Burnt Wood Finishing on the Lathe

in #lathe7 years ago


Ive been working quite a bit with green wood recently so I have a nice stack of split wood ready to be worked.  A friend of mine is letting me use his lathe.  I have really been struggling to learn to use the machine, but I did finally turn out a stretcher.  My brother had the idea to do a burnt wood finish.  We burnt the wood and then finished it off with a coat of linseed oil.  I am pleased with the results, and I will be exploring these techniques more in the future.  

As I mention in the video the wood is from a friend of mine who live in the next town over from me.  I cut a few hackberry trees off of her lot.  It was quite a lot of wood so I made and sold a few bar stools with this and then I split the rest and painted the ends.  

I have been working mostly with a shave horse and a drawknife to shape the wood but a woodworker friend of mine suggested to me that I learn to turn.  It just happened that a friend of mine had a lathe sitting around that he is willing to let me borrow and use indefinitely.

Learning to turn is challanging.  In the begging I had a few pieces of wood flying through the air very near to my face.  When I say a piece of wood I pretty much mean a small pecan log.  No harm done.  One major advancement was aquiring a set of roughing gouges.  These are large chisels in the shape of a U with a long sturdy handel.  Without this any work on the lathe is not possible. 

This last weekend my brother, my father, and I decided to give turning a try with the right tool for the job.  I mounted the piece of pecan that had formly been flying through the air and roughed it from an oval like cylender to an actual round piece of wood.  I had just broken the cheap handle for my other roughing gouge so we decided to turn this piece into a handel.

Then my dad wanted to mount a piece that I had split out of the hackberry tree, and so using a centerfinder I marked the centers and mounted the piece.  My brother came and roughed nearly to a cylender, and then I took it down the rest of the way.  Then because of my interest in making chairs I decided to make a chair stretcher.  So I took the piece way down and gave it a nice curve.

At this point my brother wanted to do a burnt wood finish.  I got out a torch, we lit it, and burnt the stretcher while turning on the lathe.  This type of finish worked especially well.  I would not have thought to do this if it was not for my brother.  I will use this technique in the future on full pieces of furniture.

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Does anyone know why the text here is in a strange text box that scrolls sideways instead of scrolling down the page?

It is possible to create a scroll bar with markdown.
Do you use any specific code?

I did not use code. So if I dont format the text with markdown then this is what happens?

No. The other way. If you use code then this could happen.
I prepare my text in an editor and copy it to steemit.
Do you also use an editor/tool and then copy/paste?

Yes I use LibreOffice for writing and spell checking. I use bluefish for html and php. So you write the markdown when you are making the post on steemit correct?

I had a similar problem in the past. I created my text in OneNote (with the markdown code) and copied it to steem. This caused a lot of problems with strange behaviours.
Now I'm using a simple texteditor (notepad++) and everything is fine.

nice video! turned out great and love the music :D

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