Projects in the queue

  • 8-ball tournaments
  • Custom Pool Cue

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Winestoppers, more pen commissions, and ornaments

Well, I have started to attempt winestoppers, and I am quickly realizing that it is going to be like the pens all over again - I need to obtain the relevant knowledge, and to learn all of the tricks.

First, I learned that in addition to the "starter's kit" for the winestoppers, I needed a Morse taper and a chuck. The taper goes into the headstock of the lathe (where the pen mandrel went), and the chuck is supposed to go over the taper, and stay there. The problem is that the chuck won't do that - it keeps coming off. I need to figure that out.

Meanwhile, I am back to pens for a bit. I have been commissioned for several pens by some co-workers. I am making a bloodwood click pencil, a cocobolo fountain pen, a cocobolo Classic American pen, and a bloodwood fountain pen. I also need to order some combination pen/pencils, as I have been asked to make one of those as well. I will hopefully have them all done by the time I next go into the office. I turned and sanded and polished the first three pens yesterday, but just in case the assembly of the pens does not turn out well, I wanted to enjoy how the pieces came out on the lathe. :-)

Yesterday (Saturday) was the day when I went to see a demo of the ornament making process that got me into woodturning in the first place. Of course, at the time I took that original class, I knew nothing about woodturning at all, and was not really able to remember all that much of it by the time I had the tools to do it. So, I had been waiting for this demo for a long time. This time, I took some notes and also was able to retain a lot more of what I saw and heard. I also was able to apply some of the principles that I learned to my pen-making later that day.

In addition to the bloodwood fountain pen, I am also making a couple of olivewood click pens that, if they turn out well, could be part of a holiday present.

Last night, while I was making my pens here, my wife was at a chorus event and was then at a potluck dinner with a Yankee Swap. Her gift was the cocobolo Classic American pen that I made a while ago, that came out almost orangeish. It was well received.

My wife and I have been making our holiday wish lists, and there is going to be a lot of woodturning related stuff on mine. It is a win-win situation: I might get some useful stuff to use in woodturning, and for once, I am going to be pretty easy to shop for. :-)

Thursday, November 15, 2007

More places to get pen materials, and more people to receive the pens

Let's see...a lot has happened since I wrote here last. Apparently my sister's colleagues really liked the broker pens. We went to Ottawa, specifically to a place called Lee Valley, which would be the store that I would be going to if I lived up there. I spent a bit of money there on some kits and some acrylic and dyed burl blanks that I had not seen at Woodcraft.

I also received a very nice gift from my (let's see, how would this go...) sister-in-law's father-in-law. Otherwise known as my wife's sister's husband's father. He lives in Newfoundland, and I have spoken with him about woodturning in the past. He gave us a few nicely turned lidded boxes a while back. He sent me a package of four large cylinders of dry birch that were cut about 5 years ago. He has already turned them down to cylindrical, which will make things much easier for me when I decide to turn them further.

Two of the click pens that I made from the beautiful piece of cocobolo have now become gifts. Friends of our family are going to get them. Their mother wanted to pay me for them, but these are people I grew up with. No charge for them - it would not be right.

Recent Woodcraft visits have included:
1) a donation of 4 pens that I have turned. This was supposed to be participation in the Turn-a-Thon for the Troops for Veterans' Day, but I was never told (despite asking) what time it was going to happen. It turns out that it was from noon to 2 p.m. only, and we got to the store at about 4:30. So, I donated pens I had already turned, and in return I got 4 kits and 4 blanks, so it was a great deal all around.
2) Getting a new chuck to use for winestoppers. I tried using the chuck and taper combination that I had bought at Woodcraft the last time I had been there, and they did not really fit together well. So, I brought them back and got a chuck that was a better fit. I still have not figured out the whole winestopper thing, but I made my first attempt at it last night, and I may try tonight as well.
3) Returning the large block of purpleheart that I bought a while back to (possibly) make into a lamp. Although I am figuring out, slowly, what to do with purpleheart to perhaps keep it purple, I have not had enough success with it to feel that I should be working with large blocks of it. So, I returned it and got a couple of kits for Wall Street pens (along with the bushings and the drill bit for the Wall Street style). Wall Street pens are interesting - they do not use much wood, but if you get the right wood, they can look really nice. Also, two pens can be made with one normal-sized pen blank.

I will total up the budgetary stuff later. Time to go give the winestopper another shot. At least with these, you do not have to worry about gluing tubes and such.