Making a bowl may look daunting, but with the expert guidance of
veteran teacher Ernie Conover, you can create a beautiful bowl even
if your experience is limited. Step-by-step photo essays show every
part of the process. Detailed drawings show how to sharpen tools and
make the correct cuts. Includes information on how to find wood,
prepare bowl blanks, and correctly chuck them.
"Ernie Conover's real gift is that he can express in words
what most woodturners cannot. His book will guide you past the
pitfalls that can trap a turner. I highly recommend this book for
novice and advanced turners alike."
-- Rude Osolnik
Introduction:
Turning a bowl is the most popular project in the turning
seminars that I run. My five-day workshops start with spindle
turning; and after two days of spindle exercises, there is a buoyant
mood when students chuck up bowl blanks and take bowl gouges in
hand. It is much like watching traditional Olympic ice-skating.
After the compulsory figures program, the free skating is a joy.
People get excited and really start having fun. There is something
magical about turning a bowl, because it is both creative and
useful. In this age of mass-produced, plastic look-alike housewares,
the knowledge that you have produced something real, artistic, and
unique is a splendid touchstone.
Most beginners are daunted by the prospect of turning a bowl and
don't know where to begin. The act of turning a bowl is easy, but
the tools and procedures to do the job are not generally understood.
Without guidance, the beginner starts with a scrap of 8/4 dry wood,
a 6-in. faceplate, and a gouge that is not properly sharpened. He or
she may even try to use a spindle gouge rather than a bowl gouge;
and either tool, as delivered from the factory, will not be
sharpened correctly.
The experienced turner starts with a better-prepared blank,
mounted on a 3-in. faceplate (or a variety of other chucks), and
uses a properly sharpened bowl gouge. The 3-in. faceplate allows you
to form a base that is proportionally correct, whereas the larger
faceplate makes for a clunky, oversized base. Properly prepared wood
is much easier to work with, and a properly sharpened bowl gouge is
a joy to use. This is all to say that having a teacher to guide you
through the initial steps and set you on the right path saves time
and frustration. After all, the idea is to have fun.
This book is an action manual for anyone who wants to turn a
bowl. I have taught hundreds of people to turn bowls, and I can
teach you. We will accomplish that end with a roll up your sleeves
and lets get to work approach. This book is short on text and long
on photos and illustrations. It is really a series of photo essays,
which explain all aspects of bowl turning from the simplest to the
most advanced. What's more, you don't have to read the entire book
to get started. You may skip the chapters on tools and equipment and
get right to the first bowl-turning essay, which will then direct
you to the sanding, finishing, and reverse-turning sections. Once
you have mastered this basic technique, you can move on to more
advanced techniques, which in turn cross-reference appropriate basic
information.
I've even covered pewter spinning, which, to my knowledge, hasn't
been covered in any other book written in recent times. Although
this was an active hobby use of the wood lathe up through the early
1950s, it seems to have since been largely forgotten. When I was a
boy, I watched my father spin a set of pewter plates after we
returned from a trip to Colonial Williamsburg. The price in the gift
shop stopped him from buying, so he spun his own, which were
indistinguishable from those at Williamsburg. Spinning pewter does
not require sophisticated tools. My dad made his from old
broomsticks, and you can do the same. Bowl turning is many faceted.
It runs the gamut from simple, functional bowls that the baby-sitter
can run through the dishwasher with impunity to ultrathin art forms
that demand to be held but that are not functional beyond holding
peanuts. I offer many options in this book, and it is up to you to
find the style that is right for you. So take off your watch and
ring, roll up your sleeves, and lets get turning.
Table of Contents:
Introduction
1 Lathes and Chucks
The ideal bowl-turning lathe
Improving your lathe
Holding the work
2 Turning Tools
The bowl gouge
The combination gouge
Scrapers
Sharpening
3 Wood for Turning
Buying wood
Gathering wood
Tiling
4 Basic Turning Techniques
How to use a bowl gouge
The simplest way to turn a bowl: One-time chucking
A better way to turn a bowl: Work-and-turn chucking
Reverse chucking
Re-turning a bowl
5 Advanced Turning Techniques
Cone separations
Natural-edge bowls
Bird's-mouth bowls
Hollow forms
Tiled bowls
Surface treatments
6 Finishing Touches
Sanding
Buffing
Making repairs
Finishing
Engraving
7 Spinning Pewter
Pewter for spinning
Tools and equipment
The dynamics of spinning
Metal finishing
Appendices
Index
Soft-cover, 8 x 10 in., 160 pages, with
color photos and drawings
Published 2004
ISBN: 978-1-56158-293-8