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Ronald Campbell
05-25-2016, 9:21 PM
Another of a series of piece I have done over the years. All from Cherry Burls. This was a very large rotten burl. The finished turning is 9 inches tall and 16 inches across at the widest. It is not a thin as I would like as the bottom had rot and a hole. I was not sure if the tenon would hold on. Then I had to jamb chuck and turn the tenon off. Never so glad to get a piece off the lathe Had I broke the wings it was a bad shaped bowl

C and C Welcome
Ron

Don Frank
05-25-2016, 9:43 PM
Wow, i dont know how you kept that together let alone sanded it. Beautiful!

Thomas Canfield
05-25-2016, 9:53 PM
Nice looking piece. I do expect the "pucker factor" was pretty high at the end, and then a lot of hand sanding. The flying wings really set it off. Job well done. Vacuum chucks and most of the other special chucks are over-rated and useless for something like that.

robert baccus
05-25-2016, 9:59 PM
Wow---hang up your gouge--you will never surpass that in a lifetime of exploded burls.

Olaf Vogel
05-25-2016, 11:07 PM
Absolutely gorgeous!
and congratulations on keeping it together.

Gary Baler
05-26-2016, 5:24 AM
You are my hero. It takes a lot of experience to recognize the potential that you achieved and a lot of guts to try it.

Don Frank
05-26-2016, 8:27 AM
Ron, Which side of that burl became the bottom? I'm guessing the side closest to the lathe but am probably wrong.

Ronald Campbell
05-26-2016, 11:47 AM
Ron, Which side of that burl became the bottom? I'm guessing the side closest to the lathe but am probably wrong.

The bottom of the bowl was the what is on the top of the burl on the cab. It had the most hard wood. Laying on the cab the side that is down had the hole most of the way through it. I knew that had to be my opening. I did not think it ran as deep as it did. Almost to the tenon

Ronald Campbell
05-26-2016, 11:51 AM
Don this is what it looked like going on the lathe. The quill of the tailstock is 4 inches and I needed all I had to get to firm wood.

Dok Yager
05-26-2016, 12:44 PM
Amazing piece! That took a lot of extremely careful and delicate turning and sanding. I can`t even imagine the time and patience it took to keep it in one piece. Excellent work Ron!

Steve Doerr
05-27-2016, 3:36 PM
Very nice I like the shape and especially how you have flared out the top. It really draws your attention to the negative space on the sides. Keep up the GREAT work and thanks for sharing.

Sam Beagle
05-28-2016, 3:08 PM
I am just fascinated with this bowl. How did you possibly keep it together.

Ronald Campbell
05-29-2016, 6:29 AM
I am just fascinated with this bowl. How did you possibly keep it together.

With every tool introduction in the hollowing process it was done with concentration

Ron