Thanks: 0
Results 1 to 3 of 3
Thread: The beloved skew
-
13th January 2024, 01:12 AM #1
The beloved skew
Five months ago, I hated my skew chisel and hardly ever touched it. I had tried to master it seriously on two previous occasions, over the past fifteen years, only to give up in frustration. I am sure many other amateur turners, like me, have gone through this experience.
I tried for a third time, following the steps outlined by Alan Lacer on the Tube, it took three months and much much much practice, but I am a confident user of the skew now. (It’s those eggs!)
It is no longer the dreaded skew, I call it my beloved skew because it is so versatile.
So, my point is that if I can do it, anyone can provided the commitment is there ( I’m addressing amateurs here, not professional turners who already know !) I just want to encourage other amateurs who may be considering learning the use of the dreaded skew. I got the hang of rolling cuts after turning bead 147. You may learn it quicker, I’m a bit slow! Happy turning!
The picture is a selection of the many practice spindles I did.
Cheers SwiftySwifty
-
13th January 2024 01:12 AM # ADSGoogle Adsense Advertisement
- Join Date
- Always
- Location
- Advertising world
- Age
- 2010
- Posts
- Many
-
13th January 2024, 07:52 AM #2SENIOR MEMBER
- Join Date
- Aug 2020
- Location
- Sunshine Coast
- Posts
- 743
I was about 13 (46 years ago) when I first jumped on a lathe. That was back when you had to learn in a vacuum. About 10 years later, after finally buying a couple books (Peter Child and some american mormon guy who I can't remember his name) realised that I had evolved my methods of turning from scraping into the cutting method on my own. I.e. dropping the handle on a gouge and watching the shavings peel off, instead of dust flying off... I got pretty good with the skew but over the rest of my turning career I grew away from it, mostly out of production turning efficiency. Having to reach for a skew to cut a bead or two and then grabbing the gouge again took too long and interrupted the flow of the work. First cuts were to establish a couple reference diameters with a 1/4" parting tool, and the rest done with a gouge. That also evolved from a 1/2" spindle gouge to a 3/8 bowl gouge with very long wings (for lack of a better description). It was about 15 years ago, when I stopped turning for money and only played on the lathe that I realised I'd lost all the muscle memory for the 1/2 skew and became quite unconfident with it. I guess being much older I never seemed to get it back. It was one of the more important things I used to teach people when starting out. Play on wood you don't care about such as firewood. That way new turners coud develop the coordination and muscle memory without the death grip that so many use with their tools as they fret about having a dig in on a project that care about. Which, ironically, I'm not heeding myself these days. So the skew only comes out when I need to spear in on a square shoulder or where the gouge can't reach...
Go on ya for sticking with it. The skew can be a very unenjoyable tool to master.
-
13th January 2024, 10:01 PM #3
Good onya!
I also find my skews don't get used as often anymore... mainly because I mostly turn goblets and the occasional bowl nowadays, for which they're not really suitable.
But for spindle turning they're the bees' knees; when one tool does 95% of the job AND can give a finish that doesn't need sanding, why faff around with anything else?
It's a good skill to have in your woodturning arsenal.
- Andy Mc
Similar Threads
-
Casket for a beloved one
By DTH1 in forum BOX MAKINGReplies: 8Last Post: 21st February 2021, 08:21 PM -
Skew block plane vs skew rebate plane
By Tiger in forum HAND TOOLS - UNPOWEREDReplies: 9Last Post: 12th September 2015, 05:15 PM -
Help on a skew??
By benupton in forum WOODTURNING - GENERALReplies: 7Last Post: 16th March 2011, 12:49 PM -
In memory to my beloved husband Niki
By Regina in forum Hatches, Matches & Dispatches. Birthday greetings and other Touchie-feelie stuff.Replies: 29Last Post: 18th March 2010, 03:05 AM -
My beloved shed
By Greyham in forum WOODWORK PICSReplies: 4Last Post: 2nd January 2005, 05:37 PM