Those turned out great! I can’t imagine working with a small piece of wood like you started with, yet get 2 beautiful pieces out of that one block! You are amazing! Bravo!
Thank you Mary. These are lots of fun to make. You might want to check out the first one I ever did. th-cam.com/video/5CuaAZ9PenM/w-d-xo.html&ab_channel=ThePapa1947
Ahhh... So that's how you do it! 😲 I've seen a couple of those and just couldn't wrap my mind around how it was done. Of course, it all seems so simple once you've seen the trick... 😀
Sounds great Paul! It is 23 degrees right now and there are things I need to get done in the shop this morning. We lost power for most of the day yesterday because of some strong winds. I have a hard time just sitting around so I may brave the cold this morning. Take care, Gary
Math, Oh NO, not math! There's no ;ace in woodturning for math! Of course I jest. Never thought my plane geometry course would turn out to be so useful! Math or not, this is a great video. Makes it look easy enough that I'll try it. Great job as usual.
So well and patiently explained and demonstrated, Gary! No wonder they call you "the professor!" Another really good teaching video for the library! Keep'em coming, my friend! 😊 Phil
Thanks so much Phil. Ahh I think you are the one that gave me that name LOL. I may have to do a series of very easy turnings. For others and for me. Take care my friend, Gary
Thanks for the detailed explanation! I’ve never seen how one of these were turned. Now I just might have to try one myself! Your help here makes it look so simple! Thanks again and keep on turning!
Thanks so much Billy. I enjoy making all these things. Even with this being easier than using a branch it was still a bucket of fun making the video. Take care my friend, Gary
Thank you Chris. I learned that crayon trick the first week of my wood pattern making apprentice ship. Been using it every since then. And that was a long time ago. Black crayon is the best. For some reason it is softer and seems to work much better.
@@ThePapa1947 that is so cool. Now I have to research why the black crayon is softer! Probably because it needs more pigment than all the others. Very cool! Thanks Gary!
Thank you Jim, it is 23 degrees right now. We lost power yesterday and good thing we have a fireplace insert because that kept us warm. Merry Christmas, Gary
That is fantastic. I have always looked at emerging bowls with awe and wonder, never really understanding how they are made. You have shown that it is easy, and rather simple. I really appreciate the lesson, and I am very impressed by the beauty of the pair of bowls you have produced. Thank you for a wonderful lesson, and another example of "this is easy, try it yourself".
Thanks so much Mark. I do think most of this is very easy. The hard part is getting it in your head and following the needed steps to make it happen. I had to learn how to see in 3D so that is a big help. I know you can do this and when your ready let me know how it goes. Take care, Gary
That is a beautiful bowl. And a great lesson on how to make one. I watched the video of the first one you made a while back and that was quite impressive
Thank you very much Chris. I am pretty proud of the first one I made. I have the other half abut the bark did not stay on. I should turn it anyway. Thanks for watching, Gary
That's amazing and I never get tired of watching that ghost image. You really can see the bowl, before it becomes a complete bowl. Merry Christmas to you and your family. Thanks for sharing.
I like your bowl you made . Great work. I have noticed some turners have their own style when turning. I have been watching different turners, and the way they use the tools is interesting. I take it after the first catch, and when the wood flies off the lathe, you learn quickly. I plan on trying my hand on turning soon and want to learn as much as i can before i start turning. Thanks for the video. It is very informative .
Thank you very much John. For sure there will be catches at first but you can learn fast if you see why that is happening. At work as a wood pattern maker I turned things over 6 foot in diameter and had a lot of mass to them. A catch on something that big will wake you up along with everyone else in the shop. I do have a video on avoiding catches with carbides. It is my method and others may have a different way but it works for me. th-cam.com/video/ef26_zrwHfc/w-d-xo.html&ab_channel=ThePapa1947 Thanks for watchiing, Gary
Thanks Gary for your clear and didactic explanation about emerging bowls,It's always a great pleasure to look at your videos from my French village. Have a nice Christmas. 🍾😄🍷
Hi Gary, I hope you are well, I just wanted to say that I think you are a really clever guy, anyway take care and stay safe, I hope you and your family have a really nice Christmas and a really truly wonderful new year x
Well done. With regards to the size of the gouge, I believe if it’s made in Europe, the measure the inside of the flute and if it’s made in the USA, it’s measured on the outside. Stay warm! -11° F in east central Minnesota this morning
Thank you very much Greg. Yes that is the way the gouges are referred to. If I buy gouges made in England I still go by the outside diameter. But that is just me. You have me with the -11. It was a blistering 20 degrees this morning LOL. Take care, Gary
Thank you John. I think it is a good easy way to start on these emerging bowls but I do not seem to take the easy way. I will say I enjoyed trying it out like this. Gary
Thank you Huw! I added the non rasied one just to show there is a little easier way to do it. Actually a lot easer to not mess up if you have never done one. Hwyl, Gary
Good Christmas Eve Evening, Gary. I love this project and remembered the one you turned in and earlier video. Now it's on my list to turn. All the best to you in this coming New Year. Merry Christmas!
Well you keep bringing back memories for me. I made two similair nut bowls to this for a Irish friend some twenty years ago - except it had a small indentation on the flat surface to place a nut to be broken by a small mallet. Very similar technique except I used a paper joint instead of hot glue to adhere the piece to the wooden face plate. A delight to see you go through the motions!
Thank you very much Anthony! I first used paper joints in 1960 or 61 in grade school shop class. Somewhere I think I still have the nut bowl I made my mother using that method. Thanks for watching and the memories, Gary
Well i reckon i can manage one of those after the festive and it warms up a bit. great vid everything i was thinking Phil has put so here's wishing you and yours a Merry Christmas and all the best from Lincolnshire UK
See, Laverna, I told you he’s not just a pretty face. 😂😂😂 Another great job, Gary! One of these days I have to try one of those myself. With instruction like this, I just might be able to accomplish it. Thanks for the guidance, my friend. Merry Christmas to you and your bride! 🎄🎄🎄 Take care, …..Gord
Thank you very much Gord. I may have to send this link to Laverna LOL. I am pretty sure you could handle this with no problems...and then you would have 2 nice little Smartie bowls! Merry Christmas to you and your bride as well. Stay warm, Gary
I absolutely love those bowls. When I have a go myself I’ll watch your video again and it will improve your ratings 😊. Have as Merry a Christmas with your family as I am having with mine 🌞
Thank you Ray. Much easier way to start with making these. We have the family coming over tomorrow and looking forward to it. Merry Christmas my friend, Gary
Thank You Gary... NICE TURNING (i do like different! .. but is it getting harder & harder to think up something new???) THAT is truly a unique little cutie !! HAPPY HOLIDAYS GARY!!!!! Until next time.... TM
Nicely done and demonstrated, Gary. My shop is put to bed for a week, or so (might sneak down on Boxing Day for awhile) but I'm happy to add this to my list of ideas for the new year. I've got a crotch piece I'm wondering if it could be emerging. I'll have to doodle a bit a figure out the method. I might try ripping it with a hand saw, or I may turn away the top half. I 'll have to think on it or ask a friend to rip it for me. You've got my wheels turning, that's certain. Thanks for a fantastic year of videos. Your video, audio, narration, edits, are all so good and consistent. Well don and Merry Christmas, happy holiday & happy New Year!
Now that's neat Gary. I was thinking; A bigger block of wood to start, make the bowl deeper, then cut the flat part into a handle, some way, and you have a cup. Merry Christmas. ;-)
Thank you Robert! Good idea and if you want to get it real fancy you could mount it end to end again and turn the handle on it. Now that you have me thinking about it that would be an easy thing to do. Thanks for watching, Gary
Very good demo Gary, both came out lookin nice, but your first one you did out of that beautiful Mimosa is gorgeous. Thanks again. Best wishes for you and yours for a very wonderful Christmas and a fantastic New Year. Cheers, Tom
Thank you Tom, Yes the Mimosa bowl has beautiful grain. I have the other half and saved the fixture to hold it for a long time. I think I will need t finish turning it even though most of the bark fell off. It has a cool pattern under the bark so I will put it on the list to finish it. Merry Christmas to you and yours as well. Gary
Thank you Gary for making another cool video and making it look so easy. I was out trying to make a Phil-like bark on oak bowl last night. Had the wood burner and my antique torpedo heater going. Around 2 degrees and 30mph wind in Pa. “It’s beginning to look a lot like…” Merry Christmas! Cya next Year
Thank you Barry. Well much colder where you are at but for us 20 degrees is pretty cold. Bathing suit weather right now at 32 degrees LOL. Merry Christmas to you my friend, Gary
Hey Gary, That is a very pretty little bowl. Cute little rascal really. I am sure I am wrong but I just dont see that as an "emerging" bowl. It is more of a bowl with a plate on the side. To me an emerging bowl would be an end grain bowl growing from a limb and leaving the bark on the lower portion of the limb with only part of the outside of the bowl exposed. I have not made one of those yet but I did make an emerging goblet, again an end grain turn with the goblet and some stem growing from the branch. It was looking great but there was a small spot on the stem that I wanted to fix (should have used sandpaper and I learned that for the future) and I ended up busting the stem and sadly ruining the the piece. That is ok though we learn as we go I am still learning from folks like you. Yall have a Merry Christmas. :)
Thank you Allyn. All but this one I have done from a branch. This was a piece of end grain wood as well but it had no bark. I do prefer the actual branch method but for someone trying it for the first time this is a good way to go. I did an emerging bottle from a branch a few years ago. It even has a branch coming out of the side. Thanks for watching and Merry Christmas, Gary
Thanks Mike, I think a round over on those edges would look good. On the others I have done on a limb I like them slightly dubbed over. Want it to look like a slice of a tree. Merry Christmas, Gary
You've simplified the confusing again, as usual. I've seen this demonstrated some years back at a "Turnfest" symposium in AUS, took extensive notes, to no avail and stayed well away from the challenge thereafter. I think you have reignited my interest in a fun project. It's 0715 on Christmas Eve here, with a temp of 73 degrees F and expected 78 max. So Santa is wearing a T shirt and shorts with bare feet and looking for a shady spot to spend the lead up to a busy night. Merry Christmas to you and your family
Thank you Des, happy it helped. I used a simple block just to make it easy to show how simple this is. I do like making them from a branch which I did recently with a piece of Apple. But more steps in mounting them on the face plate. Now I really feel cold....LOL But it was 20 degrees this morning but has warmed up to 23. Merry Christmas to you and yours, Gary
This it the largest I have done. th-cam.com/video/5CuaAZ9PenM/w-d-xo.html&ab_channel=ThePapa1947 You could do one to the max of your lathe but counter balance will be very important. At work I turned very large patterns(much larger than 20") that were way out of balance and adding some counter weight really helped. Thanks for watching, Gary
A very cool video Gary. Thank you for that! Using that method, is it possible to do a larger bowl like 4 or 5 inch diameter? I was thinking maybe it would get too out of balance? I will definitely try something along those lines. All the best Gary. Cheers, Rick
Thank you Rick. If you increased the size in evenly from this one it would be pretty much the same. Only differences would be the extra mass. But easy enough to add counter balance pieces on a wooden face plate. I would have to look back on the first one I did from a branch but I am sure I did do just that. Best of luck, Gary
Merry christmas to you and your wife. The emerging bowel was a great lesson and you mention you like challenge yourself. How about trip point emerging bowel?
Thank you Karl. So like a bowl on each end? I have thought about that. Or maybe on one end and a side. That might be easier. Well on second thought...more like a challenge. Merry Christmas, Gary
Re gouge size - Generally the Brits go by the flute size, the Yanks go by the shank size. You might think of it as two countries divided by a common language. (paraphrasing G.B. Shaw)
Thank you Bob, yes they do and I have a hard time calling the Sorby tools by their flute size when I buy them localy here next to others that measure the other way. I think I find it hard and silly to use two tools the same size and go back and forth with what they are called. I think I will stick with the Yank sizing method LOL. Take care, Gary
Came back for a refresher course.
Thanks for the return visit.
Gary
I watched this video with almost no fast forward. Because I was learning from every word. Thanks.
Thank you very much Walt. Happy to hear you did not do any fast forwarding.
Happy it helped and thanks for watching,
Gary
Those turned out great! I can’t imagine working with a small piece of wood like you started with, yet get 2 beautiful pieces out of that one block! You are amazing! Bravo!
Thank you Mary. These are lots of fun to make. You might want to check out the first one I ever did.
th-cam.com/video/5CuaAZ9PenM/w-d-xo.html&ab_channel=ThePapa1947
Ahhh... So that's how you do it! 😲 I've seen a couple of those and just couldn't wrap my mind around how it was done.
Of course, it all seems so simple once you've seen the trick... 😀
Yes it is pretty easy. Doing it with a branch is about the same except being able to mount it.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
I liked this and I am going to try making one as soon as the weather warms up so I can work.
Sounds great Paul! It is 23 degrees right now and there are things I need to get done in the shop this morning. We lost power for most of the day yesterday because of some strong winds. I have a hard time just sitting around so I may brave the cold this morning.
Take care,
Gary
Very nice bowls. I like the raised bowl emerging from the block. These look great. Thanks.
Thank you Willian and thanks for watching,
Gary
Math, Oh NO, not math! There's no ;ace in woodturning for math! Of course I jest. Never thought my plane geometry course would turn out to be so useful! Math or not, this is a great video. Makes it look easy enough that I'll try it. Great job as usual.
Thank you Tom. Yeah I do like the math part of some of this. But I used it daily at work.
Let me know how it goes when you try it.
Take care,
Gary
Cool little merging bowl
David and Maria
Merry Christmas
Thank you very much David and Maria and a very Merry Christmas to the both of you.
Gary
It's a great idea Gary and 1 I should add to my to do list! Seems a much easier way than what my mind could come up with!!
Thank you Ray. They are fun to do. I like things that take a few steps to get to the final piece.
Take care,
Gary
Beautiful little bowl. Thanks for the demonstration. I want to try it with a chunk of tree limb.
Thank you James I do like using a chunk of a tree limb. I have 2 or 3 videos of doing that.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
I am really enjoying and learning a lot watching your videos. Well done from Charles City, VA. George
Thank you very much George and thanks for watching,
Gary
Interesting idea Gary. I've never seen anything like that before.
Thank you Paul. I have done a few of those using a limb from a tree.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Hi Gary Fantastically informative video, Thank you for sharing , really enjoyable 🙌🙌🙌🙌👍👍👍👍
Thank you Douglas. Happy you enjoyed it.
Take care,
Gary
Just a very enjoyable video. This is what I will do week. Thank you for sharing.
Thank you Albert and have fun making it.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
I LOVE the other mosa wood that's really beautiful.
Thank you Manjit
So well and patiently explained and demonstrated, Gary! No wonder they call you "the professor!" Another really good teaching video for the library! Keep'em coming, my friend! 😊
Phil
Thanks so much Phil. Ahh I think you are the one that gave me that name LOL. I may have to do a series of very easy turnings. For others and for me.
Take care my friend,
Gary
Phil, don't sell yourself short, you're an excellent teacher yourself.
Merry Christmas Phil .
Another great teachimg video! Thank you😊
I wondered if it would be possible to angle the bowl comming out of the "doner" board.😮
Thanks for the detailed explanation! I’ve never seen how one of these were turned. Now I just might have to try one myself! Your help here makes it look so simple! Thanks again and keep on turning!
Thank you Michael. For sure doing it this way is not all that hard.
Best of luck,
Gary
Very ingenious. The order of the cuts is key. Thanks.
Thank you Frank and for sure it is a matter of steps to get there.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Thank you, sir, for two examples from a single piece of wood. I appreciate seeing what you have to teach.
Thank you very much Pat. These are lots of fun to do. Happy you enjoyed the video.
Take care,
Gary
I agree with Phil, Gary! Great video and they both look very nice, my friend!
Thanks so much Billy. I enjoy making all these things. Even with this being easier than using a branch it was still a bucket of fun making the video.
Take care my friend,
Gary
Very nicely done, Gary. I will be saving this one
Thank you very much Ward.
Have fun,
Gary
This was an awesome video Gary. I think I'll give this a try soon. Thanks for sharing! 👍🏾
Thank you very much Greg and let me know how it goes.
Take care,
Gary
Yet another awesome demonstration!
Thank you Luie. I left a comment on an older video of yours I missed.
Good story to go with it.
Merry Christmas.
Gary
Really great tutorial! Great idea with the crayon witness line, I will be using that one!
Thank you Chris. I learned that crayon trick the first week of my wood pattern making apprentice ship. Been using it every since then. And that was a long time ago. Black crayon is the best. For some reason it is softer and seems to work much better.
@@ThePapa1947 that is so cool. Now I have to research why the black crayon is softer! Probably because it needs more pigment than all the others. Very cool! Thanks Gary!
Looks great, Gary...neat little project!
Thank you Carol, and they are lots of fun to do.
Take care,
Gary
Nice lesson for new turners very good information about emerging' take care my friend.
Thank you Sagar!
Take care,
Gary
Merry Christmas, stay warm.
Thank you Jim, it is 23 degrees right now. We lost power yesterday and good thing we have a fireplace insert because that kept us warm.
Merry Christmas,
Gary
Thanks for making this so easy and simple to understand. Have a Merry Christmas.
Thank you Doug and Merry Christmas to you as well.
Gary
You are very talented, thanks for sharing your knowledge and tips, 👍👍👍Ernie smith from brisbane Australia
Thank you Ernie! I appreciate your comment and thanks for watching.
Gary
That is fantastic. I have always looked at emerging bowls with awe and wonder, never really understanding how they are made. You have shown that it is easy, and rather simple. I really appreciate the lesson, and I am very impressed by the beauty of the pair of bowls you have produced. Thank you for a wonderful lesson, and another example of "this is easy, try it yourself".
Thanks so much Mark. I do think most of this is very easy. The hard part is getting it in your head and following the needed steps to make it happen. I had to learn how to see in 3D so that is a big help.
I know you can do this and when your ready let me know how it goes.
Take care,
Gary
Loved the video. I’m going to try one myself. My shop is -3 degrees right now so maybe next week when it warms up.
Thank you Allen. I think you will enjoy this. Wow you have me by 17 degrees. It is 20 here at the moment.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Great information! Thank you for sharing! That's on my list to turn.
Thank you very much. I appreciate you watching and commenting.
Have fun,
Gary
Thanks again Gary for sharing your knowledge and talent. Merry Christmas!
Stuart
Thank you Stuart and Merry Christmas to you as well.
Gary
That is cool. I was wondering what an emerging bowl was. I forgot seeing your first on.
Thank you very much Chris and thanks for watching.
Gary
That is a beautiful bowl. And a great lesson on how to make one. I watched the video of the first one you made a while back and that was quite impressive
Thank you very much Chris. I am pretty proud of the first one I made. I have the other half abut the bark did not stay on. I should turn it anyway.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
As you should be proud it was impressive. You will definitely figure something out to turn with it you a quite the turner
Thank you my friend.
That’s adorable!
Thank you Lynda!
That's amazing and I never get tired of watching that ghost image. You really can see the bowl, before it becomes a complete bowl. Merry Christmas to you and your family. Thanks for sharing.
Thank you Jimmy, I like those ghost images as well. It is like the shape is being drawn right before you reys.
Merry Christmas to you and yours,
Gary
They look great can't wait to try well done sir 👌 👍
Thank you very much William, I am sure you will enjoy making them.
Take care,
Gary
Gary, you sure have a way of making the complex look simple. Have a Great New Year! Dan
Thank you very much Dan and a very Happy New Year to you as well.
Gary
Another awesome project .
Thanks so much William!
Pretty cool. Thanks for sharing. Happy Holidays
Thank you Linda and wishing you a Merry Christmas.
Great idea Gary.
Thank you Jack and thanks for watching,
Gary
Nicely done. Very good tutorial.
Thank you Doug, happy you liked it.
Merry Christmas my friend,
Gary
Yup I liked this one, got to try this over the holidays.
Happy holidays sir thanks again for your lessons.
Chuck
Thank you very much Bren and thanks for watching.
Gary
I like it! Thanks for the fun tutorial.
Thank you Rick and thanks for watching.
Gary
I like your bowl you made . Great work. I have noticed some turners have their own style when turning. I have been watching different turners, and the way they use the tools is interesting. I take it after the first catch, and when the wood flies off the lathe, you learn quickly. I plan on trying my hand on turning soon and want to learn as much as i can before i start turning. Thanks for the video. It is very informative .
Thank you very much John. For sure there will be catches at first but you can learn fast if you see why that is happening.
At work as a wood pattern maker I turned things over 6 foot in diameter and had a lot of mass to them. A catch on something that big will wake you up along with everyone else in the shop.
I do have a video on avoiding catches with carbides. It is my method and others may have a different way but it works for me.
th-cam.com/video/ef26_zrwHfc/w-d-xo.html&ab_channel=ThePapa1947
Thanks for watchiing,
Gary
You make it look so easy. Very nice. Merry Christmas
Thank you Laura and Merry Christmas,
Gary
Outstanding! 👍👍
Thanks Gary for your clear and didactic explanation about emerging bowls,It's always a great pleasure to look at your videos from my French village. Have a nice Christmas. 🍾😄🍷
Thank you very much Jean-Louis and Merry Christmas to you.
Gary
Hi Gary, I hope you are well, I just wanted to say that I think you are a really clever guy, anyway take care and stay safe, I hope you and your family have a really nice Christmas and a really truly wonderful new year x
Thank you very much Sue. And a very Merry Christmas to you as well.
Gary
Nice work! Thanks for sharing it!
Thank you very much and thanks for watching,
Gary
Well done. With regards to the size of the gouge, I believe if it’s made in Europe, the measure the inside of the flute and if it’s made in the USA, it’s measured on the outside. Stay warm! -11° F in east central Minnesota this morning
Thank you very much Greg. Yes that is the way the gouges are referred to. If I buy gouges made in England I still go by the outside diameter. But that is just me.
You have me with the -11. It was a blistering 20 degrees this morning LOL.
Take care,
Gary
That’s pretty slick. Another project I will have to do. That’s for sharing, Gary!!!
Thank you John. I think it is a good easy way to start on these emerging bowls but I do not seem to take the easy way. I will say I enjoyed trying it out like this.
Gary
Hi Gary, Definitely keeping this video for when I give it a go.
Both look fantastic but the raised lip wins it for me.
Take care my friend.
Hwyl, Huw
Thank you Huw! I added the non rasied one just to show there is a little easier way to do it. Actually a lot easer to not mess up if you have never done one.
Hwyl,
Gary
Excellent turning Mr. Gary. Merry Christmas to you and your family God bless.
Thank you very much Donald and may God Bless you with a very Merry Christmas.
Gary
very nice Gary.
Thank you very much David.
Take care,
Gary
Good Christmas Eve Evening, Gary.
I love this project and remembered the one you turned in and earlier video. Now it's on my list to turn. All the best to you in this coming New Year.
Merry Christmas!
Hi Ray, happy you liked this one as well as the others.
Wishing you a very Merry Christmas my friend,
Gary
Gary, I have yet to make one of these so thanks for the "how to" and Merry Christmas!
Thank you very much Josh and all the best for you and yours this holiday season.
Gary
Very nice, thanks Gary.
Thank you Andrew and thanks for watching,
Gary
Salut Gary oui c’est un processus assez compliqué mais qui a rendu superbe bravo Gary 👍👏
Salut Denis,
Cela a l'air compliqué mais ce n'est vraiment pas si difficile à faire.
Prenez soin de vous,
Gary
@@ThePapa1947 oui Gary je me prépare pour l’achat d’une nouvelle machine on verra , mais j’ai un peu peur de pas être à la hauteur on verra bien
Very cool! I learn lots from you and Phil@ shady acres! Thank you!
Thank you very much Peggy. I think we all learn a lot from Phil.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Awesome piece Gary always a pleasure watching merry Christmas happy New Year to you friend 🕊️🎄🙏⛄
Thank you Anthony I appreciate you watching.
Merry Christmas t you as well.
Take care,
Gary
Great tutorial!
Thank you Erik!
Those are a pair of cute emerging bowls and very well explained on how it is done, well done and thanks!
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!
Cheers Al
Thank you Al and a Merry Christmas to you as well.
Gary
good job gary
Thank you Don and thanks for watching.
Gary
HI gary u made that look so easy and I bet I can do one now. thank u. happy Christmas.
Thank you very much Manjit, I am sure you can.
Merry Christmas my friend,
Gary
Great idea Gary, anxious to try that! Very nice, merry Christmas to you and yours.
Thank you very much. It is fun to do and pretty easy this way.
Merry Christmas to you and yours as well.
Gary
Well you keep bringing back memories for me. I made two similair nut bowls to this for a Irish friend some twenty years ago - except it had a small indentation on the flat surface to place a nut to be broken by a small mallet. Very similar technique except I used a paper joint instead of hot glue to adhere the piece to the wooden face plate. A delight to see you go through the motions!
Thank you very much Anthony! I first used paper joints in 1960 or 61 in grade school shop class. Somewhere I think I still have the nut bowl I made my mother using that method.
Thanks for watching and the memories,
Gary
Well i reckon i can manage one of those after the festive and it warms up a bit. great vid everything i was thinking Phil has put so here's wishing you and yours a Merry Christmas and all the best from Lincolnshire UK
Thanks so much Gary and a very Merry Christmas to you as well my friend,
Gary
See, Laverna, I told you he’s not just a pretty face. 😂😂😂 Another great job, Gary! One of these days I have to try one of those myself. With instruction like this, I just might be able to accomplish it. Thanks for the guidance, my friend. Merry Christmas to you and your bride! 🎄🎄🎄
Take care,
…..Gord
Thank you very much Gord. I may have to send this link to Laverna LOL.
I am pretty sure you could handle this with no problems...and then you would have 2 nice little Smartie bowls!
Merry Christmas to you and your bride as well.
Stay warm,
Gary
I absolutely love those bowls. When I have a go myself I’ll watch your video again and it will improve your ratings 😊. Have as Merry a Christmas with your family as I am having with mine 🌞
Thank you Ray. Much easier way to start with making these.
We have the family coming over tomorrow and looking forward to it.
Merry Christmas my friend,
Gary
Dear Garry , Thanks for another excellent video . Merry Christmas and all the best for 23 . Al
Thanks so much Al and a very Merry Christmas to you as well.
Gary
Thank You Gary... NICE TURNING (i do like different! .. but is it getting harder & harder to think up something new???)
THAT is truly a unique little cutie !! HAPPY HOLIDAYS GARY!!!!! Until next time.... TM
Thanks so much TM. This is not basics for sure but a very basic way to try it compared to a crooked old branch LOL.
Merry Christmas my friend,
Gary
This way of doing it looks so much easier then the first one you did . Love them . MERRY CHRISTMAS
Thank you Jon and it is. Merry Christmas my friend,
Gary
Love it wao nice
Thank you and thanks for watching,
Gary
Nicely done and demonstrated, Gary. My shop is put to bed for a week, or so (might sneak down on Boxing Day for awhile) but I'm happy to add this to my list of ideas for the new year. I've got a crotch piece I'm wondering if it could be emerging. I'll have to doodle a bit a figure out the method. I might try ripping it with a hand saw, or I may turn away the top half. I 'll have to think on it or ask a friend to rip it for me. You've got my wheels turning, that's certain.
Thanks for a fantastic year of videos. Your video, audio, narration, edits, are all so good and consistent. Well don and Merry Christmas, happy holiday & happy New Year!
Thanks so much Jay. Looking forward to hearing how that crotch piece goes.
Merry Christmas to you and yours as well.
Gary
Now that's neat Gary. I was thinking; A bigger block of wood to start, make the bowl deeper, then cut the flat part into a handle, some way, and you have a cup.
Merry Christmas. ;-)
Thank you Robert! Good idea and if you want to get it real fancy you could mount it end to end again and turn the handle on it. Now that you have me thinking about it that would be an easy thing to do.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
nice job
Thank you Delbert!
Very good demo Gary, both came out lookin nice, but your first one you did out of that beautiful Mimosa is gorgeous. Thanks again. Best wishes for you and yours for a very wonderful Christmas and a fantastic New Year. Cheers, Tom
Thank you Tom, Yes the Mimosa bowl has beautiful grain. I have the other half and saved the fixture to hold it for a long time. I think I will need t finish turning it even though most of the bark fell off. It has a cool pattern under the bark so I will put it on the list to finish it.
Merry Christmas to you and yours as well.
Gary
Thank you Gary for making another cool video and making it look so easy. I was out trying to make a Phil-like bark on oak bowl last night. Had the wood burner and my antique torpedo heater going. Around 2 degrees and 30mph wind in Pa. “It’s beginning to look a lot like…” Merry Christmas! Cya next Year
Thank you Barry. Well much colder where you are at but for us 20 degrees is pretty cold. Bathing suit weather right now at 32 degrees LOL.
Merry Christmas to you my friend,
Gary
Merry Christmas Gary
Thank you Chris and a very Merry Christmas to you as well.
Gary
As always beautiful work brother👍🏽I wanna do one of those 🤙🏽. merry Christmas and happy new year 🎉 to you and your family, my friend 👍🏽
Thanks so much Habeeb and Merry Christmas to you and yours.
Gary
Hey Gary, That is a very pretty little bowl. Cute little rascal really. I am sure I am wrong but I just dont see that as an "emerging" bowl. It is more of a bowl with a plate on the side. To me an emerging bowl would be an end grain bowl growing from a limb and leaving the bark on the lower portion of the limb with only part of the outside of the bowl exposed. I have not made one of those yet but I did make an emerging goblet, again an end grain turn with the goblet and some stem growing from the branch. It was looking great but there was a small spot on the stem that I wanted to fix (should have used sandpaper and I learned that for the future) and I ended up busting the stem and sadly ruining the the piece. That is ok though we learn as we go I am still learning from folks like you. Yall have a Merry Christmas. :)
Thank you Allyn. All but this one I have done from a branch. This was a piece of end grain wood as well but it had no bark. I do prefer the actual branch method but for someone trying it for the first time this is a good way to go.
I did an emerging bottle from a branch a few years ago. It even has a branch coming out of the side.
Thanks for watching and Merry Christmas,
Gary
@@ThePapa1947 oh wow a branch coming out the side would look amazing. Thanks again for the wonderful video. Merry Christmas yall.
Looks great . What would a round over look like on the edges of the block ? Again Merry Christmas .
Thanks Mike, I think a round over on those edges would look good. On the others I have done on a limb I like them slightly dubbed over.
Want it to look like a slice of a tree.
Merry Christmas,
Gary
Slick!
Thank you Stuart!
That's so cool.
Thank you very much.
You've simplified the confusing again, as usual. I've seen this demonstrated some years back at a "Turnfest" symposium in AUS, took extensive notes, to no avail and stayed well away from the challenge thereafter. I think you have reignited my interest in a fun project.
It's 0715 on Christmas Eve here, with a temp of 73 degrees F and expected 78 max. So Santa is wearing a T shirt and shorts with bare feet and looking for a shady spot to spend the lead up to a busy night.
Merry Christmas to you and your family
Thank you Des, happy it helped. I used a simple block just to make it easy to show how simple this is. I do like making them from a branch which I did recently with a piece of Apple. But more steps in mounting them on the face plate.
Now I really feel cold....LOL But it was 20 degrees this morning but has warmed up to 23.
Merry Christmas to you and yours,
Gary
MERCI👍
Thank you very much!
What is the largest piece you have done with this style? My Laguna is a 20x42. Thinking about trying it on a larger scale.
This it the largest I have done. th-cam.com/video/5CuaAZ9PenM/w-d-xo.html&ab_channel=ThePapa1947
You could do one to the max of your lathe but counter balance will be very important.
At work I turned very large patterns(much larger than 20") that were way out of balance and adding some counter weight really helped.
Thanks for watching,
Gary
Gary. Do you have the link for the first emerging bowl? Merry Christmas Gary
Merry Christmas Mark th-cam.com/video/5CuaAZ9PenM/w-d-xo.html&ab_channel=ThePapa1947
Cute💙💙💙💙
Thank you Jylssa!
A very cool video Gary. Thank you for that! Using that method, is it possible to do a larger bowl like 4 or 5 inch diameter? I was thinking maybe it would get too out of balance? I will definitely try something along those lines.
All the best Gary. Cheers, Rick
Thank you Rick. If you increased the size in evenly from this one it would be pretty much the same. Only differences would be the extra mass. But easy enough to add counter balance pieces on a wooden face plate. I would have to look back on the first one I did from a branch but I am sure I did do just that.
Best of luck,
Gary
@@ThePapa1947 thanks. I’ll take a look at that one as well!
Merry christmas to you and your wife. The emerging bowel was a great lesson and you mention you like challenge yourself. How about trip point emerging bowel?
Can't spell and fat fingers. I meant a two-point bowl.
Thank you Karl. So like a bowl on each end? I have thought about that. Or maybe on one end and a side. That might be easier.
Well on second thought...more like a challenge.
Merry Christmas,
Gary
I have the same problem as well as not knowing how to spell LOL
Re gouge size - Generally the Brits go by the flute size, the Yanks go by the shank size. You might think of it as two countries divided by a common language. (paraphrasing G.B. Shaw)
Thank you Bob, yes they do and I have a hard time calling the Sorby tools by their flute size when I buy them localy here next to others that measure the other way. I think I find it hard and silly to use two tools the same size and go back and forth with what they are called. I think I will stick with the Yank sizing method LOL.
Take care,
Gary
1st
Good morning Huw!
You are definitely guilty of making it look and sound easy!
Guilty as charged! LOL
Thanks for watching,
Gary