Category: Turnings 2010

  • Bowl 369 Red maple

    Another of the Red Maple Bowls from Roswell. This was a new design with the horizontal rim. I also dyed the inside a darkish Red color. I plan on making more of this design in the future.

  • Bowl 366 Cocobolo

    This bowl is from exotic wood purchased from a store that is a prevayor to woodworkers of all types. This piece is Cocobolo and was a Christmas gift from my sister Ann.

    It is perfect as a salt cellar and I am not sure whether this one will make it to market of it will end up in Allison’s kitchen.

  • Bowl 362 Mesquite

    This is one of about 8 bowls I have turned from some Mesquite a good friend brought back from Texas on a trip to visit his family. I really love this one as you can really see where the branch came out of the linb on this one.

  • Bowl 361 Walnut

    This is another bowl produced from the Knoxville Walnut. To give you an idea it took two trips to get the sections of wood down to Atlanta and will probably produce about 14 bowls that are 12-13 inches in diameter.

  • Bowl 360 Red Maple

    I was most pleased with this maple tree from Roswell. It was very healthy when it came down and the wood was very clean. This bowl will make someone a wonderful salad bowl.

    If there is a downside to Red maple its a grayish crust that forms on the wood during drying. I have seen this also on Bradford Pear, however the Pear is “easier” to remove, however in either case both take a long time to sand through to the clean wood.

  • Bowl 359 Walnut

    Another of the bowls turned from the Knoxville Walnut. You can see insect damage on the inside of the bowl, left side. It looks like black dots.

  • Bowl 355 Walnut

    The Walnut Wood came from my uncles home in Knoxville, TN. This bowl again was turned vertically and the pith is located in the bottom of this bowl. Because of the way it was turned the cambria (white wood) surrounds the main hardwood. When it was first turned fresh he white was really white but as it dried the darker tones set in and changed it completely.

    For now this is my “Keeper” for the year.

  • Bowl 354 Red Maple

    This bowl is from a very old, very healthy Red Maple tree that was removed from a Condo in Roswell so that Plumbing and sewer issues could be addressed.

    The bowl was turned vertically from the trunk, meaning that the pith is located on the bottom of the bowl and not eliminated from the top edge of the bowl.

    Anyway its very white except for a bit of inner bark and some contrasting sawdust used to fill a crack that arrived during drying.