Fascinating Sam, and again very well explained and demonstrated. Your method is one we all could employ, without any high tech gizmos. Thank you take care Mike
Many thanks Sam for an excellent tutorial on making a sphere. I certainly learned several new techniques from this video. I'm very enthusiastic about wood turning and I absorb every thing I can possibly learn from expert turners such as yourself and other contributors to TH-cam. Best wishes, Alan.
It's been over 40 years since I've turned any walnut, but I can smell the sweet smell, just watching you. The mind is an amazing thing. I like your tool support. Great work. A true craftsman.
I recently built a new garage and in pursuit of something new to do (and maybe make some $ on the side) I put a room attic on top of it to make a wood shop. 34 x 12 and I love it. I bout a mill, a lathe, etc. and just watch experts like you to learn new things and then experiment with pine until I got it. I love this video - very insightful and answered some questions I had about how to improve the cosmetics of some bed posts I am making for my daughter who is about to buy her fist home. Thanks for taking the time.
Hi, I'm a licenced general machinist with metals and plastics but I also like wood working. There are probably a zillion vids on TH-cam these days on anything, but this one got my attention. I never saw anything like this before and it looks real neat. Oh I wish There was TH-cam when I was a kid, there are so many things I could have learned. I also learned a lot about doing stuff on my Jeep. All the same thanks for the video! Jake
Thank you. This video was really helpful. I plan to make a sphear out of wood soon for a costume. I haven't used a lathe since 7th grade and this was a great refresher. I can't wait to start my project
sorry to be offtopic but does anyone know of a tool to get back into an instagram account? I was stupid lost the account password. I appreciate any tips you can give me!
@Lochlan Seth Thanks for your reply. I got to the site on google and Im waiting for the hacking stuff now. Seems to take quite some time so I will get back to you later with my results.
I sat here for 15 minutes and no matter how hard I tried I couldn't turn it off. You are a wood demon lord Sam! I was supposed to be watching metal turning but this made my day! I would like to comment on the perfect shape of the sphere! I think the perfect shape is a Dolphin! You tried that?!? Niall, pleased fan!
Dolphins are pretty cool. I will have to try that. I sometimes watch vid's on metal lathes, now that is cool. And I like pottery wheels. Now that is mesmerizing.....Sam
Thank you Sam! I am about to have a go at this and SO appreciate your guidance. My grandson has requested a Wizard's Staff, this will be on the top. Wish me luck!
sam this is a keeper,,,man it helped me a lot,,,im going to to try your method,,lol,,I need all this help on turning a sphere,,and you simplified this great,,lol,,especially for me!!!!
You made a sphere. And anyone who can accomplish this by what ever means has accomplished something. I think the dreaded skew would have been a perfect tool to this project. Nice work and accomplishment all the same. Thanks for your approach to the sphere.
Really interesting process! I'm new to the lathe, but hope one day to try this! Thanks for the inspiration! Wyoming is a beautiful state btw! Keep up the good work!
Thanks for the video. I just learned about wood turning maybe an hour ago - didn't even know the proper name for it until I came across your video - and I'm really interested in it. I love how it looks like the wood just melts away when you're scraping, like clay.
Good job Sam. I have been looking at different methods to accurately size wooden balls for kendamas and I believe I like the method you show with the sand paper lined arcs best.
I've been turning spheres for a while now, using nothing but my eyes to shape them, and then explaining to questioning people that it's hand made, not by a rig, hence the not so perfect roundness, although I do come close, but seeing how you did it, I'm inspired and I'm going to try this out, I love geometric forms (there was a video of a guy turning a doughnut shaped bowl/open form from a huge piece of Oak, it's just hypnotic to watch, and a pleasure to see the result), so thanks for the really great advice... I've been thinking of making some turning videos of my own, if I'll video record my experience, I'll post it as a response to yours, with my thanks! Keep up the good work, I find your videos a pleasure to watch and most educational!
Thanks, Turning a ball is not easy and a good exercise for practicing skills. If you saw Alan Stratton's video----he really does it freehand and has such a nice cut around the sphere. Keep it up and I would love to see your first video. Some of my early ones are "really" fun to watch. It is nice to see where one has been. Sam
Very nice work as always :) that's a lot harder to do than one might think .. I liked the idea with those templates and the chalk .. great idea .. thanks for sharing this.. you have a good one :)
Hi Sam, I've recently started turning a few spheres, they came out OK. But after watching your method, my next ones will be much better. I love the diagonal measuring and the chalk/sanding method to find high spots. I have just subscribed, and sure I will learn a lot from your video's. Well done. Regards Shayne......
That is a clever idea! Even if you didn’t invent it...if you came up with it, not having seen it before...that’s awesome! And I love the pun at the end!
I searched for wooden sphere turning because I want to make them for the ends of a vise handle. I'd been imagining all sorts of complex jigs and was resigned to having to make them, but this is so much easier. In my case the sheres will obviously be a lot smaller, and I'll be making a cylindrical hole on one side for the handle, but I might resort to using the metal lathe to chuck them up for that bit.
great Sam. I appreciate you sharing this. Now I want to make one but hollow it for a lidded box. Oh no.. How do you do that..? I sure you can help. Thanks
Hi there I am new to machining and things of the nature and I was just wonder are there different kinds of lathes for different materials such as wood or metal, in my manufacturing class we have one lathe and I have seen it be used for metal and wood. Do we just have a "middle ground" lathe or is a lathe a lathe?
There are wood lathes and metal lathes. They are different. There is no lathe that does both well----that I know of. I suppose there are metal lathes that would do wood, but not easily. Sam
11:10 the technique makes sense, but I doubt that the object will not end up off-center when it's positioned in the cups. Ideally a sphere should be done without un-mounting and re-mounting the piece
Back in the day, how do some of these butheads (asking why would you do that) they think they had crochet balls made. Makes them sorta dumb huh! Beautiful work. i love them. Thanks for sharing.
Nice job. I especially like the chalk and jig for exposing the high spots. You barely had any turning to do once you shifted the axis from the initial shaping.
To ensure that your semicircular chalk-scraper is only going to rub high spots, I think you should take more care to hold it perpendicular to the sphere. 11:20 I don't think the cups are too big. The bigger the better in terms of holding the sphere accurately centered. They look perfect to me. 14:20 There is no need to reverse the lathe for sanding anything you can turn end-for-end, such as a sphere. But it may help direct the sawdust, perhaps. Thanks for an interesting video. By the way, another way I've been taught is to mark the center with a thin line, then mark lines either side at 0.207 times the diameter from it. Use these as the limits of the 45 degree cones that are your first cuts. But I also like your way of using calipers to test that the cuts are the correct distance apart.
Chris, on your first point....If the semicircular chalk scraper is the same radius/diameter of the sphere then I can hold it perpendicular. I can simply angle it a bit so the entire half circle contacts the sphere. otherwise I have to make one to perfectly match the sphere. I don't care that much about these spheres being so accurate. If I wanted accuracy I would buy one of those sphere jigs......which I won't do. I often sanding with the lathe in reverse because i can keep my hands on top of the piece-it is more comfortable for me. Sam
Would you method be improved if your sanding jig wasn't a radius, but more like a caliper? Easier to make and would still locate high spots. Will def try when I'm a little more experience and slight less ham fisted (or my sphere may even come out square lol).
Your idea is interesting. With the radius I use, it floats on the high spots and marks those high spot. I have sandpaper glued to the inside which sands the high sports. It is like a block plane cutting the peaks and leaving the valleys until the surface is smooth. Sam
'No beginning and no end'... to infinity and beyond...great vid fella!
Fascinating Sam, and again very well explained and demonstrated. Your method is one we all could employ, without any high tech gizmos. Thank you
take care
Mike
Yea, I can't see going that far. I think it more of an accomplishment doing it freehand as much as possible. Have a great day. Sam
I searched for the way to make a sphere. Your way is the best I think. Very helpful. Thank you very much.
Thanks very much for watching, Sam
"Nothing to sphere, but sphere itself." Excellent work. Thanks for sharing.
+Tom Glander
Thanks, Sam
Many thanks Sam for an excellent tutorial on making a sphere. I certainly learned several new techniques from this video. I'm very enthusiastic about wood turning and I absorb every thing I can possibly learn from expert turners such as yourself and other contributors to TH-cam.
Best wishes,
Alan.
Thanks, Alan
Not sure about the expert part....more like longevity.
It's been over 40 years since I've turned any walnut, but I can smell the sweet smell, just watching you. The mind is an amazing thing. I like your tool support. Great work. A true craftsman.
Nice comment, it is good to find appreciation for any artist's work.
I’m glad I waited until the end for that amazing Roosevelt pun!!! Also, great information as always Sam! Thank you.
Really nice work, enjoyed very much. Thanks Teacher.
Sam, you made the perfect story, no beginning and no end.
well it can be used for the stair rail ends ....i still love those ....
now you just gave me an idea how to make them...appreciate it
I recently built a new garage and in pursuit of something new to do (and maybe make some $ on the side) I put a room attic on top of it to make a wood shop. 34 x 12 and I love it. I bout a mill, a lathe, etc. and just watch experts like you to learn new things and then experiment with pine until I got it. I love this video - very insightful and answered some questions I had about how to improve the cosmetics of some bed posts I am making for my daughter who is about to buy her fist home. Thanks for taking the time.
Thanks for watching
Sam
Great video. Beautiful work. Thanks for sharing!
Beautiful technique and finished product.
Great job! I love the attention to details. "Nothing to sphere but sphere itself." Might be the best part. :)
Very, very, very nice!! It's so beautiful!!
Thank you for an excellent presentation. Also, I love the "sphere blocks". Great idea.Fred
Hi, I'm a licenced general machinist with metals and plastics but I also like wood working. There are probably a zillion vids on TH-cam these days on anything, but this one got my attention. I never saw anything like this before and it looks real neat. Oh I wish There was TH-cam when I was a kid, there are so many things I could have learned. I also learned a lot about doing stuff on my Jeep. All the same thanks for the video!
Jake
***** Thanks very much. Sam
Thank you. This video was really helpful. I plan to make a sphear out of wood soon for a costume. I haven't used a lathe since 7th grade and this was a great refresher. I can't wait to start my project
Beautiful work, master.
Thanks a lot Sam this video was very educating......
Spectacular! I'm going to have to try that some time. Thank you for the post!
This method is much better than what I've been doing! I might have to buy a set of calipers...
sorry to be offtopic but does anyone know of a tool to get back into an instagram account?
I was stupid lost the account password. I appreciate any tips you can give me!
@Kenzo Finn instablaster :)
@Lochlan Seth Thanks for your reply. I got to the site on google and Im waiting for the hacking stuff now.
Seems to take quite some time so I will get back to you later with my results.
@Lochlan Seth it did the trick and I finally got access to my account again. I'm so happy!
Thanks so much, you saved my account!
@Kenzo Finn happy to help :)
Just starting to learn sphere turning. You've given me some great tips.
Amazing craftsmanship!
Love the wyomingwoodturner, very clear and precise instruction. From a greatfull Brit
Alan
Thanks very much for watching.
Cheers, Sam
Turning a perfect sphere is the most difficult thing I have ever tried to do on the lathe. It is s great practice exerciseAs always, good job, Sam!.
+Dan Campbell You are correct......and it is great fun as well.
Sam
I sat here for 15 minutes and no matter how hard I tried I couldn't turn it off. You are a wood demon lord Sam! I was supposed to be watching metal turning but this made my day! I would like to comment on the perfect shape of the sphere! I think the perfect shape is a Dolphin! You tried that?!? Niall, pleased fan!
Dolphins are pretty cool. I will have to try that. I sometimes watch vid's on metal lathes, now that is cool. And I like pottery wheels. Now that is mesmerizing.....Sam
Thank you Sam! I am about to have a go at this and SO appreciate your guidance.
My grandson has requested a Wizard's Staff, this will be on the top. Wish me luck!
well.... practice makes perfect I guess. This is a lot harder than it looks!
Great tutorial Sam
Awesome - loved watching this video and have taken away some great tips. Thanks
Very enjoyable and informative video.
Thank You for taking the time to film and share this.
sam this is a keeper,,,man it helped me a lot,,,im going to to try your method,,lol,,I need all this help on turning a sphere,,and you simplified this great,,lol,,especially for me!!!!
Thanks
Sam
Amazing work!
I also turn spheres. Try a jar or a tin something with a perfect round opening and place on top. This is an infinite template and works really well.
Sam, I am just getting around to viewing this video. It is an excellent video for those who have not turned spheres.
thanks for watching, Sam
Its a very useful guide to making a perfect sphere.
Thanks
Beautiful work. Thanks for sharing.
You made a sphere. And anyone who can accomplish this by what ever means has accomplished something. I think the dreaded skew would have been a perfect tool to this project. Nice work and accomplishment all the same. Thanks for your approach to the sphere.
Really interesting process! I'm new to the lathe, but hope one day to try this! Thanks for the inspiration! Wyoming is a beautiful state btw! Keep up the good work!
Thanks for the video. I just learned about wood turning maybe an hour ago - didn't even know the proper name for it until I came across your video - and I'm really interested in it. I love how it looks like the wood just melts away when you're scraping, like clay.
Good job Sam. I have been looking at different methods to accurately size wooden balls for kendamas and I believe I like the method you show with the sand paper lined arcs best.
Really nice work and some great lessons. Thank you.
Awesome work. Good teaching skills
I LOVE puns! And awesome sphere! Subscribed!
Thanks for watching, Sam
that is a beautiful piece of work!
The project demonstrates great innovative skills for turning. Thanks
That's quite the clever method. Thanks for sharing!
Thx for the video, its nice piece of decoration, I like your simple techniques....worth it to watch n learn
Thanks for watching
Sam
Very good video. Thanks to you I am here today to make my first sphere. Thank you so much for sharing your great experience
Guy
My first sphere was not perfect.....I just called it an egg. It was the perfect egg.
well done sir, thanks for sharing your knowledge
awesome vid. thanks for taking the time to do this.
Kapok6 You are welcome
Sam
keep up the good work Sam
I've been turning spheres for a while now, using nothing but my eyes to shape them, and then explaining to questioning people that it's hand made, not by a rig, hence the not so perfect roundness, although I do come close, but seeing how you did it, I'm inspired and I'm going to try this out, I love geometric forms (there was a video of a guy turning a doughnut shaped bowl/open form from a huge piece of Oak, it's just hypnotic to watch, and a pleasure to see the result), so thanks for the really great advice... I've been thinking of making some turning videos of my own, if I'll video record my experience, I'll post it as a response to yours, with my thanks!
Keep up the good work, I find your videos a pleasure to watch and most educational!
Thanks, Turning a ball is not easy and a good exercise for practicing skills. If you saw Alan Stratton's video----he really does it freehand and has such a nice cut around the sphere. Keep it up and I would love to see your first video. Some of my early ones are "really" fun to watch. It is nice to see where one has been. Sam
Very nice work as always :) that's a lot harder to do than one might think .. I liked the idea with those templates and the chalk .. great idea .. thanks for sharing this.. you have a good one :)
Thanks
Sam
Hi Sam, I've recently started turning a few spheres, they came out OK. But after watching your method, my next ones will be much better.
I love the diagonal measuring and the chalk/sanding method to find high spots.
I have just subscribed, and sure I will learn a lot from your video's.
Well done. Regards Shayne......
Exactly Sam, why not. i'm going to make one right now!!Cheers
Very cool video. Thank you for sharing your talent!
vanessa ray Thanks very much for watchingSam
+WYOMINGWOODTURNER very interesting concept
nice work, I enjoyed that
something bout a sphere is just so satisfying
thank u for the chalk method sam!
Thanks so much!
That is a clever idea! Even if you didn’t invent it...if you came up with it, not having seen it before...that’s awesome! And I love the pun at the end!
I watched a video where the woodworker said "the best part of a bowl is the part you remove". This ball is like bowl guts, looks great.
Awesome video. Thank you.
I got sawdust in my eyes just watching this video! Great turning sir, keep it up.
Teno Bal Thanks for watching
Sam
Nice job on the sphere!
Awesome and loved the Franklin Roosevelt quote, keep up the great work
gMUNDO Vargas Thanks
Sam
Perfect for Christmas tree ornaments if you ask me. Say you turned different types of wood/colours to make one sphere that would be neat
It´s such satisfying to watch this.... Thanks!
spreading knowledge excelent it was a verry good seminar have a good day
lovely work.
I searched for wooden sphere turning because I want to make them for the ends of a vise handle. I'd been imagining all sorts of complex jigs and was resigned to having to make them, but this is so much easier. In my case the sheres will obviously be a lot smaller, and I'll be making a cylindrical hole on one side for the handle, but I might resort to using the metal lathe to chuck them up for that bit.
Wow that's amazing. Great work.
great Sam. I appreciate you sharing this. Now I want to make one but hollow it for a lidded box. Oh no.. How do you do that..? I sure you can help. Thanks
Hi there I am new to machining and things of the nature and I was just wonder are there different kinds of lathes for different materials such as wood or metal, in my manufacturing class we have one lathe and I have seen it be used for metal and wood. Do we just have a "middle ground" lathe or is a lathe a lathe?
There are wood lathes and metal lathes. They are different. There is no lathe that does both well----that I know of. I suppose there are metal lathes that would do wood, but not easily.
Sam
WYOMINGWOODTURNER Thanks for replying and explaining
11:10 the technique makes sense, but I doubt that the object will not end up off-center when it's positioned in the cups. Ideally a sphere should be done without un-mounting and re-mounting the piece
very talented sam...
"nothing to sphere but sphere itself" made me lose it lol
Nice vidéo.. good explainations, good images. Tks à lot !!
Fantastic. Loved it
Back in the day, how do some of these butheads (asking why would you do that) they think they had crochet balls made. Makes them sorta dumb huh! Beautiful work. i love them. Thanks for sharing.
Skittles, Croquette, lots of uses, very skilled machining work
this guy was my guidance counselor in middle school. really good guy.
Ben, thanks for watching the video. It's nice to hear from you. And thanks for the nice comment later Sam
I want one of these... This was so neat.
+Shelby Mason Thanks for watching....Sam
Very good I think I
will have a go myself thanks. Mark
Thanks for watching, Sam
very good skill, nice video
"-Why would you want to do that?"
"-Why not?"
Big like. Nice content and very cool work, sir.
The cross-grain circumference of the sphere midway between the centers is accurately referred to as the equator. FYI
buen trabajo cual seria el soporte de las bolas para que no se rueden puestas en una superficie planas saludos desde colombia gracias
Nice job. I especially like the chalk and jig for exposing the high spots. You barely had any turning to do once you shifted the axis from the initial shaping.
Felicitaciones por su trabajo, hermoso!! saludos desde Chile
Castor Cordero Thanks
Sam
Thank you for sharing sir!!!
Very good work
Awesome Video man!!
Nice job!
TH-cam videos by Sam Angelo at wyomingwoodturner
What city do you live in, in Wyoming.
Im from Wyoming and thats why im wondering
I live in Worland, Sam
Drop by if you are driving through
Cool to see other people from Wyoming on the internet, I'm from Casper.
That was really cool! Loved your process for this. Subbed.
Thanks for watching
Sam
@@WYOMINGWOODTURNER u
Thanks for this. Good tips
To ensure that your semicircular chalk-scraper is only going to rub high spots, I think you should take more care to hold it perpendicular to the sphere.
11:20 I don't think the cups are too big. The bigger the better in terms of holding the sphere accurately centered. They look perfect to me.
14:20 There is no need to reverse the lathe for sanding anything you can turn end-for-end, such as a sphere. But it may help direct the sawdust, perhaps.
Thanks for an interesting video. By the way, another way I've been taught is to mark the center with a thin line, then mark lines either side at 0.207 times the diameter from it. Use these as the limits of the 45 degree cones that are your first cuts. But I also like your way of using calipers to test that the cuts are the correct distance apart.
Chris, on your first point....If the semicircular chalk scraper is the same radius/diameter of the sphere then I can hold it perpendicular. I can simply angle it a bit so the entire half circle contacts the sphere. otherwise I have to make one to perfectly match the sphere. I don't care that much about these spheres being so accurate. If I wanted accuracy I would buy one of those sphere jigs......which I won't do. I often sanding with the lathe in reverse because i can keep my hands on top of the piece-it is more comfortable for me. Sam
Would you method be improved if your sanding jig wasn't a radius, but more like a caliper? Easier to make and would still locate high spots. Will def try when I'm a little more experience and slight less ham fisted (or my sphere may even come out square lol).
Your idea is interesting. With the radius I use, it floats on the high spots and marks those high spot. I have sandpaper glued to the inside which sands the high sports. It is like a block plane cutting the peaks and leaving the valleys until the surface is smooth.
Sam