flat side of the board. My guess is the board was cut from the log with the grain the way it was. Like getting quarter sawed boards. Which tend to cost more. Back in 1963 I was fortunate enough to use Walnut. Only time I used Walnut in shop class. Take care my friend, Gary
That’s what I call brilliant recycling, Gary. What a remarkable woodturning, my friend. You must be thrilled with it and you should be. I also like your flattening jig a lot. Wonderful video, Gary! 👏👏👏👏 Take care, …..Gord
Thank you very much Gord. Those boards had a rough life. With us using it for a aquarium stand and our daughter have it for a couple of years. I was talking to her the other day and she had to think about when she had it. Maybe have been right after college when she shared an apartment with on of her friends. Either way I was hoping she had a picture of it. I think we had the corner of it in two phots we have. One with the wife and I and the other when our daughter was around 2 years old. If one ever shows up I will show it. But those pictures were taken when you actually had film and had to pay for all of them even if they were blurry. Thanks a lot for watching my friend, Gary
Another beauty. Congratulations on living your dream and having that magnificent bowl as a trophy for your success. I look forward to your next video. Thank you for everything.
Thank you very much Carson. What I loved about my job was making something different that had never been made before. And mostly the challenge of making it. Thanks for watching, Gary
I really love your ability to design jigs and tools to help you turn out some beautiful pieces. I never get tired of watching your videos. Keep up the great work.
Gary you are so inspirational. Repurposing your selves has given you a beautiful heirloom to pass on. The chatoyant’s is amazing. I really like how you true up the face before you glue up the next layer.
Thanks so much Kevin. I knew the system would work and was a little stuck on the idea of a cross feed type system. But this is so simple and does the job. And actually takes the same setup to get the ring thickness. Well if I really wanted to I could setup a gluing jig in my CNC milling machine and program each layer.....WAIT!!!!!!] Dang I actually just thought of that and almost ran out to the shop and tried it. Think I will use the KISS method on this. Thanks for watching, Gary
Very cool. Some where around here I have a nut bowl I made my mother in grade school shop class. That got me hooked on turning for sure. But the first day of my pattern making apprentice the boss handed me a drawing and said: here see what you can do with this. That was it I was totally hooked. Looks like you have a few years on me with junior high your wood shop class. Thanks for watching, Gary
Thank you very much Amber. He was a really good teach and loved Deft Lacquer and a radial arm saw. I soon found out that a table saw was much better for building things like cabinets and furniture. And of course it was our main tool in the pattern shop. That and a bandsaw and a big disk sander and you could make anything the customer wanted. Thanks for watching, Gary
Thank you Judith and that is great having the old book case. We still have the Oak roll top I made and the round oak dining table with a turned pedestal and carved feet. Both of those were made in 1973 or 1974. I need to look up the old pictures and put a note in each one. Thanks for watching, Gary
Hi, Gary. I've been away from UA-cam for a while, and it looks like I picked just the right time to take another look. That is a spectacular piece of work! The best part was watching the finished product spinning on the turntable at the end of the video. The reflection from the segments looked like strobe lights. You may have finally inspired me to cut some segments! Haha! Thanks for a great video! Take care, --Paul
I don't know if that wood gained anything in appearance over the 60 years but it certainly did not lose anything. It's beautiful. I love the little jug shape. And your Deft Lacquer finish is outstanding. I also like the little fixture you use for surfacing each ring. I'm not a welder but I bet the same thing can be done in hardwood. The setup procedure for it is good too. Lastly your production is very good. You show every step but not to excess. Too many turners refuse to show sanding because they say it is boring. Too much of it is perhaps but I want to see what technique is used. You did it very well. 👍👍Thank you for sharing. Have a great 2023 and stay safe. 🙂🙂 Subscribed.
Thank you very much Glen. Happy you enjoyed the video. The flattening jig was all stock parts that screw together except for the 3D printed piece and that could have been made out of wood. Thanks for watching, Gary
Thank you very much Wes, It is very special for sure. I fell in love with making things out of wood in a grade school shop class. The grain is what did it for me. It is so easy to not even see the grain but that is the best part of wood. Thanks for watching, Gary
Mama Mia! That is absolutely gorgeous! The reflection makes it look 3D with some pieces deep down inside the beautiful bowl and other squares popping out at you. Absolutely stunning work! You are so creative! Fabulous work!! Bravo!
Thanks so much Bruce. Every time I would either move the boards or just glance back at them it would make me smile. Thinking about how simple things were like back then and not knowing what would be in store for me. Thanks for watching, Gary
Hadn't thought about this before - with segmented turning it is possible to go with the grain all around the bowl. Must be nice to turn without hitting end grain intermittently. Nice work
For sure Joseph. It will make some of the easiest turnings you can do. Plus you make a stable part at the same time. My experience in segments long before segmented bowls go popular. We used the method at work for large wood patterns for a few reasons. One to make the pattern hollow to save on weight and material and one of the best reasons was the ease at which it turns without having to deal with engrain. Thanks for watching, Gary
Thank you very much. It sure brought back a lot of memories for sure. I talked about when I decided to be a wood pattern maker What got my interest was there was a wood shop behind where I lived and I could look out the window and see them working. I loved what they were doing but had no idea what they were making. So when I hit high school and found out what pattern makers did I knew that was what I wanted to do. Absolutely no regrets. Thanks for watching, Gary
Really beautiful, Gary. The finish is great, too. It must be a great feeling that you will be able to keep a cherished memory like that around for a long time. Bill
Thank you Bill. For sure I felt bad looking at those boards leaning against the wall near my milling machine. I moved them out close a month ago when I knew it was time to give them a new life. Thanks for watching, Gary
I still have my very first wood shop project. A small bathroom stool made from poplar. That was 1970. Your vase is extra cool because of the history of the wood. 👍
Thank you Dan. I hope this summer when we take the old piano apart I will be able to make something from it. It is a 1904 upright and no body will even take it for free. My wife has claimed part of it for me to make her a cool computer desk. Or at least that is the plan. Thanks for watching, Gary
Well who wouldn’t love that! Good for you recycling an old high school project into something that can be cherished for ever. Wow! And here I thought I was a hoarder 😊. A beautiful project and again I’m amazed at your skill and patience. Cheers,Rick
Such a beautiful piece, and now you have a gorgeous keepsake for you and your family for years to come! I like the idea of crystal’s to put the story of the wood inside. I would add a picture of your shelf if you have one. What a treasure!
Thanks so much Marcia! We are still looking for a picture of the shelf. Seems like I would have had one from back when I made it. Hope to find one but at least I will write something up to put in it. And I do have pictures of the boards before I cut them up. Thanks for watching, Gary
Sentimental genius!! Watching you cut it on the lathe it appeared to cut nicely without tear out or dust. It must’ve aged very well without deteriorating. I agree with Phil about the appearance on the turntable seeing the segments reflect. Super job and great video again. Thank you!
Thank you very much Barry. For sure it aged nicely and it was so nice cutting into it and exposing all the fresh grain. It will no long have to sit in my unheated garage. It is now in the center of the shelf I keep my favorites. Thanks for watching, Gary
Thank you very much Garry. For a few years we have been wanting to get rid of our 1904 upright piano. Cant even give them away anymore. I have deiced to take it a part and use as much wood as I can from it. Stay tuned. It will not be till it warms back up here and not raining. Thanks for watching, Gary
gorgeous Gary always a treat watching you on the lathe, such clear step by step instructions without going on too long at each bit, as always a superb finish on a gorgeous piece I am not jealous of the finish you achieve at all (he says nose growing a foot long) cheers for sharing Ross 👍👍
Thank you very much Ross. I appreciate your comments and feed back. I never know for sure if I might be jabbering a bit much about some things. Brushing lacquer is a lot different than wipe on poly for sure. And you can get a great finish with wipe on poly or even the water based polyacrylic. The thing with lacquers is that is all we used on the patterns at work. Some being as big as 15 feet long so that is a lot of brushing. The big trick with lacquer unlike a varnish is you do not want to brush it out. It dries way to fast. Except for the last finish coat where I make it about 50/50 mix with lacquer thinner. Worth trying for sure. But the spray lacquer works good as well. Thanks again, Gary
Thank you very much Michael. You know you just got me thinking. Someone suggested a little history written down and place into the bowl. Maybe a stirp of the same wood put in there. Thanks for watching, Gary
Great idea. Honestly though, that piece has enough history you could get away with something a bit more permanant than a piece of paper. Maybe a stand with a place for a small plaque or something.
That is truly a beautiful piece Gary and a great way of keeping the history of one of your first woodworking projects alive! That will now become a treasure for your children after you don't need it any more, well done and thanks! Cheers Al
Thanks so much Al. For sure if I would have left it as 2 boards nobody would want them. I remember the day I brought it home from school all excited to show my mother. Thanks for watching, Gary
Gary, I appreciate your attention to details and your ability to convey every step, tool, lathe speed, etc. You cover all the bases - creative artist to detailed technician!
Thank you very much Maria. Yes the edge grain looks so much better than the flat grain. But back then we built everything out of flat boards. And of course I was a high school student and had not yet learned all the cool things we do today. Thanks for watching, Gary
Thank you very much. I was very happy when I finished it. That was a very important piece of wood. Was a kind of hard to choose to cut it up into small pieces but it was the best use for it. Take care, Gary
Oh My Goodness! Walnut is King already. Pretty sure I love it even more segmented. Super job making this piece. I may have to give segmenting another go because of this. Thanks for sharing this with us Gary!
Thank you very much Doug. It is amazing who the grain can change with how it is cut. I recall the first time I used segments as an apprentice wood pattern maker. Wow that was soo cool but this part was about 8 feel long and 3 foot in diameter. But once I got into it I made my wife a beautiful segmented lidded box out of Pecan. Not a little box either. About 12' diameter. It is sitting on a shelf next to the Oak roll top desk I made her as well. All close to 5o years ago. Give it a try I think you will love it.
Awesome , build & story. It sure looks better then a flat board .I have a couple of items that I built many years ago that I & my wife still use , a good feeling .
Thank you very much Mark. Our place is filled with things I built over the years. Two are almost 50 years old. An Oak roll top desk and a round oak table with a turned pedestal and carved feet. Thanks for wataching, Gary
What a treasure to be able to reclaim that wood. I would imagine that many special memories went through your mind as you were working on it! It looks beautiful.
Thanks you Mark. For sure it went back to the great shop teachers I had and as a senior they let me take shop if I would be willing to be an assistant as well and help the younger kids. I got to work on what ever I wanted when not helping. That year I built one of my sisters a desk and another one a china hutch. When my wife and I got married we ended up with 4 or 5 aquariums. The unit I made in high school had 2. That is another hobby we never want to do again. Lot of work. Thanks for watching, Gary
Thank you very much. A lot of these will be done with contrasting wood. But I was not about to do that with this one. The contrast of the wood is better than anything else I may have used along with it. Thanks for watching, Gary
Gary, it’s lovely. What a fantastic way to revisit your youth and it was so interesting to see you flatten the segments so they fit perfectly. Maybe i wasted my money on a drum sander? 🌞
Thank you Ray. I have always wanted to get a drum sander and would have bought one 2 years ago when I built a new information desk for our church. But none stock and I did not want to wait 3 months. They have them in stock but I do not have room for one. Oh sure could get rid of one of my bandsaws but I really like having 2..not to mention the horizontal metal cutting one. I may get rid of it and one of my milling machines. That would give me much more room. But I have to say my flattening system worked great! Thanks for watching, Gary
I love this bowl the way the pieces even though they're all sanded smooth they have light and shadows in the wood each piece lovely and distinct from the others. For the age of the wood it looks brand spanking new.
Thank you very much Judith. It was very special making this. As wood sits it does age and we mostly thing about the surface we can see. It was a real joy to cut into it from lots directions the way making segments will do. A very peasant surprise was waiting to how itself. Thanks for watching, Gary
Your skill as a patternmaker certainly shines through. I will "blow my trumpet" and say that my techniques as a retired UK patternmaker are similar to yours. I do enjoy seeing (and reminiscing) your videos. I have made a comment on each video I've viewed - and appreciated your reply. By the way I've found a Bulgarian company who will supply a 3d printer at reasonable cost - I look forward to delivery next week. May be my last "boys toy"
Hi Perry, yes I do love talking about our old trade. It sure is not what it used to be. I was lucky that there was still drawings coming in and i got to build them from 2D instead of sanding up something that came off the CNC machine. I felt sorry for the young apprentices I helped train and then they end up doing finishing on a pattern milled out by someone who had very little idea of how it even worked when the foundry got them. And then the CAD guys that did not know what draft was for. Oh well I loved what I did and I love what I am doing now. A 3D printer! Fantastic. I almost printed a template up today but the laser machine will cut it 50 times faster than the printer will print it. But the printer will do more and I like it a lot more. Have fun when it shows up. Which model did you get? Gary
@@ThePapa1947 After much thought I have purchased a Saturn 8K (Manufacturer Elegoo) MSLA Printer with 10" 8K monographic LCD display. Building space 219x123x210. Cost was a little more than I wanted but with free delivery and set-up and demo. Plus my partner (Armenian woman) who is very artistic can produce her items on it as well. That frees me up to concentrate on my products rather that turning formers for her. Although I have a long list of items and tooling which will be made first.
Gosh what a lovely bowl and fantastic story Gary. You have described your processes extremely well, I might finish off my first segmented bowl now, you’ve spurred me on. Thanks for sharing, enjoyed this immensely. End grain,side grain fantastic.
Thank you Chris, yes it is very special. I was talking with our daughters the other day it she was having a hard time remember where she had it for a few years. We never could find any pictures of it in use around here. Thanks for watching, Gary
Thank you Laura, yes it really felt good. I struggled for a few years on what to make out of it. But I am really happy what I decided on. Thanks for watching, Gary
Wow, Gary .. just WOW. What a beautiful bowl, what a lovely story. If only the tree knew what was going to be made from it, and that you cared for the wood for 60 years, and then how it would be repurposed, using your enhanced skills to make something wonderful to treasure for even longer ... that tree would be so happy! - isn't this what we all aspire to and why we love what we do in our own small way. Brilliant!
David thank you for putting the story and my feelings for this piece of wood into a wonderful story. It is exactly how I feel.
I have wondered about the tree and where it was growing and why it was cut down.
I have some nice Walnut from a tree our friends needed to have taken down. Every piece I turn I think about how that tree looked(it was a beauty) Everyone that gets one of the turnings gets the story as well.
Thanks again,
Gary
Those segments reflect the light beautifully, Gary! I think this should permanently be on a turntable with a little spotlight pointed at it. What a fitting use for those old boards and I mean, OLD! LOL! That was a lot of segments! And with your math, each and every one fits perfectly! I love the design you used, very stately and, of course, the finish is impeccable! This is one for the Ascher family museum! Great job, professor! 😊
Phil
Thank you Phil. That would be cool to have them on a turntable with spot light. Once I got them cleaned up and sanded the one side they looked new and made me feel much younger...I wish LOL
It is sitting in the prime spot on a shelf behind me right now along with some of my other favorites.
I actually enjoyed brushing the lacquer on this one. But it sure does make lot of powerful fumes compared to spraying.
Back in high school we had a paint room and about all that was used was Deft Lacquer and when in there your started to feel like you could float. I think Deft did that to get us all addicted to the stuff LOL
Thanks for watching my friend,
Gary
You should show this to all those "decluttering" fanatics. Saving those boards really paid off,
Thank you very much Jim. Sometimes the perfect piece of wood is must sitting there waiting to be used.
Sort of one of those Catch 22 moments. Do I leave it how was and make a new wood frame for it. Or make it into something that you can look at with out setting hot cups of coffee on it LOL.
Sure happy I made this.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
What a wonderful way to preserve your history. I'm sure future generations will cherish it. I can imagine it being taken to Antique Road Show in a hundred years!
Thank you very much Kristi. I had to chuckle as it got its start 60 years ago. But not as a segmented bowl.
Sure hope we can find a picture of that stand some day. I know there has to be one. At least when I brought it home from high school shop class.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
...yep...she's a beauty!!!...I love how you can now re-enjoy the wood you enjoyed 60 years ago...very well done!!!...👍
Matt
Thank you very much Matt. It was a real treat to make it back then and even more special today.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
63 is the year I was born in July I never thought I would make it to 60 that is a real beauty
Thank you Bill. Happy you are here and watching my videos.
Take care,
Gary
Thanks for sharing this nostalgic turning! I recently finished my first segmented piece, largely inspired by your many amazing videos. It’s also a nostalgic creation; made from three boards cut from trees that came from my dad’s farm in Michigan. Cherry, ash, and walnut rings; layered to form an urn for my dad’s eventual funeral. He’s 97 now, still lives in his own place, and is still a good driver! Anyway, keep up the good work. I hope you’re still turning when you’re 97!
If you’re interested, I could show you a picture of the urn.
Thank you very much Mike. What you have made is very special and sure I would love to see it.
You can find my email in my About Page.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
That is one beautiful vase!
So glad you decided to rip up those boards.
And Thank you for mentioning my channel 👍 you are too kind
Thank you Luie. I was not sure how I would feel cutting them up. But I am sure glad I did. The grain is amazing with its new shape.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
After 60 years of looking at the flat grain of those boards, now you get to enjoy the shimmer of the side grain. What a beautiful piece with so much priceless history behind it!
Thank you very much Leigh. I debated to tell the story of the boards but really felt compelled to do so.
Just wait till you see what I do to our 1904 upright piano. Well I will have to wait as well because not exactly sure what it will be.
I would give it away but nobody wants and old piano and my wife wants me to make her something for her out of it and not just burn it all up.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Family Heirloom. Make sure you write up the story and put it in the vase for future generations.
Thank you very much Valerie. For sure I will do that and maybe make a copy of the video and put it on a USB drive.
Thanks for the historical piece. Very cool Gary.
Thank you Paul it was really fun for me to do.
I appreciate you watching and commenting,
Gary
What a great way to keep your memories of one time in your life alive. People don’t understand why we save stuff. It’s just for what you did there. Way to go, also that finish shines beautifully. Keep on doing what you do.
Thank you Dale, happy you liked it. So this might be the year I take apart our 1904 upright piano. I will make something from some of it.
Nobody wants them anymore and it would only go for scrap. So I will try and make something for the memories of it.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Mama Mia! Now that is an awesome piece of work! So cool with all those segments! It is absolutely gorgeous! Now you can have that for another 60 years! The memories will never fade! Bravo!
Thank you very much Mary. It was a very special turning for me to do.
Happy you enjoyed it.
Gary
One of your most stunning turnings! Not only does it have nostalgic value, but it's a "clinic" on segmental turning! Well done, Gary!
Thanks so much Donald I appreciate you comment and thanks for watching,
Gary
That is a beautiful bowl. It's good to reuse old wood. It has a lot of history.
Thank you very much James. The piece of wood was first made in SW Portland , lived in NW Portland. Then it moved to SE Portland and when I got out of the Army it moved back to another part of SW Portland which is called Garden Home Oregon.
So there is a little bit of history. Oh I forgot about when our daughter had it. That may have been down in Southern Oregon where she went to college.. But neither one of us could remember if it was there or maybe Hillsboro Oregon when she got out of school
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Even the bowl is smiling.
Thank you Edwin and I believe you are correct. That bowl is very happy now that is is the number one spot in our house.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
I love the way the lights reflects off of the grain as the bowl rotates. Simply beautiful.
Thank you John. I do love the reflection the wood gives. It really makes the wood look alive.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Nice job looks Awesome Gary, Great momento piece to be remembered for years to come, it’s great to prolong old stuff that would be done away with for something Beautiful to be made into 😎
Thanks so much Kimsey!
Coming soon in a theater near you...Papa turns a piano LOL
Well we have a 1904 upright piano we can not even give away. So I think we will take it apart and I will look for some turning stock in there. There should be a non turning project for sure. but will need to wait for warm weather and no rain!
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Beautiful job Gary! Old Board is now a beautiful new bowl back to the future
Thanks for sharing the history
Thanks so much Dave, it was sure fun to do.
Cheers,
Gary
Absolutely beautiful. You did those old boards justice.
Thank you very much Sue. I just had to do something with them. Back then segmented turnings were not really thought of for bowls.
But was used a lot in the wood pattern making trade. Matter of fact I became a wood pattern maker and did some huge segmented turnings. One was 6 foot in diameter and ended up about 3 foot deep.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Hi Gary...
Just beautiful... very well done...
Great back story...
Take care my friend...All the best.....Andy
Thanks so much Andy. This has been one of my favorite things to turn. Thanks for watching,
Gary
Wow ! 60 yrs ! That is one beautiful bowl Gary . Great job ! Thanks for sharing .
Thank you very much Jon. Happy you enjoyed watching it being made.
Take care,
Gary
BEAUTIFUL as usual Gary!! Thank you for using our pastes on top of your lacquer!! I dont know if we told you Gary, our pastes were featured in this winters THIS OLD HOUSE magazine, the crew used it on top of a table they built. Keep up the great videos Gary!!
Thank you Tom! Yes I watched the video a few times. Congrats on that.
Nice proportion. Sure came alive. My first project was 1967 and we still have that little 2 deck corner table. Yep I’m a 47 too. Should start a club. Lol
Thank you Steve. That would be a great club. My first car(a junker I bought for $25 when I was 16) was a 1947 Dodge Coupe.
Take care,
Gary
Gary, you repurposed that shelf into a beautiful piece of art. If you haven't already done so, I encourage you to write down the story of the history of the wood. Tuck it inside so that the story isn't forgotten!
Thank you Crystal! I like that idea and then I will add a link to the video.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Wow! That's beautiful Gary! And you made that shelf...the year I was born! 2 years till my retirement! Cant wait!😃👍🏻👍🏻
Thank you so much Mike! Only two more years. That is great. Plus retiring when you are still a y6ung man! Very Cool!
Gary, my wife and I love the depth of the wood . Beautiful piece of work and great way to repurpose a nostalgic, sentimental piece. Amazing!
Thank you Steve and you wife as well. It was really fun to make it from those boards. Sure glad I decided to save them.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
As Lawrence Welk would say, "Van Nuys, Van Nuys!" (Very nice, Very nice!). Like everyone else, I love the history behind that wood. I would have just told everyone that I wanted to make sure that the wood had dried properly. Ha ha ha!
Thank you Dave and that is a good idea. But if I told my friends that I would hear. Yeah it dried and aged like you but you got white hair and lots of wrinkles in those years LOL But I hang around a bunch of old guys who can be pretty brutal. But so am I when it comes to kidding friends.
Magnificent, Gary! Your reminiscences took me back to 7th grade shop class, also 60 years ago. The complexity and precision of your work is a joy to watch. Then there's that hand-brushed finish! Wow!!
Thank you very much Peter. Somewhere around here I have a nut bowl I made my mother in the 7th grade.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Oooooooooutstanding, Gary! Another fine wood turning brought to you by ThePapa1947. The wood has a very nice chatoyance and comes out nicely on the video.👍👍👍👍👍🐈🐈
Thanks so much John, I have only had a few times where I use the flat side of the board. My guess is the board was cut from the log with the grain the way it was. Like getting quarter sawed boards. Which tend to cost more.
Back in 1963 I was fortunate enough to use Walnut. Only time I used Walnut in shop class.
Take care my friend,
Gary
Very beautiful Gary. The lacquer really made it pop, papa. 👍🇺🇸
Thank you! For sure that lacquer brought the life back in the wood.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
That’s what I call brilliant recycling, Gary. What a remarkable woodturning, my friend. You must be thrilled with it and you should be.
I also like your flattening jig a lot. Wonderful video, Gary! 👏👏👏👏
Take care,
…..Gord
Thank you very much Gord. Those boards had a rough life. With us using it for a aquarium stand and our daughter have it for a couple of years. I was talking to her the other day and she had to think about when she had it. Maybe have been right after college when she shared an apartment with on of her friends. Either way I was hoping she had a picture of it. I think we had the corner of it in two phots we have.
One with the wife and I and the other when our daughter was around 2 years old.
If one ever shows up I will show it. But those pictures were taken when you actually had film and had to pay for all of them even if they were blurry.
Thanks a lot for watching my friend,
Gary
Nice old memories going on for another 60 yrs. you'd better keep well so you can show it to me again in another 60
Thank you very much Ron! Thanks for watching my friend,
Gary
Another beauty. Congratulations on living your dream and having that magnificent bowl as a trophy for your success. I look forward to your next video. Thank you for everything.
Thank you very much Carson. What I loved about my job was making something different that had never been made before.
And mostly the challenge of making it.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
What a beautiful vase and a wonderful memory ❤
Thank you very much Pat and thanks for watching,
Gary
I really love your ability to design jigs and tools to help you turn out some beautiful pieces. I never get tired of watching your videos. Keep up the great work.
Thank you very much Doug for your wonderful comments. They are much appreciated.
Take care
Gary
Gary you are so inspirational. Repurposing your selves has given you a beautiful heirloom to pass on. The chatoyant’s is amazing. I really like how you true up the face before you glue up the next layer.
Thanks so much Kevin. I knew the system would work and was a little stuck on the idea of a cross feed type system. But this is so simple and does the job. And actually takes the same setup to get the ring thickness.
Well if I really wanted to I could setup a gluing jig in my CNC milling machine and program each layer.....WAIT!!!!!!]
Dang I actually just thought of that and almost ran out to the shop and tried it.
Think I will use the KISS method on this.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
I, too, am attached to old things, Gary. I still use the mallet and nut bowl I turned in junior high wood shop 65 years ago.
Very cool. Some where around here I have a nut bowl I made my mother in grade school shop class. That got me hooked on turning for sure. But the first day of my pattern making apprentice the boss handed me a drawing and said: here see what you can do with this.
That was it I was totally hooked. Looks like you have a few years on me with junior high your wood shop class.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
What a great idea Gary, really beautiful
Thank you Michael. I think it was the best use for those boards. I had thought about using them for years.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
So so lovely. Your shop teacher would be proud!
Thank you very much Amber. He was a really good teach and loved Deft Lacquer and a radial arm saw. I soon found out that a table saw was much better for building things like cabinets and furniture. And of course it was our main tool in the pattern shop. That and a bandsaw and a big disk sander and you could make anything the customer wanted.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
A very beautiful hollow form Gary. Greta to see used wood repurposed.
Thank you very much Jack. I appreciate you watching and commenting.
Take care,
Gary
Wow nice looking 60 years. I have a bookcase I made with my grandfather 73 years ago still using it.
Thank you Judith and that is great having the old book case.
We still have the Oak roll top I made and the round oak dining table with a turned pedestal and carved feet.
Both of those were made in 1973 or 1974. I need to look up the old pictures and put a note in each one.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Wow, what a beautiful transition from old to new.
Thank you very much Michael. Just needed to age the wood before giving it a final shape LOL.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Beautiful! And I could almost smell that old wood.
Thank you very much Cliff. So happy I choose what to make out of it.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Hi, Gary. I've been away from UA-cam for a while, and it looks like I picked just the right time to take another look. That is a spectacular piece of work! The best part was watching the finished product spinning on the turntable at the end of the video. The reflection from the segments looked like strobe lights. You may have finally inspired me to cut some segments! Haha! Thanks for a great video!
Take care,
--Paul
Welcome back Paul and thanks for watching.
Yes those segments really shined. Some beautiful grain hiding all these years inside those boards.
I don't know if that wood gained anything in appearance over the 60 years but it certainly did not lose anything. It's beautiful. I love the little jug shape. And your Deft Lacquer finish is outstanding. I also like the little fixture you use for surfacing each ring. I'm not a welder but I bet the same thing can be done in hardwood. The setup procedure for it is good too. Lastly your production is very good. You show every step but not to excess. Too many turners refuse to show sanding because they say it is boring. Too much of it is perhaps but I want to see what technique is used. You did it very well. 👍👍Thank you for sharing. Have a great 2023 and stay safe. 🙂🙂 Subscribed.
Thank you very much Glen. Happy you enjoyed the video.
The flattening jig was all stock parts that screw together except for the 3D printed piece and that could have been made out of wood.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Great job Gary! Always nice to repurpose something with that much sentimental value; may it last at least another 60yrs!
Wes @ Piedra Designs
Thank you very much Wes, It is very special for sure. I fell in love with making things out of wood in a grade school shop class. The grain is what did it for me. It is so easy to not even see the grain but that is the best part of wood.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Mama Mia! That is absolutely gorgeous! The reflection makes it look 3D with some pieces deep down inside the beautiful bowl and other squares popping out at you. Absolutely stunning work! You are so creative! Fabulous work!! Bravo!
Thanks so much Mary. I sure enjoyed making this out of those old boards. It looks much better this way than it did as a stand.
Take care,
Gary
It has been so long since I have heard of deff Lacquer
I have been using it pretty much all those years from the first time I tried it. I do think it got less popular for a while.
gary that is a good segmented vase my friend hope u r doing well, just remember God loves u, God bless. chris
Thanks so much Chris. Doing ok my friend. And for sure he does love us.
Take care,
Gary
As always, you give us great ideas and bring them to life. Thanks for the sacrifice of your time and the benefit of your wisdom.
Thank you very much Stevio. Time spent enjoying and helping is quality time.
Thanks for your comments and for watching,
Gary
Beautiful bowl Gary with quite a bit of history, loved it buddy! Love that deft lacquer finish. Thanks for sharing my friend!👍🏻👍🏻
Thanks so much Bruce. Every time I would either move the boards or just glance back at them it would make me smile.
Thinking about how simple things were like back then and not knowing what would be in store for me.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
I love the story behind the wood. Nice looking turning as well.
Thank you very much Rick. I love that story as well. Brings back memories of another time when things were simple.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
I'm not really a segmented turner. Okay I have never tried it. But never say never. You and Luie are certainly the best I have seen. Really amazing.
Thank you very much Rick. Not for everyone but give it a try sometime and you may love it.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Hadn't thought about this before - with segmented turning it is possible to go with the grain all around the bowl. Must be nice to turn without hitting end grain intermittently. Nice work
For sure Joseph. It will make some of the easiest turnings you can do. Plus you make a stable part at the same time.
My experience in segments long before segmented bowls go popular. We used the method at work for large wood patterns for a few reasons. One to make the pattern hollow to save on weight and material and one of the best reasons was the ease at which it turns without having to deal with engrain.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
A very attractive bowl from wood with many many positive memories. I admire your vision!
Thank you very much. It sure brought back a lot of memories for sure.
I talked about when I decided to be a wood pattern maker What got my interest was there was a wood shop behind where I lived and I could look out the window and see them working. I loved what they were doing but had no idea what they were making. So when I hit high school and found out what pattern makers did I knew that was what I wanted to do. Absolutely no regrets.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Really beautiful, Gary. The finish is great, too. It must be a great feeling that you will be able to keep a cherished memory like that around for a long time.
Bill
Thank you Bill. For sure I felt bad looking at those boards leaning against the wall near my milling machine. I moved them out close a month ago when I knew it was time to give them a new life.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
I still have my very first wood shop project. A small bathroom stool made from poplar. That was 1970. Your vase is extra cool because of the history of the wood. 👍
Thank you Dan. I hope this summer when we take the old piano apart I will be able to make something from it. It is a 1904 upright and no body will even take it for free. My wife has claimed part of it for me to make her a cool computer desk. Or at least that is the plan.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Absolutely stunning Gary I want to be like you when I grow up 😃love watching you create thanks for sharing your wonderful talents 😊
Thank you very much Tim. Just make sure you keep that kid in you somewhere. I have!
Thanks for watching,
Gary
@ThePapa1947 I'm a 75 year old kid who likes turning wood 😊
Well who wouldn’t love that! Good for you recycling an old high school project into something that can be cherished for ever. Wow! And here I thought I was a hoarder 😊. A beautiful project and again I’m amazed at your skill and patience. Cheers,Rick
Thank you Rick. Yes there are some things I cherish(AKA a hoarder) This one is pretty special.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Nice work Gary, I always love your segmented projects.
Thank you very much Ronald. I have a few more in line to do.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Such a beautiful piece, and now you have a gorgeous keepsake for you and your family for years to come! I like the idea of crystal’s to put the story of the wood inside. I would add a picture of your shelf if you have one. What a treasure!
Thanks so much Marcia! We are still looking for a picture of the shelf. Seems like I would have had one from back when I made it. Hope to find one but at least I will write something up to put in it. And I do have pictures of the boards before I cut them up.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Sentimental genius!! Watching you cut it on the lathe it appeared to cut nicely without tear out or dust. It must’ve aged very well without deteriorating. I agree with Phil about the appearance on the turntable seeing the segments reflect. Super job and great video again. Thank you!
Thank you very much Barry. For sure it aged nicely and it was so nice cutting into it and exposing all the fresh grain. It will no long have to sit in my unheated garage. It is now in the center of the shelf I keep my favorites.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Another great project!! Looks fantastic Gary!!
Thank you very much Alan!
absolutely gorgeous bowl. Doesn't seem that the age of the wood changes your craftsmanship either. That is definition of recycle on a super level
Thank you very much Garry. For a few years we have been wanting to get rid of our 1904 upright piano. Cant even give them away anymore.
I have deiced to take it a part and use as much wood as I can from it.
Stay tuned. It will not be till it warms back up here and not raining.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
gorgeous Gary always a treat watching you on the lathe, such clear step by step instructions without going on too long at each bit, as always a superb finish on a gorgeous piece I am not jealous of the finish you achieve at all (he says nose growing a foot long) cheers for sharing Ross 👍👍
Thank you very much Ross. I appreciate your comments and feed back. I never know for sure if I might be jabbering a bit much about some things. Brushing lacquer is a lot different than wipe on poly for sure. And you can get a great finish with wipe on poly or even the water based polyacrylic. The thing with lacquers is that is all we used on the patterns at work. Some being as big as 15 feet long so that is a lot of brushing. The big trick with lacquer unlike a varnish is you do not want to brush it out. It dries way to fast. Except for the last finish coat where I make it about 50/50 mix with lacquer thinner.
Worth trying for sure. But the spray lacquer works good as well.
Thanks again,
Gary
That is just stunning. The finish came out so nice. What a great way to pay homege to your younger self.
Thank you very much Michael. You know you just got me thinking. Someone suggested a little history written down and place into the bowl. Maybe a stirp of the same wood put in there.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Great idea. Honestly though, that piece has enough history you could get away with something a bit more permanant than a piece of paper. Maybe a stand with a place for a small plaque or something.
That is great Gary. Glad you are enjoy your 3D crafting.
Thank you Lee. Yes the 3D is lots of fun and useful.
Thanks for watching.
Gary
That is truly a beautiful piece Gary and a great way of keeping the history of one of your first woodworking projects alive! That will now become a treasure for your children after you don't need it any more, well done and thanks!
Cheers Al
Thanks so much Al. For sure if I would have left it as 2 boards nobody would want them. I remember the day I brought it home from school all excited to show my mother.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Gary, I appreciate your attention to details and your ability to convey every step, tool, lathe speed, etc. You cover all the bases - creative artist to detailed technician!
Thank you very much John. I appreciate hearing your comment on this. Some say...too much talking and not enough turning LOL
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Awesome use of some pretty old wood. I like how, even though the segments are rounded, they look flat from certain angles. Thanks for sharing.
Thank you Jimmy. Yes they do appear flat and it gives a wonderful illusion.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
That is just stunning Gary.
Thanks so much Les!
Beautiful piece Gary that end grain sure does look great with the Deft lacquer!
Thank you very much Maria. Yes the edge grain looks so much better than the flat grain. But back then we built everything out of flat boards. And of course I was a high school student and had not yet learned all the cool things we do today.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Gary it looks Stunning, well done Sir 🙌🙌🙌🙌🙌🙌🙌🙌. Thank you for sharing how this is done 👍👍
Thank you Douglas and thanks for watching,
Gary
Stunning! What a beautiful repurpose. I am always amazed at your segmented work.
Thanks so much Stephanie and thanks for watching,
Gary
Gary, that is a beautiful piece.
Thank you very much Paul!
Wow, fabulous Gary. Never throw anything away !!!
Thanks Stewart. I never do but I should on some things. Need some room back 😔 lol.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
That is an amazing piece!! What a way to use some wood that's been "hanging around" for years. Nice job.
Thank you very much. I was very happy when I finished it. That was a very important piece of wood. Was a kind of hard to choose to cut it up into small pieces but it was the best use for it.
Take care,
Gary
Beautiful vase 🏺
Thank you very much Carol!
Oh My Goodness! Walnut is King already. Pretty sure I love it even more segmented. Super job making this piece. I may have to give segmenting another go because of this. Thanks for sharing this with us Gary!
Thank you very much Doug. It is amazing who the grain can change with how it is cut.
I recall the first time I used segments as an apprentice wood pattern maker. Wow that was soo cool but this part was about 8 feel long and 3 foot in diameter. But once I got into it I made my wife a beautiful segmented lidded box out of Pecan. Not a little box either. About 12' diameter. It is sitting on a shelf next to the Oak roll top desk I made her as well. All close to 5o years ago.
Give it a try I think you will love it.
Hi Papa
Great looking vase.
Davd and Maria Wuse
Thank you very much David and Maria!
Awesome , build & story. It sure looks better then a flat board .I have a couple of items that I built many years ago that I & my wife still use , a good feeling .
Thank you very much Mark. Our place is filled with things I built over the years. Two are almost 50 years old. An Oak roll top desk and a round oak table with a turned pedestal and carved feet.
Thanks for wataching,
Gary
Gary you are a great craftsman that vase is beautiful.
Thank you very much! And thanks for watching,
Gary
Beautiful Gary. Inspiring too. It’s given me some ideas. Thanks for sharing.
Thank you very much. Happy turning,
Gary
What a treasure to be able to reclaim that wood. I would imagine that many special memories went through your mind as you were working on it! It looks beautiful.
Thanks you Mark. For sure it went back to the great shop teachers I had and as a senior they let me take shop if I would be willing to be an assistant as well and help the younger kids. I got to work on what ever I wanted when not helping.
That year I built one of my sisters a desk and another one a china hutch.
When my wife and I got married we ended up with 4 or 5 aquariums. The unit I made in high school had 2.
That is another hobby we never want to do again. Lot of work.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
What a great project. A beautiful new piece that holds good old-school memories. Deftly done.
Thanks!
Thank you very much. A lot of these will be done with contrasting wood. But I was not about to do that with this one.
The contrast of the wood is better than anything else I may have used along with it.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Gary, it’s lovely. What a fantastic way to revisit your youth and it was so interesting to see you flatten the segments so they fit perfectly. Maybe i wasted my money on a drum sander? 🌞
Thank you Ray. I have always wanted to get a drum sander and would have bought one 2 years ago when I built a new information desk for our church. But none stock and I did not want to wait 3 months. They have them in stock but I do not have room for one. Oh sure could get rid of one of my bandsaws but I really like having 2..not to mention the horizontal metal cutting one. I may get rid of it and one of my milling machines. That would give me much more room.
But I have to say my flattening system worked great!
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Gorgeous! Nice work Papa!
Thank you very much Peggy and thanks for watching,
Gary
I love this bowl the way the pieces even though they're all sanded smooth they have light and shadows in the wood each piece lovely and distinct from the others. For the age of the wood it looks brand spanking new.
Thank you very much Judith. It was very special making this. As wood sits it does age and we mostly thing about the surface we can see.
It was a real joy to cut into it from lots directions the way making segments will do. A very peasant surprise was waiting to how itself.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Your skill as a patternmaker certainly shines through. I will "blow my trumpet" and say that my techniques as a retired UK patternmaker are similar to yours. I do enjoy seeing (and reminiscing) your videos. I have made a comment on each video I've viewed - and appreciated your reply. By the way I've found a Bulgarian company who will supply a 3d printer at reasonable cost - I look forward to delivery next week. May be my last "boys toy"
Hi Perry, yes I do love talking about our old trade. It sure is not what it used to be. I was lucky that there was still drawings coming in and i got to build them from 2D instead of sanding up something that came off the CNC machine. I felt sorry for the young apprentices I helped train and then they end up doing finishing on a pattern milled out by someone who had very little idea of how it even worked when the foundry got them. And then the CAD guys that did not know what draft was for. Oh well I loved what I did and I love what I am doing now.
A 3D printer! Fantastic. I almost printed a template up today but the laser machine will cut it 50 times faster than the printer will print it.
But the printer will do more and I like it a lot more.
Have fun when it shows up. Which model did you get?
Gary
@@ThePapa1947 After much thought I have purchased a Saturn 8K (Manufacturer Elegoo) MSLA Printer with 10" 8K monographic LCD display. Building space 219x123x210. Cost was a little more than I wanted but with free delivery and set-up and demo. Plus my partner (Armenian woman) who is very artistic can produce her items on it as well. That frees me up to concentrate on my products rather that turning formers for her.
Although I have a long list of items and tooling which will be made first.
You gave those boards a new life!! Excellent work Gary ,and the segments are really nice superb finish:):)
All the best
Yiannis
Thanks so much Yiannis! Happy you liked it and thanks for watching.
Gary
Great piece as always Gary -- thanks for sharing. Stay safe my friend -- Dennis
Thank you very much Dennis! Take care,
Gary
Gosh what a lovely bowl and fantastic story Gary.
You have described your processes extremely well, I might finish off my first segmented bowl now, you’ve spurred me on. Thanks for sharing, enjoyed this immensely.
End grain,side grain fantastic.
Thank you very much Greg I really appreciate your comment and thanks for watching.
Gary
Very nice. A great way to preserve some history.
Thank you Chris, yes it is very special. I was talking with our daughters the other day it she was having a hard time remember where she had it for a few years. We never could find any pictures of it in use around here.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
That has to be heart warming to keep something from your history and making something new. Well done Gary. The grains are awesome.
Thank you Laura, yes it really felt good. I struggled for a few years on what to make out of it. But I am really happy what I decided on.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Beautiful recycle job Gary!
Stuart
Thank you very much Stuart!
Very beautiful. Thank you for showing us
Thank you Mike and thanks for watching and commenting.
Take care,
Gary
Beautiful Bowl, I like that you gave the old boards new life. The design is very good and the finish is beautiful. Thank you for sharing.
Thank you very much Bob!
Very inspiring. I’ve learned a lot watching your videos. Thanks for sharing the history behind the wood.
Thank you Bob it was a lot of fun using those 2 boards to make something totally different from what they were.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
great video Gary. I would like to see a video of your musical talent.
Thank you very much Dave. A few years ago I posted a clip playing in the group I am in.
Thanks for watching,
Gary