Corner Shelf

I built a corner shelf to go at the end of this run of cabinets. It has always felt a little unfinished, and I think this shelf really rounds it out. I even managed to get the color to match! Now I just need to find something to put there.

A Bevy of Bowls

Here are a set of bowls I've finished over the last couple of weeks, that I've just now gotten around to taking pictures of. In order, they are: apple and white ash (first image), white ash (second image), a great big white ash bowl, over nine inches in diameter (third image), apple (fourth image), curly pyinma (fifth image).


Sofa Table

I just finished this sofa table to go behind the love seat in our living room. I built it from some red oak lumber I milled from a tree in our yard with my chainsaw last year. I left the slab top 'live-edge' (i.e., bark still on), and did the same for the apron. It's pretty dusty in this picture (it had just come out of the shop), but I think it looks pretty good all the same.

Couple of Bowls

Here a couple of bowls I've made recently. The one on the left is from a chunk of spalted hickory, and it now sits atop our entertainment center in the living room. The one on the right is from a tree that fell across the path I cut in our back yard - which was actually the tree that got me interested in buying a lathe in the first place. I made it for Andi for her birthday.

Plate and Bowl

On the far left is a plate I made on the lathe out of a piece of spalted hickory I cut up two summers ago. And all the way to the right is a small bowl from some of the wood from the apple tree I helped a friend cut down in early November. In the middle is a small vessel made from hickory burl that I'm pretty sure I've posted here before.

Step Stool

To help Lori reach Carter in her new bed in order to tuck her in, I took a couple of hours one weekend and built this little step stool for Carter's room. I built it out of some of the red oak lumber I milled with my chainsaw last year from a tree that fell in our woods. So this stool went from tree to useable object all without leaving our yard! I really love the ray fleck in that oak. That's one benefit of sawing it yourself - you get to choose how you cut it. In this case, I chose to cut a few pieces quartersawn to expose the rays.

A Bushel of Bowls

A few weeks ago, I helped a friend cut down an apple tree that was growing too close to his house. I took a whole bunch of the wood home with me, to use for woodturning. Since then, I've roughed out all of these bowls. Once they've finished drying out, I can turn them down to finished thickness, and put some finish on them. But for now, they're still soaking wet. While turning them on the lathe, I sometimes ended up with a line down my shirt and across the floor of water. When turning fresh apple wood, there's a smell almost of apple cider - it was pretty cool. I really like the contrast between the dark red heartwood and the cream-colored sapwood in these pieces. Apple has a tendency to crack and twist pretty badly as it dries, so if at least 50% of these rough-turned blanks make it through to finished bowls, I'll be really happy.

Stuff on the Shelf

Here are photos of a couple of things I've made recently and forgot to post. From left to right: a weed pot made from some hickory burl that I cut last year, a new piece of origami, and a small vessel made from another chunk of that hickory burl. All three are on display on a shelf in our living room. I really like that I'm starting to display some of the things I've made around the house. I normally give away so much of what I make that I don't keep anything for myself. For example - in high school, I was really into sculpting stone. But even though I made several pieces while I was there, I don't own even one of them - they've all been given away to family and friends. Which still makes me happy, just in a different way.

More Weed Pots

And here are a whole bunch of weed pots that I made as Christmas presents. These are a blast to make. I can usually make one start to finish in one session, and they have no 'set' pattern, so they really give me a chance to get creative. I think I need to make a bunch more of these to scatter around our house. As an added bonus, all of these weed pots were made from wood that I gathered on our property.

Screwdrivers

Here are a set of screwdrivers that I turned on the lathe for Christmas presents as well. They came out great! I still have one more kit so that I can make one for myself.