Thank you so much buddy! This is what happens when I dont have a lathe but the urge to make a bowl sets in. :-) Your support is much appreciated you know! Thanks again and take care!
I recently purchased a 10" bandsaw and I have been learning how to use it. I intend to create some bandsaw boxes and then I came across this. Your bowl came out very nice. I am going to try this. Very cool! Thanks for posting this.
So sorry for my late reply! Thanks for watching and commenting! TH-cam doesn't always give me notices. :-( Sounds great, and I hope you already made some boxes or tried the bowl! Did it go well?
Greetings to you as well mate! I saw my name on your screen :) thanks mate !! Brilliant project my friend and very well made . Great work from you as usual my friend !! Take care, Bram
Yes you sure did! :-) You are one of the resources of my inspiration so if I can guide others to look up your work - I'm happy! :-) Thanks for your support! Very much appreciated! Cheers!
Big thanks ZW! I think a bowl really should be turned on the lathe, but this turned out pretty decent too. :-) If I would do another bowl, I would try with some "cooler" wood. Thanks for the kind words and for your great work!
OK...wait a minute. We just made a bandsaw box on our channel and came across your video. OMG is that thing cool! I would have never thought of that concept but you better believe that we are gonna try it. Thank you for the inspiration! Subed!!!
I don’t understand the part about using a scrap piece to determine the width of each segment? Why not just measure 1/4” or 1/2” wide and cut? If your table is tilted at the same angle won’t the segments be the same?
Hi! thanks for watching and for your question! I totally understand you. Ofcourse one could set a fixed angle (but you need to calculate it, depending on the thickness of your board). If I meassure the thickness like I do, I get an angle that would work with each layer (and not fall down or stack inside the previous ring). If you just pick an angle at random, you might end up with rings that stacks inside each other... I tried this at first, just having a go at it and cut happily several rings from a board, and was very confused to say atleast. 😊 I just wanted to (try) to one (of many) ways to get a angle that would work. Thanks again for a very relevant question. I hope I could answer it. Cheers!
That came out really cool. Very well done! I really appreciate the efficient use of wood! I see people turn bowls out of this giant block of wood and I know that's how it is typically done, but it still drives me nuts! But this, to make that big bowl out of a small flat piece of wood, awesome!
Thank you so much Nick! You are absolutly right - there is not much wood-loss in this build :-) Thanks again for your kind words and I'm looking forward to you next project! I'm still going to build me one of those slick business card holder! :-) Take care buddy!
Hi Opa! Happy you liked it! :-) Yes (and these layers are pretty thin). If the bandsaw table is tilted even more the walls/sides will get thicker. Or I could glue up boards making the stock thicker (and the layers will be thicker too). Hope all is well! Thank you so much for your support - see ya soon! :-)
Hi Kathleen! Many thanks for watching and commenting. For this bowl I set the table to 20 degrees. But it depends on the look you want and the thickness of the wood you are using. If you try it out - it would be fun to know how it turns out! Take care!
Hi! Thank you very much! I will try to answer as good as I can and please let me know if you have further questions. :-) If I didnt tilt the table at all, the rings would not stack on top of each other. They would just fall trough (each ring smaller than the other). By tilting it I get an angle that makes the rings stand on top of each other. You could do a bowl with straight sides if you have another piece to cut each ring from. It would be cool to try. Hope this helps! Thanks again! :-)
Hi friend! Sorry for my late reply. About the square. Its a dirt cheap carpenter square that we use here in Sweden and they usually comes with a 45 degree feature. I'm guessig you are from Canada? (lovely country btw!) :-). I must ask - are these types of squares not common over at your place? I cant say anything about the quality of this square - It was dirt cheap :-) goo.gl/27pNEU All the best to you!
Not really the standard squares here are the combination square with the adjustable ruler and a fixed 90 sort of like the one you have. But I haven't noticed a fixed square with the 45 before. And I am from Canada! I wouldn't mind visiting Sweden one of these days, but maybe not in the winter ;) Thanks for the info
I love these small differences in countries. :-) Here in northen Europe its harder to get a hold of a speed square or a dado stack to the table saw. Something thats seems quite common in the US and Canada. :-)
Thanks for a nice vid. You skipped over the part of how you obtained the slanted line for your marker. It’s just the bandsaw line on a piece of the remnant wood is it not.
And thank you! You are absolutly right. I traced that of the bandsaw blade from the tilted table. It's (what I find) the quickest way to get the thickness. Thanks for asking and watching! :-)
DEKEROS.COM You are most welcome. I have watched it several times and have saved it in my TH-cam library for further views. Lots of very good information. Now I am looking to understand how to best do the cut to get to inner rings.
I thank you again for that. I dont know if it helps, but there may be some more information in these two links, if you have not already seen them. :-) www.dekeros.com/2018/03/bandsaw-bowl.html www.instructables.com/id/Bandsaw-Bowl/ All the best to you!
Thank you so much Bruce! Yes - you are correct - I set the angle of the table so each of the rings can stack on top of each other. This was a test from my side, and it turned out quite decent. :-) Thanks for your kind words again!
@@dekeros-recreationalwoodwo6456 th-cam.com/video/x9YVqD0QsWY/w-d-xo.html Can you create the funnel/whirlpool like structure used in this setup? Can this be made with the tools that you have or need some special machinery?
Aha! Now I see what you mean! Never seen that before. Looks cool. Sure I could create something like that for sure. Either with the bandsaw or better yet - a router. I maybe would make a template of some sort to make the tracing better. 😊 It's not on my list to do - but a cool thing to try in the future! Thanks for the idea and explanation!
Hello! thank you for your question! The board was 2 cm thick and the largest circle was the width of the board - 20 cm in diameter. Have a great day! :-)
nope but thanks for the concern. I'm aware of the issue, but I have a skin condition. So the alternative is not working with wood at all. Also... this was done in the dead of winter, with no heating in the shop. :-) No gloves or no work. Thanks for watching!
I have been watch bowl videos all day trying to find a simpler way then you come alone and make it so clear thank you sir
haha. thanks! hope it shows what I'm doing and good luck to you with your take on it! :-) cheers!
Very Nice!! Both your project and you video presentation.
Many thanks! I really appreciate your kind words!
Nice idea! I like the look of the end grain.
Thank you very much Nikos! Yeah, the end grain look turned out pretty decent. Thank you again for commenting and watching! Much appreciated!
Nice job!
Many thanks Mark! I appreciate your support immensely! Do you have any future porjects coming along? Take care!
Really nice bowl!
Many thanks Magnus! :-)
Super cool bro! Cheers, Chris.
Thanks Chris! I really appreciate your kind words! Hope all is well - looking forward to your next video. Take care and thanks again!
That's fantastic mate really impressive
Warm thanks my friend! :-)
Great work and the out look of your workshop I'm envious.
Thank you so much buddy! This is what happens when I dont have a lathe but the urge to make a bowl sets in. :-) Your support is much appreciated you know! Thanks again and take care!
That's a really cool way to make a bowl.
Many thanks! I really appreciate it buddy! Take care buddy!
I recently purchased a 10" bandsaw and I have been learning how to use it. I intend to create some bandsaw boxes and then I came across this. Your bowl came out very nice. I am going to try this. Very cool! Thanks for posting this.
So sorry for my late reply! Thanks for watching and commenting! TH-cam doesn't always give me notices. :-( Sounds great, and I hope you already made some boxes or tried the bowl! Did it go well?
'I Like it', pretty much ZERO waste :)
Thank you my friend! Yeah, just some small cut offs, but I will save them for later. :-)
Very cool! I'll have to try that one. Good video
Thank you so much for watching and commenting! I really appreciate it!
Nice intro nice edit nice bowl all is so perfect!
Thank you very much my friend for you kind words! Much appreciated! :-)
Very cool man! 😎 Loved it!! 🤠
Thank you very much! I really appreciate your support and kind words!
Very very nice bro!!👌🏽
Thank you very much! I really appreciate it my friend!
Greetings to you as well mate! I saw my name on your screen :) thanks mate !! Brilliant project my friend and very well made .
Great work from you as usual my friend !! Take care, Bram
Yes you sure did! :-) You are one of the resources of my inspiration so if I can guide others to look up your work - I'm happy! :-) Thanks for your support! Very much appreciated! Cheers!
Pretty awesome that Dekeros! Not as easy as you made it look either. Well edited video, cheers man!
Thank you so much! I'm really thankful for your kind words! I'm looking forward to your next projects my friend! See ya soon! :-)
Nice build! I love how you make the most out of every tool you have! Keep the great projects coming!
Many warm thanks for your kind words! I promise to continue if you do too! :-) Take care buddy!
Wow. Love the intro. And that's a very cool technique for making a band saw bowl. I might have to try that! 💀.
Big thanks ZW! I think a bowl really should be turned on the lathe, but this turned out pretty decent too. :-) If I would do another bowl, I would try with some "cooler" wood. Thanks for the kind words and for your great work!
Nice and simple. I think pine looks really good in bowls, I turned a few on the lathe that was a few laminated 2x8's.
Thank you so very much! Pine is perfectly fine :-) Thank you for watching and commenting!
OK...wait a minute. We just made a bandsaw box on our channel and came across your video. OMG is that thing cool! I would have never thought of that concept but you better believe that we are gonna try it. Thank you for the inspiration! Subed!!!
I saw your bandsaw box. Really great work! All the best you you guys!
Great, thanks for checking it out! We're looking forward to seeing what you come up with next!
Very good idea! :)
Thank you very much! I appreciate it a lot!
This is a really nice project, I'm curious about the next project, Subscribed👌
Thank you very much! Really appreciate your kind words! :-)
Namaste my good friend :) Superb work :) Greetings and Blessings to you too :) ॐ
Namaste! And thank you my friend - your good work inspire me! Take care - all the best to you!
I've seen those done and then turned, but not like this. Turned out quite well!
Billy
Thank you Billy! Yeah - making something like this, but with some nicer wood and then turn it would be interesting and fun. All the best to you!
I don’t understand the part about using a scrap piece to determine the width of each segment? Why not just measure 1/4” or 1/2” wide and cut? If your table is tilted at the same angle won’t the segments be the same?
Hi! thanks for watching and for your question! I totally understand you. Ofcourse one could set a fixed angle (but you need to calculate it, depending on the thickness of your board). If I meassure the thickness like I do, I get an angle that would work with each layer (and not fall down or stack inside the previous ring).
If you just pick an angle at random, you might end up with rings that stacks inside each other... I tried this at first, just having a go at it and cut happily several rings from a board, and was very confused to say atleast. 😊
I just wanted to (try) to one (of many) ways to get a angle that would work. Thanks again for a very relevant question. I hope I could answer it. Cheers!
Cool!
Thank you very much buddy! Tack! Du har mångra grymma projekt - måste kolla igenom alla! :-)
Kolla runt du men det mesta är rätt gammalt och rätt dåligt :)
BETTY GOOOD
That came out really cool. Very well done! I really appreciate the efficient use of wood! I see people turn bowls out of this giant block of wood and I know that's how it is typically done, but it still drives me nuts! But this, to make that big bowl out of a small flat piece of wood, awesome!
Thank you so much Nick! You are absolutly right - there is not much wood-loss in this build :-) Thanks again for your kind words and I'm looking forward to you next project! I'm still going to build me one of those slick business card holder! :-) Take care buddy!
Hey my friend that bowl turned out great is it possible to make those layers thicker?
Hi Opa! Happy you liked it! :-) Yes (and these layers are pretty thin). If the bandsaw table is tilted even more the walls/sides will get thicker. Or I could glue up boards making the stock thicker (and the layers will be thicker too). Hope all is well! Thank you so much for your support - see ya soon! :-)
I will have to try that. What was the angle of the band saw table set too?
Hi Kathleen! Many thanks for watching and commenting. For this bowl I set the table to 20 degrees. But it depends on the look you want and the thickness of the wood you are using. If you try it out - it would be fun to know how it turns out! Take care!
Loved the bowl ❤️❤️ but I was wondering does it have to be tilted when cutting the circles out ?
Hi! Thank you very much! I will try to answer as good as I can and please let me know if you have further questions. :-) If I didnt tilt the table at all, the rings would not stack on top of each other. They would just fall trough (each ring smaller than the other). By tilting it I get an angle that makes the rings stand on top of each other. You could do a bowl with straight sides if you have another piece to cut each ring from. It would be cool to try. Hope this helps! Thanks again! :-)
Wow, I just noticed that your square has a 45 feature. Can you let me know who makes it?
Hi friend! Sorry for my late reply. About the square. Its a dirt cheap carpenter square that we use here in Sweden and they usually comes with a 45 degree feature. I'm guessig you are from Canada? (lovely country btw!) :-). I must ask - are these types of squares not common over at your place?
I cant say anything about the quality of this square - It was dirt cheap :-) goo.gl/27pNEU
All the best to you!
Not really the standard squares here are the combination square with the adjustable ruler and a fixed 90 sort of like the one you have. But I haven't noticed a fixed square with the 45 before.
And I am from Canada! I wouldn't mind visiting Sweden one of these days, but maybe not in the winter ;)
Thanks for the info
I love these small differences in countries. :-) Here in northen Europe its harder to get a hold of a speed square or a dado stack to the table saw. Something thats seems quite common in the US and Canada. :-)
Thanks for a nice vid. You skipped over the part of how you obtained the slanted line for your marker. It’s just the bandsaw line on a piece of the remnant wood is it not.
And thank you! You are absolutly right. I traced that of the bandsaw blade from the tilted table. It's (what I find) the quickest way to get the thickness.
Thanks for asking and watching! :-)
DEKEROS.COM You are most welcome. I have watched it several times and have saved it in my TH-cam library for further views. Lots of very good information. Now I am looking to understand how to best do the cut to get to inner rings.
I thank you again for that. I dont know if it helps, but there may be some more information in these two links, if you have not already seen them. :-)
www.dekeros.com/2018/03/bandsaw-bowl.html
www.instructables.com/id/Bandsaw-Bowl/
All the best to you!
Incredible! What a simple concept, but nicely executed. did you have your bandsaw cutting at an angle, it looks like?
Thank you so much Bruce! Yes - you are correct - I set the angle of the table so each of the rings can stack on top of each other. This was a test from my side, and it turned out quite decent. :-) Thanks for your kind words again!
Very nice. See you don't need a lathe to make a bowl
Thank you a ton Frank! I appreciate you watching and comenting - you know it! Thanks and hope all is well!
Can you create a marble run whirlpool!?
I don't really understand what you mean? Could you please explain a little more? :-)
@@dekeros-recreationalwoodwo6456
th-cam.com/video/x9YVqD0QsWY/w-d-xo.html
Can you create the funnel/whirlpool like structure used in this setup?
Can this be made with the tools that you have or need some special machinery?
Aha! Now I see what you mean! Never seen that before. Looks cool. Sure I could create something like that for sure. Either with the bandsaw or better yet - a router. I maybe would make a template of some sort to make the tracing better. 😊 It's not on my list to do - but a cool thing to try in the future! Thanks for the idea and explanation!
How thick was the wood you used? How big of a diameter was your total circle?
Hello! thank you for your question! The board was 2 cm thick and the largest circle was the width of the board - 20 cm in diameter. Have a great day! :-)
Ne travail pas avec des gants tu te feras encore plus de dégât si tu te chope les doigts.
nope but thanks for the concern. I'm aware of the issue, but I have a skin condition. So the alternative is not working with wood at all. Also... this was done in the dead of winter, with no heating in the shop. :-) No gloves or no work. Thanks for watching!
I've heard good feedback about the Woodglut plans.