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dai sensei
25th September 2007, 10:16 PM
When I visited my aunt in northern NSW not so long ago I also went to help collect firewood with my uncle and a cousin from my aunt’s farm. Although my aunt did not grow up on this farm, but married the man that ran it, the farm was the original family farm cleared and built by my great grandfather many years ago (when cedar was plentiful :-).

The firewood we were collecting was from a Flooded Gum that had dropped some large branches in a recent storm. Most of it had a beautiful colour, typical of an old growth Flooded Gum, but straight grained and boring for turning. There was a large crotch that looked interesting, so I ran the chainsaw down its length, exposing grain heaven. I quickly threw it in the back of my car to take home. I would be back in a flash if a whole tree fell over, there are a few, all have main trunks that are twisted and around 8ft dia :2tsup:.

Soon as I got back I cut out a dia 400mm by 100mm blank and rough turned it the same day to 20mm thick to dry. I also cut another 2 smaller bowl blanks and left them to dry. I couldn’t wait for the smaller blanks to dry, so finished turned them a month later using 7 coats of Danish oil on the large one and 5 on the small one to try and control the cracking. They warped a fair bit, especially the thinner one, so I finished them with Shellewax Cream and Glow, buffing them to a shine a few weeks later. They still need another buff as the Danish oil is still bleeding a bit, but I will wait another few months.

The larger bowl I let dry for almost 3 months before finishing. It looked pretty dry and I couldn’t wait to polish that grain. It had warped a bit and I found it was almost 15mm out of round. I was getting very worried I had not left enough meat to re-turn it, the sides are actually only 1.5mm thick :o. I sanded it to 1200 grit then used Shellewax/EEE/Shellewax Cream/Glow and got a beautiful shine. No Danish oil this time, so the colour was natural. The photo doesn’t do it justice, especially when the light picks up the small flecs within the grain, but it is as smooth as a baby’s bum.

The fruit bowl is dia 350mm x 70mm, the other bowls are dia 140mm x 70mm and dia 110mm x 50mm. The colours in the photos are pretty spot on.

Comments welcome.

Allan at Wallan
25th September 2007, 10:51 PM
Great result Neil and extra marks for having
perservered through all the difficulties.:2tsup:

Allan

_____________________________________

I am not at all worried about dying
... but just hope I am not there at the time.

robyn2839
25th September 2007, 10:53 PM
lovely grain and great finish .i wish i could get that shine. got a couple of really big peices of pinkish color squiggly? gum yesterday ran an 8'' thick peice through my bandsaw. (it nearly killed my jet) cant wait to turn some.bob

mobjack68
25th September 2007, 11:00 PM
Great looking stuff....I thought you mentioned the straight grain stuff was boring?? I think the color makes up for any of the "Straight grain boring" attitude of the wood.....you wouldn't happen to have a scientific name for the Flooded Gum would you??? I'm from the USA and I'm trying to get a handle on native Australian species AND their common names (the common name of some trees in the States changes from region to region) Drying your blanks....do you just let them air dry?? I have experimented with "bagging" small pieces, that is put it in a sealed plastic bag and open it occasionally to let some fresh air in. The contained humidity allows the piece to "normalize" (doesn't allow the wood to dry too fast on the outside...) Don't discount the microwave when drying small pieces!!! If you heat them up, remember the wave heats from the inside, then put them in a plastic bag, the humidity will again keep the outer layers from drying too rapidly, keeping shrinkage and distortion to a minimum.

DJ’s Timber
25th September 2007, 11:21 PM
Great stuff Neil :2tsup:

BernieP
25th September 2007, 11:27 PM
G'Day Neil

Beautiful work, boy what a colour and shine. Thanks for sharing.

Cheers
Bernie

mick61
25th September 2007, 11:28 PM
G`day very nice job:2tsup:
mick:D

TTIT
25th September 2007, 11:37 PM
Bit of WOW factor there Neil :2tsup:. I had no idea flooded gum was that colorful - lovely lookin' stuff and a nice job on it :U

ss_11000
26th September 2007, 12:51 AM
top effort Neil:clap:

great finish on awesome looking wood:2tsup:

Harry72
26th September 2007, 01:32 AM
Nice grain colour and shape, well done.

Gil Jones
26th September 2007, 01:35 AM
Beautiful work and wood!!:2tsup:

switt775
26th September 2007, 09:29 AM
Great looking stuff. Thanks for adding the details about how you came across the wood. I always figure getting wood for free makes the finished product so much more valuable.:2tsup:

OGYT
26th September 2007, 11:00 AM
Yer a professional, Neil. Gorgeous work! Love that feather that runs through it. Don't know that I've ever seen a prettier one.

Hardenfast
26th September 2007, 11:05 AM
Very nice indeed Mr Sensei. I would have never picked that for Flooded Gum unless you had told us. There you go!

Wayne

robynmau
26th September 2007, 11:48 AM
I really like the fruit bowl, and the pots are cute too :-

dai sensei
26th September 2007, 02:28 PM
Thanks for the compliments.


..got a couple of really big peices of pinkish color squiggly? gum yesterday ran an 8'' thick peice through my bandsaw. (it nearly killed my jet) cant wait to turn some.bob

I assume you mean Scribbly Gum, just watch out for cracking whilst drying, that timber is famous for firewood as the only one you don't need to spilt. Beautiful colour though.


.....you wouldn't happen to have a scientific name for the Flooded Gum would you
...do you just let them air dry

Names - see here (http://www.woodworkforums.ubeaut.com.au/showthread.php?t=52579&highlight=Timber+list)

These bowls were just end grain sealed with Bondcrete and air dried. Normally I would use bag or sawdust, but I was in a hurry. Not too much of a hurry to warrent microwave, but I have used that in the past too. I used CA to seal any cracks that did appear to mimimise how far they went (I checked each day for a week, then 3rd day for 2 weeks, then once a week)


Love that feather that runs through it.

Good description. I had thought of fire, but feather is perfect.

rsser
26th September 2007, 03:09 PM
Bootle says Flooded gum is also Rose gum.

Nice furniture timber. Saw some schmick traditional dining chairs made out of it at the workshop next to the Milawa cheese factory restaurant here in Vic.

Beaut figure in that piece Neil. Great use of a great find.

funkychicken
26th September 2007, 03:41 PM
Amazing stuff, oh Sensei!

Beautiful colour in them bowels ;)

scooter
26th September 2007, 04:00 PM
Very nice, Neil, well done :2tsup:

Getting good use out of that sheoak handled awl from Al's BBQ a while back :2tsup:


Cheers......................Sean

orraloon
26th September 2007, 04:03 PM
Nice work Sensei,
Shame to think of all the good turning wood ending up in the fire. This has got me thinking I will check out the firewood pile at the local garden center.

Regards
John

Wayne Blanch
26th September 2007, 06:56 PM
Booodyful!:2tsup:

Nice work, a job well done:2tsup:

Studley 2436
26th September 2007, 08:52 PM
Really nice work there Neil. Top marks greenie from me.

There is a site with a few species (http://www.hardwood.timber.net.au/speciesindex.htm) that has a few of the many aussie timbers. Do a Google and you will find more sites.

Studley

La truciolara
26th September 2007, 10:50 PM
Superb work, superb finish…. And superb wood.
I do too walk along side the river in Verona (:C<st1:country-region w:st="[/IMG]Italy</ST1<img" src="images/smilies/tongue.gif" border="0" alt="" title="Tongue" smilieid="653" class="inlineimg"></st1:country-region>) and gather floated wood, but I must say, to my dismay, I sometimes have good surprises after turning but nothing that beautiful.
You did real well with this floated wood. Congratulation.

reeves
27th September 2007, 01:36 AM
nice work, lovely grain mate