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This flaired vase is an exercise in using vertical spacers to the limit. Each one is sized at the widest it can be for each individual ring.
The combination of the miter cut of the segments and the wall slopes, make the segments look a bit like arrows. And they look even better on
the inside!
The vase measures 7" tall by 7 3/4" diameter. The light wood is Curly Maple and the dark wood is Black Walnut. A Purpleheart plug in the bottom
completes the 241 piece vase which is finished in gloss lacquer.
The construction of the bottom employs two, staggered layers and a multi-size plug to prevent any wood movement due to atmospheric changes. |
For Sale |
$250 |
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This hollow form is another exercise in using vertical spacers to the limit. The combination of the miter cut of the segments and the wall slopes,
give the segments a tapered look. Too bad you can't peek to see what they look like on the inside!
The vase measures 9" tall by 6 1/2" diameter. The light wood is Maple and the dark wood is Black Walnut. A Purpleheart plug in the bottom
completes the 289 piece vase which is finished in several coats of gloss lacquer and buffed/polished to a perfect finish.
No cheating on the construction of this one by building as two halves and then joining. This one was assembled a layer at a time all the way from
the bottom to the top!
The construction of the bottom employs two, staggered layers and a multi-size plug to prevent any wood movement due to atmospheric changes. |
For Sale |
$350 |
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This hollow form is an exercise in using vertical spacers to the limit. Each one is sized at the widest it can be for each individual ring.
The glue joint between the miter cut of the segments and spacers gives a tapered appearance caused by the wall slope. And they look even better on
the inside!
The vase measures 9 3/4" tall by 5 1/2" diameter. The light wood is Maple and the dark wood is Black Walnut. A Purpleheart plug in the bottom
completes the 313 piece vase which is finished in gloss lacquer.
No cheating on the construction of this one by building as two halves and then joining. This one was assembled a layer at a time all the way from
the bottom to the top!
The construction of the bottom employs two, staggered layers and a multi-size plug to prevent any wood movement due to atmospheric changes. |
For Sale |
$300 |
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This is a Weed Pot gone wild! 805 pieces using Cherry, Yellowheart, Ebony, Bloodwood, and Cocobolo (plug in the bottom).
After deciding upon the Navajo border pattern and a zigzag for the feature ring, I still needed something to provide movement in the piece, but I
wanted to keep it simple. Playing around with vertical spacers, I happened on the idea of a progression of spacer widths. I tried various relationships
to the object diameter and ended up with a simple progression starting with a minimum size just above the feature ring and growing as you move
upward to the top. It looks like a fountain!
I learned a new detail on the assembly of rings with a full set of vertical spacers. You can make the ring as two halves so you can touch up the
diameter ends to match. But you better think about it before leaping. One half has to have both spacers! |
For Sale |
$400 |
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No, it'st not a segmented piece! But where else can I show it? This is a simple hollowform
turned from a log of White Sycamore (I think?) and then dyed in the fashion of Chris Pytlik
using Procyon dyes (yellow, orange, red, black) and finished in clear lacquer, sanded, and
buffed to a high polish. When you start applying the dye, the first thought is "What have I done?."
Then you keep on applying dye, watching it develop and the colors merge until an inner voice
calls out ("It's done dude!"). |
For Sale |
$200 |
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The feature ring design in "Lasting Vision" represents the
butterfly, a symbol of everlasting/eternal life. Its colors of Maple,
Walnut, and Lacewood are echoed in the two simple mosaic rings above
it. The clear acrylic inserts are repeated above the two mosaic rings
as a set of vertical spacers through which you can actually see the
wood grain on the opposite side of the neck interior. All of these
special features drove the piece count up to 674 and the project time
to about 20 hours. The piece was finished first with clear lacquer to
preserve the wood colors as much as possible and, after the grain was
filled, coated with one layer of polyurethane to provide a durable
finish. The piece is fitted with a 12 oz. tumbler inside so it may be
used for real floral arrangements instead of merely dried flowers. |
Sold |
$800 |
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This project is a 10" salad mixing bowl with 12 sided layers
and mostly comprised of hard Maple. Its design, fabrication, turning,
and finishing are the subject of my new 120 minute DVD on segmented
turning. The feature ring is actually two rings made up of zigzag
elements turned on their sides to form chevrons. Above and below the
chevron rings are thin rings of Yellowheart and Purpleheart to set the
lightning-like design off from the rest of the project. After final
turning, the bowl was sanded to 600 grit, sealed with a Lacquer based
sanding sealer, and then the surface was filled with clear lacquer to
preserve as much of the natural wood colors as possible. A final
polyurethane code was applied then to provide a super durable finish
that will allow the piece to used regularly. The total project time was
about 12 hours for this 397 piece item. |
For Sale |
$600 |
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This project is a 6 3/4" sphere atop a 3 1/4" cube of
Plexiglass. The design of the piece was made using the Sketch-A-Bowl,
Zigzag Designer and Layer Tuner features of Segmented Project Planner
and with a little help from Paint. The sphere contains 410 pieces
consisting of Birds Eye Maple, Black Walnut and Ebony dust. Decorating
the sphere is a central band of zigzags (1st generation lamination) and
two chevron bands which are zigzags turned on their sides. I learned
with this project that chevrons are a lot easier to accomplish than
pure zigzags; even after coping with the high angle miter cuts (65
degrees) required for them. The Ebony dust was mixed with polyester
resin to make two accent rings just off the poles of the piece after
the sphere was turned using the multiple axis method. The project is
finished with clear lacquer to preserve the original wood colors as
much as possible. The Plexiglas/acrylic cube was constructed from 1/4"
clear material and then put on the lathe to cut out the hole in its top
for the sphere. The total project time was about 10 hours. |
For Sale |
$400 |
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This piece took "Best of Show" at the 2006 Mid-State Fair in
Paso Robles. While the major part of this bowl is Cherry, there are a
lot of other things to look at. The primary feature ring is as set of
thunderbirds constructed in the "Cookie Log" style. The background of
each bird is Maple and the bodies alternate in Mahogany and Black
Walnut. Notice that the heads of the birds are all facing to the right.
Above the thunderbirds is a ring of chevrons (actually a double zigzag
laid on its side) alternating also in Mahogany and Black Walnut with
Maple as the background color. This time the design is facing left to
keep the whole thing from getting wound up too tight. After you count
up all the pieces, the magic number is 480. 48 of the pieces are Ebony.
The finish is brushed on gloss polyurethane using my super-slow turning
attachment. |
Sold |
$350 |
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This piece took a first place and the judges award at the
2005 Mid-State Fair in Paso Robles and was sold, on display and won 1st
Runner Up in the California Contours 2006 show in San Luis Obispo.
Dubbed 'Sequences' the feature ring is composed of Yellowheart and
Purpleheart vertical strips with their widths determined by the
Fibonacci Sequence (1-1-2-3-5-8-13, etc.). The second sequence/series
comes into play with the half-sine waves. The effect was achieved by
first making two sticks with alternating woods of the appropriate
widths. One stick was the mirror image of the other. Then the two
sticks were stacked and the sine wave was cut on a bandsaw with its
table tilted about 3 degrees. The upper half from the top piece is
mated with the lower half from the bottom piece to get a perfect fit.
The left over pieces make another set that is almost as good. The
finish was special for this project as I wanted to preserve the light
color of the Maple. Clear lacquer was used to build up the finish and
then a final coat of polyurethane was applied to get the super glossy
and tough finish that will allow this piece to be used daily for many
years. |
Sold |
$350 |
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Inspired by a piece made by Clarence Rannefeld, this 13" bowl boasts Cherry, Lacewood, Black Walnut, Maple, and Ebony.
The interlocking chevrons alternate in Lacewood and Black Walnut on the Maple background. Including the small plug in the
bottom, the piece totals out at 253 pieces. It is finished with polyurethane varnish and polished. |
Sold |
$350 |
 |
Here's a challenging project. It's a set of 5 nested balls composed of several kinds of wood and using varying
constructions. And what you see is only half of the effort; there were 10 jamb chucks to be made to hold the balls during
rounding. The inner-most ball is solid Maple at about 1.25" in diameter. The next ball is solid Bubinga with walls
about .25" thick. Then comes a glue-up of Purpleheart, Yellowheart, and Redheart, looking much like a pool ball. The next
one is made of Bubinga and Cocobolo with Yellowheart stripes between. I'm reminded of a Bocci ball. The outer-most ball is
composed of Maple, Cherry, and Black Walnut and is constructed of segmented layers. This piece is on display in the
California Contours 2006 show in San Luis Obispo during May and June. The finish in this case is friction polish and paste
wax. |
Sold |
$300 |
 |
The feature ring for this 10" Cherry bowl was made as a 1 1/2 generation lamination. The diamonds were created starting
with a lamination board composed of Zebrawood in the center, then symmetric bands of Maple, and then borders of Lacewood.
I cut this board into 1 1/2" strips, flipped every other piece over, and glued it all together to form the typical 1st
generation zigzag pattern. Then I split the whole thing down the middle, slid one half by one-half of a repeat, and glued
it back together to form the diamonds.
Immediately above and below the feature ring are narrow bands of Maple and Ebony to set it off.
If you count every little glue joint, a lamination drives up the piece count; in this case to 325. The finish is brushed
on gloss polyurethane using my super-slow turning attachment. |
Sold |
$350 |
 |
I made this combination project (part segmented, part solid block) as a present to a person who recently helped me
obtain a pile of very nice wood at a very attractive price. I want him to think of me in the future. The base started as a
disk cut from a solid block of Maple. I started this project by mounting the Maple disk on a screw chuck and turning the
outside and chucking mechanism on the bottom. Then I added a segmeted ring to the top composed of Black Walnut and Maple
and turned the piece around in my standard Nova chuck to cut the inside. After I completed this, I reversed the piece
again in a set of Cole jaws to remove the chucking mechanism from the bottom. The piece was finished with alternating
applications of Watco Danish oil and paste wax after sanding to the 1500-grit level. |
Gift |
$100 |
 |
This salad mixing bowl uses a Navajo blanket border for the feature ring which is composed of Ash and Black Walnut. The
rest of the bowl is Cherry save the bottom. For the bottom I used Cherry, Maple, Walnut, and Ebony to form a Tumbling Blocks
medallion. The piece count for this 6-3/4" x 10" piece is 192 and it took about 10 hours for construction and finishing.
While I've promised this one to my wife, along with 4 small bowls to match, I'm willing to try it again. |
Gift |
$335 |
 |
This bowl uses a common indian design that shows a black
snake coiling around a red line. The red line is Redheart and the dark
snake is Rosewood while the remainder is Maple. I carried the red and
black theme into the bottom of this bowl forming a bulls eye pattern.
The piece count for this 6-3/4" x 10-1/4" piece is 169 and it took
about 10 hours for construction and finishing. |
Sold |
$300 |
 |
I started out making a modified form of the earlier Delft
bowls but managed to design it with a Glue-Up tolerance of only 1/16".
That's what I usually achieve but making it a requirement and basing
all the cutting on that assumption led to a problem in the feature
ring. I discovered that my roundoff compensation wasn't quite large
enough so a couple of the sub-rings couldn't be used. My 1/8" Glue-Up
tolerance was masking the problem. The next release of the program
gives more compensation and the bowl came out a little different. In
making it different, I got the opportunity to try out some new
pre-glued, iron on Walnut veneer. For the finish I've gone back to
Polyurethane varnish. The piece is very new, so the Cherry hasn't even
started to darken. In 6 months the contrast between the Maple and the
Cherry will be quite pronounced. The piece count for this 4-1/2" x
10-3/4" piece is 205 and it took about 10 hours for construction and
finishing. |
Gift |
$250 |
 |
Sometimes I like to get playful with a project and here is an example. The shape is the basic weed pot. Don't ask me
where the name came from. I used Cherry for the base wood and inserted two swirls of Maple. In the center of each of the
Maple segments, I drilled a hole. Then, as I assembled the bowl, I used a coping saw to cut out the path between the drilled
holes. When all was done, I used a rotary rasp, then a file, and finally sand paper to sculpture and smooth out the swirl.
For the finish I went to Watco Danish Oil Finish and Carnauba wax in alternating applications using wet-or-dry sand paper
with each oil application. The piece is still new, so the Cherry hasn't done much darkening. The piece count for this 7"x10"
hollowform piece is 253 and it took about 12 hours for construction and finishing. |
Sold |
$300 |
 |
The basic shape of this bowl was borrowed from my Indian Motif project. But I wanted to try something with some scroll
saw work. I searched through all my clipart files and came up with a simple wave. But the Segmented Project Planner did not
allow me to show what it would look like. So, the program got a new capability which allows one to paint any segment with
virtually any graphic. If you could figure out a way to put your favorite photo on the side of a project, the program would
show you what it would look like. The base wood for this project is Cherry while the waves and sky are alternating pieces of
Walnut and Lacewood. Framing the waves and sky are Maple, Narra, and Paduak. I used outdoor polyurethane varnish for the first
three coats of finish to help preserve the paduak's color. The piece count for this 10"x6" bowl is 193 and it took about 10
hours for construction, including the scroll saw work, and finishing. |
Sold |
$350 |
 |
No, you're eyes do not deceive you. This is not a segmented piece. This started as a block of Redwood burl my son gave
me for Christmas 2 years ago. It had a large open area and I wasn't ready, at the time, to tackle it. Well, now I finally
have. With a gap of ~25% of a rotation, you would have thought the chisel would be bouncing all over the place. But it
really wasn't all that bad. Sanding, however, was another story. I ended up wrapping sand paper around pieces of dowel. The
finish is Watco Danish Oil Finish and Carnauba wax in alternating applications. |
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N/A |
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I liked the feature ring in the previous bowl but thought it could be improved on. I spent a few minutes in the
Segmented Project Planner to add another layer below the feature ring and reworked the feature ring pattern to make it
simpler. But, to get what I wanted, the project went to 18 sides. Use a little math and you'll see I immediately broke my
new vow and created yet another 72 segment ring. The base wood is again Cherry but I changed the light wood in the feature
ring to Ash and oriented its grain to get more character. The piece count for this 13" piece is 307 and it took about 11
hours for construction and finishing. |
For Sale |
$350 |
 |
I switched to Cherry as the base wood for this bowl whose design is loosely borrowed from a china serving bowl I saw in
a catalog. The feature ring is composed of Maple and Black Walnut and the center band of this ring ended up being a ring of
72 segments. I vowed never again to cut so many pieces for just one ring. The project was designed entirely within the
Segmented Project Planner, using Sketch-A-Bowl to get the shape and AutoBowl to set the wall thickness. The total piece
count for this 13" bowl is 193 and it took about 9 hours for construction and finishing. One of my wife's quilting pals has
decided that this one is "hers". |
Sold |
$275 |
 |
Here is a new project designed entirely within the Segmented Project Planner. I used the Sketch-A-Bowl function to get
the shape and then used AutoBowl to set the wall thickness. For adornment, I created a mountain-like pattern as a Segment
Design and applied it to all segments of one layer. This pattern consists of Yellow Heart for the sky, Lacewood for the
mountain bases, and Purple Heart outlining the tops of the mountains. Above and below this layer I sub-divided a layer into
bands of Maple, Cherry, and Ebony which were glued up as a sandwich. The rest of the bowl is Maple. The total as built
piece count is 193 for this 10" bowl and it took about 11.5 hours for construction and finishing. |
Sold |
$300 |
 |
Designed entirely within the Segmented Project Planner, this project started with the Sketch-A-Bowl function to set the
initial shape. Then I used AutoBowl to set the wall thickness. Finally, I created an indian style pattern for the ring near
the top which is composed of Mahogany, Black Walnut, and Maple. The rest of the bowl, except for the Cherry layer, is
Maple. The total piece count was 157.
This piece was sold for $500 at the Hospice of San Luis Obispo County auction on 9/27/2003. |
Auctioned |
$500 |
 |
I had a 12" white globe from an old "touch" lamp that had
long since lost its "touch". I resurrected it by constructing a 12"
globe to match it for a new lamp. This was my second project using the
"Segment Designs" capability of the Segmented Project Planner. The band
in the middle is composed of Mahogany, Yellow Heart, and Maple. The
checkerboard band just above and below it is a combination of Red Birch
and Maple. The segmented globe is composed of 250 pieces and the
completed lamp stands 25" tall. |
For Sale |
$375 |
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This is my first project using the "Segment Designs"
capability of the Segmented Project Planner. The band is a simple slash
of Yellow Heart on a field of Purple Heart. Then a thin band of Yellow
Heart is added to the top and bottom of the band. This project caused
me to redesign my miter sled so that I could quickly and cheaply
accommodate the multiple miter angles. 121 pieces make up this piece. |
For Sale |
$150 |
 |
I tried a simple, but unusual, shape for this project which
is intended as a vase. It looks sort of like an old spittoon. The
primary material is Maple with Black Walnut making up the two swirls as
well as the two bands at the top and bottom. It measures 9" x 7" and is
composed of 133 pieces. |
For Sale |
$185 |
 |
I bought some 1/4" thick Zebra Wood and tried to come up with
something that would show off its grain. The top ring of these bowls is
a complex ring. The base of this ring has the Zebra Wood oriented to
show its grain to the side and is backed with some Maple to give it
stability for gluing and flattening. The interior Maple was removed
during the turning so the grain shows from both the inside and the
outside. The upper half of the ring has the grain oriented to show from
above. The rest of the material is Maple. Each bowl is made up of 72
pieces and they measure 6" x 3". |
Sold |
$100 |
 |
Here's proof you can make use of those rings you made in error! I had several assorted Maple rings laying about taking
up space. I cut a couple more rings and made bases to end up with a set of three nested bowls. My mom got these last
Christmas. |
Gift |
N/A |
 |
Here's a tall bowl, 9-1/2", featuring
complex curves. The base wood is Red Birch. Near the top is a sandwich of two pieces of Bolivian Rosewood and one
of Yellow Heart. Just below the middle is a checkerboard ring of Yellow Heart and Purple Heart banded above and below with
Walnut. The piece count is 234. |
For Sale |
$195 |
 |
This simple cookie jar is my first project designed entirely
within the Segmented Project Planner. No sketch of any kind was made
prior to going to the computer. This project also caused me to add
segment coloring to the program's capabilities. The base wood is Maple
with the "C" on the front and back made from Walnut segments. It
measures 7" x 9" and is made up of 234 pieces. |
For Sale |
$210 |
 |
These hemispheric salad bowls are fashioned from Black Walnut with thin rings of Maple added for contrast. |
Gift |
N/A |
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These straight-lined creations come from well aged hard Maple flooring material with thin rings and divisions from
Black Walnut. The maple came from a friend who had the pieces in her attic for several years. What a surprise when the wood
came back to her in this form! |
Gift |
N/A |
 |
Maple, Alder, Red Oak, Cherry, and Black Walnut adorn this piece. Stacking the layers in an offset fashion gives the
dramatic illusion of spirals. Shaping the cross-section as a quarter circle heightens the effect. |
Sold |
$145 |
 |
Who says all turnings have to be bowls? This plate is Maple
with inlaid Black Walnut diamonds. This 11" project is composed of 31
pieces. While the picture looks pretty good, I think it looks best when
piled high with chocolate chip cookies. Do you think the nut people
would be interested? |
Sold |
$75 |