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Newsletter June 2009 Vol. 14 No. 6
Meeting Information: Saturday, June 20 from 9 am to 12 pm Jim Rinde: Wire Brush Decoration Sam Turner: Re-turning Bowl Blanks
At Levi Mize Woodcraftsman's Shop 162 Aviador Street #17+18, Camarillo, CA 93010 Aviador Street is north of the Camarillo Airport and is reached from the Central Ave exit off US 101: go south and turn left (east) on Ventura Blvd., then right (south) on Aviador St. About three-quarters of the way to the end of Aviador, on the left is a long building. Levi's shop is the last two doors on the left on the south side of the building. Please park directly in front of, or behind, his shop or against the curb on the north side of the building and not in front of other shops. BRING YOUR OWN CHAIR OR SIT ON THE FLOOR
President's Corner - Steve Leblanc
Raffle
We will be raffling off a fine ¾” Glaser skew chisel donated by Paulo Marin at
our June 20th meeting. If you can contribute some wood blanks
or a roughed-out seasoned bowl blank as an enhancement to the raffle, bring it
to the meeting. It’s always fun to go home with project wood.
Club Library
A fine addition to the club library has been made. Eli Avisera’s 5-DVD
beginners set and 7-DVD intermediate set have been purchased. The DVDs
from the set can be checked out individually and must be returned by the next
meeting. The Club is asking for compensation for any unreturned DVDs by
the borrower. Avocado Bowls We are continuing to collect avocado bowls. If you have any bowls finished for Tim Albers be sure to bring them to the meeting at Levi’s shop.
Show & Tell Summer Social Mark your calendars for the annual Summer Social at the Rinde’s on July 18th.
Eyeglasses & Hearing Aids
New and continuing members should pay their 2009 club dues of $25 to treasurer Ron Lindsay. Please mail them to him or bring to the meeting. The membership forms in Word and Acrobat formats can be accessed from the top of the Bylaws page.
AAW Symposium - June 26-28 in Albuquerque, NM.
Ventura County Fair - August 5-16 Al Geller, Dave Hutter, and Pete Ortega are coordinating scheduling for our booth at the fair. Please be prepared to sign up for particular time slots - to demonstrate woodturning on the club mini lathe - starting with the 20 June meeting.
There are now twelve Classes for judged entries in Division 345 Woodturning. They added Class 5, Fair Theme, which this year is "Purebred and Home Grown." Get your entries prepared if you haven't already. Entries must be submitted July 24-26 10 am to 5 pm.
We usually have a display cabinet near our booth at the fair to show our work separate from the judged entries. Be prepared to contribute to this as well.
New Members: Ray Calles, Joel Congelliere, Michael Lombard, and Pedro Morillas (see Club Roster for addresses, phone numbers, etc.)
By Al Geller and Sam Turner Christian Delhon provided an
interesting day-long demo on May 23, 2009. Christian is from
Christian was born in 1960 and became interested in
woodworking at age 15. He began studying to become a cabinet maker. In 1977, he
was accepted by the Ecole Boulle.
Founded in
Having always been attracted by woodturning, he learned
the rudiments of the profession in 1994. He has been trained by Jean Francois Escoulen of
Christian began his demo with a six-pointed, spiked,
captured cube inside of a sphere (spiked ball) and multiple captured spheres
commonly referred to as Chinese balls. Both objects were made using his
specially designed tools and tool holder, which Paulo Marin indicated he will
make commercially for Christian. The tool holder is shown in the photos,
having a pointed tool for making the spiked ball -- also shown in the pictures.
These projects require using dry dense hardwood, a special
sphere-holding chuck and a tool holder with special pointed and offset radius
cutters. A flat plate tool rest supports the tool holder. These
projects are also discussed in great detail in David Springett's book
"Woodturning Wizardry," available at Amazon.com, your local book store or
woodturning catalog store. (Also check the club library for books and
videos.) Springett's
tool holder and tools are available in the Accurate layout and
patience are required. Christian did not rely upon the tailstock to center
the spherical openings. He adjusted the sphere up to six times to get the
center of the opening exactly at the lathe center. Once the sphere is
firmly held in the sphere chuck, cutting the spikes or the Chinese balls appeared to
be relatively simple. Always cut the end grain spikes in the spiked ball
and the end grain openings in the Chinese ball first, since end grain is the
hardest wood. This will also help eliminate chipping the edges of the
captured cube in the spiked ball. Delhon's
handout from the
demo gives a step by step detailed procedure for making the Chinese balls.
See also the accompanying photos. Next, Christian made a Spherical Box with bead and groove decoration on the exterior. This project used many of the same principles as the Chinese Balls but on a more basic hand turned level. To see a step-by step-breakdown of this project, go to the Winter 2005 issue of the AAW Journal (American Woodturner). This is a six-page article that is also available from the internet. Follow the link: http://www.woodturner.org/products/aw/SphericalBall.pdf . This article includes sidebars: “Three steps to a round ball”, ”Detailing the ball into segments” and “Christian’s custom grooving tool.”
Finally, Christian turned a Trembleur, a long spindle with
beads separated by thin sections. French woodturner Jean Francois Escoulen
resurrected these forms by studying old books about turning. There is a
good article on Trembleurs in the Winter 2002 edition of American Woodturner on
page 17. Much of Christian’s work was done with a bedan. French
woodturners use the bedan extensively. There is an excellent article on the bedan in
the Winter 2002 edition of American Woodturner, page 20.
There is more information on line on Trembleurs and
how to make one. See Woodturning Online:
www.woodturningonline.com and go to the project page index. Then click
on Trembleur. Final thoughts: Christian Delhon is an excellent woodturner who has mastered the art of tool control. Anyone will improve their turning by attempting and practicing the skills he used to create these beautiful and challenging projects.
For photos from the demo, Click Here. |