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  1. #1
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    Default Something unusual

    Alain Mailland, the well known French wood turner, did a demo on some of his art

    He turned a funny piece. To do so he:

    <o></o>Turned a sphere<o></o>
    Signed very carefully the places where he will turn kind of “Volcano”<o></o>
    Put the sphere in a matrix,
    Turned the cone of the first volcano and hollowed it<o></o>
    Rotated the sphere in order to have the next point perfectly in line with the axel of the lathe
    did the second “volcano” and so on<o></o>
    At the end he used carving chisel and gouges to take away the wood remaining between the cones of the many volcanoes.<o></o>
    <o>

    <o></o></o>
    Last edited by scooter; 11th September 2007 at 06:45 PM. Reason: tags
    http://www.la-truciolara.com/
    La Truciolara is the workshop where I do my shavings.

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  3. #2
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    Default

    Most interesting, Claude. The "volcano" centres seem to be more irregularly spaced than an icosahedron or such, which adds even more to the mystique. In the last pic of the sequence, one of the holes is larger than the others. Was that to remove the last bit of the interior after hollowing? Otherwise, I'd expect hollowing from the last hole would leave a fragment inside to rattle around. Or maybe several fragments.

    Thank you very, very much for posting this.

    Joe
    Of course truth is stranger than fiction.
    Fiction has to make sense. - Mark Twain

  4. #3
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by joe greiner View Post
    Most interesting, Claude. The "volcano" centres seem to be more irregularly spaced than an icosahedron or such, which adds even more to the mystique. In the last pic of the sequence, one of the holes is larger than the others. Was that to remove the last bit of the interior after hollowing? Otherwise, I'd expect hollowing from the last hole would leave a fragment inside to rattle around. Or maybe several fragments.

    Thank you very, very much for posting this.

    Joe
    I must say that Alain Mailland didn't care too much about the regularity of the hole diameters as he had a limited time for his demo. But in this case I am wondering, (i do not remember) but I think it is a dark piece of bark which gives this impression. Personally I think that regular or irregular might be only a question of personal taste. It was impressive to see him turn.

    http://www.mailland.fr/
    If you do not know him I think it is worth looking at his web site
    http://www.la-truciolara.com/
    La Truciolara is the workshop where I do my shavings.

  5. #4
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    Default

    Joe
    By the way...
    what is an "icosahedron" ????
    http://www.la-truciolara.com/
    La Truciolara is the workshop where I do my shavings.

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    From Greek, I think. A regular polyhedron with twenty identical faces, all equilateral triangles. At each vertex, five faces meet. IIRC, the vertices are the centre points of the holes of the Chinese Ball. See, for example, David Springett's book, "Woodturning Wizardry."

    Also, with each of the twenty faces further subdivided into equal triangles, projected onto the circumscribing sphere, and with one or more of the twenty faces absent, forms the basis of Buckminster Fuller's geodesic dome. The projection onto the sphere renders the resulting smaller spherical triangles UNequal, although there are several axes of symmetry.

    Joe
    Of course truth is stranger than fiction.
    Fiction has to make sense. - Mark Twain

  7. #6
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    what is an "icosahedron" ????
    Hmm, learn something new every day.

    Now how can work that in to my conversation....
    Inspiration exists, but it has to find you working. — Pablo Picasso


  8. #7
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    Thank you Joe.
    I'm a little less stupid today... though I guess I have to re read it several time to remember.
    http://www.la-truciolara.com/
    La Truciolara is the workshop where I do my shavings.

  9. #8
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    Default

    Just thought I'd mention, for the benefit of any other dumbies, I've only just realised that clicking on that first photo "steps through" a few pics of the turning process.

    I was wondering what Joe was talking about...

    Vely interesting!
    I may be weird, but I'm saving up to become eccentric.

    - Andy Mc

  10. #9
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    The only clue that Joe had was the finger/hand cursor on the enlarged pic. Also had the word "seguente" in the callout, which seems to mean "sequence" in Italian.

    I got the drift of the woodturning process, but I have NO idea at all how Claude posted the pics.

    [Got it. The pics aren't posted. It's a link to Claude's web site.]

    Joe
    Last edited by joe greiner; 14th September 2007 at 11:07 PM. Reason: [added]
    Of course truth is stranger than fiction.
    Fiction has to make sense. - Mark Twain

  11. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by Skew ChiDAMN!! View Post
    .......for the benefit of any other dumbies, .......clicking on that first photo "steps through" a few pics of the turning process.

    I was wondering what Joe was talking about...
    and I thought HE had lost the plot!!! Thanks Skew!
    .
    Updated 8th of February 2024

  12. #11
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    I was wondering what Joe was talking about...

    I am glad I was not the only one......had me guessing, the iccy hedron thingy was not real help either.

    Very interesting effect, thanks Claude. It has answered a question on a project I have had in mind for few months now.
    Inspiration exists, but it has to find you working. — Pablo Picasso


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