This bowl was made by cutting a sliding dovetail in two flat pieces of wood, gluing them together and cutting them with a scroll saw. There are eight segmented stacks that were cut, glued and sanded.
This bowl was made using a scroll saw to cut segments, glue, sand and finish them. The design is my own free-hand drawing on a piece of poplar. After cutting a segment, I used that to get the outline of the next segment. Sanding on this bowl was tricky and took a lot of time.
This bowl is made from Aspen using a scroll saw. The flare design required making a double cut at two different angles with the scroll saw. I used geometry to get the angle I wanted.
This bowl was made from Aspen and Tigerwood. This unusual design was created by cutting and gluing a wedge of Tigerwood to Aspen. You can see the 'eye of the Tiger' (I think a knot) in the base. I cut this using a scroll saw. There are five segments to this bowl.
This bowl was made from Cherry and Wenge. The top diameter is 14". There are nine strips that were glued together to get this swag pattern. Seven stacked segments were cut using a scroll saw, glued, sanded and finished.
This bowl was made by cutting a sliding dovetail in two flat pieces of wood, glueing them together and cutting them with a scroll saw. There are eight segmented stacks that were cut, glued and sanded.
This is made from flat stock bubinga and wenge, glued and cut with a scroll saw. I design my own patterns. The main bowl is 12" in diamter and the salad bowls are 8" in diameter.
This is my first attempt at a lidded bowl and pedestal. Oregon Myrtle is a joy to turn, sand and finish. Right now I have about 6 coats of Tung Oil on the out side so need to let it cure then buff it out. My attempt was to make the base of the pedestal mirror the bowls shape and the...