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Start out with a basic chunk of wood and form a tenon on one end of
it so that the scroll chuck has something to hold onto. You'll be
working the other end without any support from the tailstock in order to
hollow it out. Shape the wood on the outside to whatever pleases
you. Do be careful with how wide (diameter) it is though.
Make sure you have a hollowing tool that'll reach out that far (from
inside, of course). If it doesn't, you can always make your access
hole larger in order to hollow out everything on the inside. |
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A side view. Everything is attached firmly. Make your tenon
(that fits into the chuck jaws) as long as possible without
bottoming out in there. It just be just a hair shorter than the
jaws are long. A good, square (or ever so slightly tapered)
shoulder on that tenon is essential for this type of scroll chuck.
The dovetail chucks are different. Not the toolrest position here.
Close but not too close. You'll need as much support for the tool
once you get hollowed out deep in there as possible. |
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Front view, showing where Joe has already hollowed (actually, he
simply drilled a hole in there with a forstner bit to start with.
Saves a lot of time and effort doing it that way. Be sure to be
completely done (I say that again BE COMPLETELY DONE) with the outside
form shape, sanding and (sometimes) even finishing of the outside before
you start to hollow. Even on these small hollow forms, once you
start hollowing, the wood moves / warps. This makes going back to
the outside worthless. |
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OK, here's Joe doing his thing. Standard hollowing position.
He's using a Sorby Multi-tip hollowing tool here. Nothing fancy.
Just straight-up woodturning by hand. |
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A better view. Work you way from "inside to outside" in there.
Opposite of what you'd be doing with hollowing a side-grain bowl, for
instance. Take small "bites" at a time. Try not to hit the
rim of the opening you've made. |
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Joe is from Oklahoma. 'nuff said. |
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No, actually, this is quite common. Sometimes, it's just
simply easier to sit on the bed of the lathe in order to work
comfortably while hollowing. He's really cranking that tool here
trying to get the hollowing done quick in this demonstration.
That's probably why he got up there to put some serious leverage to it. |
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See where Joe has the butt-end of that tool? THAT's why you
need to leave plenty of room between the wall and your lathe, folks!
To get up under that lip and starting down the side, you'll need extra
room out there to get the tool in the right spot. Either that, or
just swivel the head on that tool a bit. But that's just a pain to
do all the time. |
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A better shot of what's happening. Joe moved the toolrest out
a bit so we could get a better shot. You wouldn't want to keep the
toolrest out that far from the wood normally. |
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Chips and dust are flying! |
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Which brings us to a sad reality with hollow forms. Not so bad
with the large-ish opening on this particular form, but it can be
downright annoying with others. All of that stuff you're hollowing
out gets trapped inside there instead of falling down and out of your
way. You have to clean out all of that stuff .... constantly!
If you don't, you're not going to be getting as good or quick of cut in
there. AND you can even jamb up your tool causing some serious
damage (to your hollowform and yourself too). So clean it out
really often. Joe is using some compressed air to blow it out.
Notice that hand on top? Experience counts here ... that's for
keeping the blown out stuff out of your face. |
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"Now THAT's smoooooth !" |
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Wake up Joe !!! We're not done yet. Here, he's pulled
out the big gun (a Sorby Texan-sized hollowing tool). Size does
matter here. That longer, heavier tool is dampening the vibrations
and giving him more leverage. It sure makes hollowing easier and
more enjoyable. It'll also give better results with smoother cuts. |
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Sanding the rim |
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Sanding the inside of the rim |
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Sanded. Not even my wonderful narration can make sanding any more
exciting. But, sanding is extremely important. It can ruin
an otherwise perfect form. This was sanded up to 600 grit, I
believe. |
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HEY!, what happened? Did the world shift? I thought that
hollowform was facing the other direction?!?! Yep, it was.
What's happened is that Joe likes to "finish off the foot" of his
pieces. That means that he is now going to reverse the hollowform
and do as much turning on the foot of it as possible. Instead of
just chopping off (or parting off) the foot from what he just hollowed,
he'll do some fancy (and intricate) turning on the bottom in order to
make it look nicer. |
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A closeup of what he's going to do. You can see in the
previous picture that the hollowed-out area is now on a tapered cone
(which is now in the scroll-chuck). This keeps that end of the
hollowform centered on the lathe. The live center on the foot-end
of the hollowform must be veeerrryy carefully positioned ... and
re-positioned ... and re-positioned, etc. until the entire hollowform is
running as true as possible. DON'T tighten that tailstock up too
much. You'll push the hollowform up onto that cone too hard and
CRACK. yep. |
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Joe is using a spindle gouge (this is a great spot to use an actual
detail gouge, by the way) to very lightly take that foot down and make
it flow nicely along with the rest of the outside of the piece.
He's also making the very bottom of the foot a little concave so it'll
rest on a table just on the outside rim of the foot. Very delicate
work here. Go too far and you'll "go through" the piece where
you've hollowed it on the inside. Don't take enough off and the
piece feels / looks too bottom-heavy. |
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Sanding. Still not exciting. *sigh* |
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Saws off the very last little bit hanging on at the bottom of the
foot. VERY IMPORTANT... Don't just twist, rip or try to knock off
that little thing. You're likely to take the bottom of that foot
with you leaving a hole all the way through it. Been there, done
that. Treat that little nubbin carefully every time. You
worked hard to get to this stage. Don't mess it up now. |
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Joe is using a handheld drill with a foam pad / sandpaper attachment
to gently sand the bottom of the foot. |
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Finished piece. Actually, it does need some finish applied to
it now. Nice bit of spalting in there. Good looking form. |
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Have fun making your own woodturned hollowform! |