Well, its gotten much cooler here and rainy too. What kind of weather is this? Yes, wood turning weather!!
Ok, our next project is a scrap wood project and here is the discussion behind this:
DiscussionI had some 12"x1" pine boards left over from a recent project along with a piece of 12"x2"western red cedar that I had been eyeing for a couple of days and wondering what I could do with all of it. I suddenly got the idea to laminate them all together and make a yarn bowl. Linda, my buddy who tests a lot of my kitchen ware, is also an amazing knitter and I got the idea she might like to try out a yarn bowl for me. I emailed her and she said yes but to make it deep with a wide bottom so it cant easily tip over. So this is what were going begin making today.
PlansI am going to make the bowl out of yellow pine with a red cedar bottom. If you google the words yarn bowl youll see what they look like-typically a large, flat bottomed bowl with either several large holes drilled into the side or a hole-slot combination. The hole-slot thing allows the knitter to pass the yarn through the hole without having to break the yarn and it keeps the yarn in the bowl while its being knitted.
I used 8 - 12"x1" pine boards and cut them into 11" circles and I did the same thing with the red cedar. Im going to coat them liberally with wood glue, clamp them, and let the whole thing dry overnight.
Lets take a look at some photos:
Here is the stack ready for gluing. The whole thing is about 7"high and 11" wide and even though it looks huge in the photo, its not very heavy, which is important for my lathe as I dont want to exceed the operational limits by turning too heavy a block. You can also see a line on the side-Ive drawn that line on the edges of the boards to keep the end grain patterns lined up:








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