It certainly gives another dimension to a piece of wood that does not have markings or colouring. Not sure where this idea originated but it has opened a whole new world in woodturning. Thanks again Jim. Safe and happy turnings. David.
As I far as I know I was the first to do this process with Milliput, it is something I have been doing for a while. Milliput themselves had never heard of their products being used this way. A lot of people have now started using it and a lot of videos have recently appeared on TH-cam featuring the technique. It is very versatile and the variations are endless. I'm glad you like it. Cheers, Jim
Thanks Daniel, I really appreciate you taking the time to watch and comment. I'm glad you liked the bowl, I enjoyed turning it. More videos soon, all the best, Jim
Thanks sooo much for this video Jim! I really enjoyed all your videos using Milliput Expoxy. I, like Alan, see a 'Greek' influence in your turning/inlay and like it very much. Again, THANKS for such a wonderful idea and we all appreciate your efforts and expertise! Safe turning to you always!
Wonderfully well made video, very clear and instructional, comprehensive detail on every aspect of the process. Excellent still photos of your work at the end, it's really beautiful to behold. Thank you.
Thank you Kevin. I really appreciate your very kind words. I am gradually trying to improve my videos, I have included much more commentary in my latest videos. All the best, Jim
I've just finished watching all your inlay videos, and I think this a great idea! You've done some very nice patterns, and I'm looking forward to more. Thanks for sharing this. Clyde
Jim, it was good to meet you at UKIWS today. The bowl looks lovely on you tube, but it doesn't do it justice - in real life it was utterly stunning. Thanks - now I need to go any buy some milliput ;-) !
Thanks Jamie. It was great to meet up. Try the Milliput it is great to use. Check out my first Milliput videos as there is more info about the process on those. All the best, Jim
Hi Jim That is a beautifull bowl I used to use milliput for model making and still have some somewhere I will definitly give it a go on a bowl Thanks for sharing a great idea All the best !!............Andy.
Milliput is great stuff, I've used it for years for creative things and repairing things, thanks for commenting. Let it set well before turning it, it feels set after 3 hours but actually gets much harder if left overnight. All the best, Jim
I absolutely adore that pattern you did with the Milliput! And the inside of the bowl, it's so nice to look at! I need more bowls like that in my life. You've got another subscriber from me!
Thanks Geof, I really enjoyed turning this piece, I'm very pleased you like it. I have another bowl video that I will be posting in the next couple of days, using a different technique. All the best, Jim
Jim, Hello from Baltimore, MD USA. Absolutely amazing. I've never seen this technique before. I love the different designs you've "invented". Going to order some from Amazon tonight.
Thanks John, I'm very pleased you like it. Great results can be achieved once you get used to how Milliput handles. Some of my earlier videos give a bit more info on mixing etc. All the best, Jim
Thanks Paul, it is well worth trying and gives very satisfying results, mix it thoroughly and give it lots of time to set before finishing. It feels hard after 4-5 hours but it actually continues to harden after this and is best left overnight. All the best, Jim.
Thanks Mike, I'm very pleased you like it. I have not turned a finial in Milliput yet, I will have to leave it fairly chunky or I will turn away all the pattern. Cheers, Jim.
Hi Jim, I am a subscriber to Mike Waldt and now I'm a subscriber to you. I hope to see much more of your innovative work here in Arizona. I have been looking for some one that makes a segmented bowl without the segments. Keep up the good work! Bill
Hi Jim That,s one beautiful bowl. I have never used milliput but I will be trying that out, thanks for the tips on how to let it harden. rely like what I see and want to see more, I have subscribed to your channel. Best Wishes Alan.
Thanks Alan for subscribing and for taking the time to watch and comment. I'm glad you like the videos, I've got another one coming out this week hopefully, showing a method of colouring Milliput and then using it in a different way. All the best , Jim
That is amazing - really good. And I've never seen anyone using Milliput as an inlay - very clever idea. I would imagine you are going to be copied but never mind. Going to watch your other vids now. Thank you.
That's a great technique but I have to say as nice as your inlay looks it's easy to miss what a nice form you got on that bowl. Well done! Steve Krumanaker
That came out incredibly beautiful! Love the idea of the putty. I was also thinking as I watched you mix and blend the putty that I could probably use polymer clay for that as well. The temps I bake polymer clay at don't hurt wood as I have baked plenty of things on or with wood in the past. - Heidi
I think you could do much more intricate designs with polymer clay because it is much easier to handle, but it does not stick so well and any movement in the wood whilst baking would result in gaps appearing. Try it with a kiln dried blank and see what happens, it could be good, I know it sands and polishes OK. All the best,Jim.
Jimson's Stuff Yes I could but I would have to practice making canes :) I do well with a mokume gane pattern though and could do some neat things with that. :) As for the sticking I would hope that adding liquid clay between the wood and clay would help. It usually does help in other projects with creating a strong bond between clay and other materials or with baked clay. I always keep some on hand. :)
I’m assuming you used sycamore again. It’s a fairly nice, somewhat grainless wood which I’m sure allows your milliput designs stand out. You are very creative with the milliput. I like this turning a great deal.
Excelente trabajo 👏👏 Una pregunta, esa pasta de 3 colones es para pegar halgo en específico , Soy de Costa Rica y quisiera saber como hacer algo parecido,, Gracias.
Thanks Peter, glad you liked the video. I love Streets in Brock ! Shops like that are unfortunately a dying breed , the stock they carry is amazing. Black Milliput is often the harder one to find in shops. Are you a member of any Woodturning clubs ? All the best, Jim
That's really nice, mate. You do some gorgeous work. I'd love to be able to do stuff like this this but I just don't have access to the tools and space. :(... so I'll just live vicariously through you, lol. Keep it up. EDIT.. just been reading some of the comments.. It's very civil of you to take the time to answer in the different languages, I don't see enough of that kind of care.
Thanks, glad you liked it, I was thinking while filming the summary what it reminded me of but my mind went blank, I think it does look a bit Greek. Cheers, Jim.
Thank you Adrian, it is well worth trying Milliput, the creative possibilities are limitless. Mix it thoroughly and give it plenty of time to set. All the best, Jim
Jim, can you mix the colors to create variations or are you limited to the set colors. I am trying to work out what colors would work well with purple heart. I was going to put an ash band around it but you have opened my eyes to milliput
Thanks Ken, I'm glad I've inspired you to try it. It is sticky stuff but turns well once thoroughly set and you can get a great finish on it. All the best, Jim
Thank you very much Kevin. I use Sycamore because it is relatively cheap and readily available but also because it does not tend to have very interesting grain and lends itself well to embellishment. With more fancy woods I would rather leave the wood to speak for itself. Cheers Jim
Thanks , I'm glad I've inspired you. Yes all my idea, I've not found any previous reference to it although I have seen a few similar since. Cheers, Jim
Hi Jim - another amazing bowl. I really like this design, looking forward to the lid/finial. I just received this month's edition of Woodturning Magazine and can you believe there is an article on using modeling clay as an insert. It is a different brand and method but similar process.
I'm glad you like the bowl. I have not seen the latest copy of Woodturning yet. The editor is meant to be calling me about my work, perhaps they are not so interested now! All the best, Jim.
Well I think your technique is much better. The article in the mag requires baking your wood which seems like a recipe for shrinkage and cracking....anyway keep up the great work!
+Simon Leach I will try and get a copy of the mag later in the week. It sounds like they are using polymer clay, I looked into this and have had people ask me about it but I totally agree with you, it is highly likely to move and crack, polymer clay does not stick so well either. Cheers, Jim
I'm very glad you like it. The putty is multipurpose, it sticks well and sets very hard, not really designed for automotive work. The best thing is to follow the link in the description to the Milliput website, there is loads of info on there. Give it a try, it's great to use. I've got lots more videos planned. All the best, Jim.
Here I thought I was the only one who inlays weird materials in odd ways into turnings... ;) Never heard of Milliput before - something else to play with!
It's great to experiment. The man who never made a mistake , never made anything ! Give Milliput a try, mix it thoroughly and it is best left overnight to set completely. All the best, Jim
I really love the bowl you made - truly lovely stuff! Just a bit of (hopefully) constructive criticism - I came to you from Peter Brown, and I think you might do well to skip some of the process (as he does). I loved the process, but I had to watch it at 9x normal speed! I usually watch things at 2x though, so maybe I'm just a tad batty ;-) All the best mate, and keep it up! JL
Thanks Jake, I am still fairly new to the video making thing, I have tried to skinny my later videos down a bit. It is difficult to get a balance, some people want to see the whole process, particularly when I am doing the more complex bits. I will work on it. Cheers, Jim
That's great, I'm glad you managed to find some. Mix it thoroughly , you have plenty of working time, and it is best left overnight as it will get even harder and give a better finish. All the best, Jim.
yeh I thought you were a Carp fisherman by the ccmoore T-shirt I've been carping since the 80s but living in Sussex there's not many decent Carp lakes so I spend most of my time fishing in the Cotswolds £90 a year so you can't beat that around here at £35 per 24hrs tight lines mate
I use the Simon Hope pro sander which is available from several U.K. Retailers or direct from his website hopewoodturning. There are other similar designs from Robert Sorby and Axminster tools. They are self powered, running on a bearing and the spin of the wood makes them spin. Cheers, Jim.
LOL...uh, Jim you may want to change your closed caption at 0:38...you sound as if you are saying you were a tool while on the bench..lol. I know that's not what you meant.
It certainly gives another dimension to a piece of wood that does not have markings or colouring. Not sure where this idea originated but it has opened a whole new world in woodturning. Thanks again Jim. Safe and happy turnings. David.
As I far as I know I was the first to do this process with Milliput, it is something I have been doing for a while. Milliput themselves had never heard of their products being used this way. A lot of people have now started using it and a lot of videos have recently appeared on TH-cam featuring the technique. It is very versatile and the variations are endless. I'm glad you like it. Cheers, Jim
Hi Jim! Excellent! Beautiful looking enclosed bowl! Very nice pattern! Cheers! Daniel
Thanks Daniel, I really appreciate you taking the time to watch and comment. I'm glad you liked the bowl, I enjoyed turning it. More videos soon, all the best, Jim
Hi Jim,
Brilliant, brilliant idea's, brilliant woodturning, brilliant finish, brilliant video's...... 👍👍👍👍👍 Brilliantly executed.
Very pleased you like it Andy. Thanks for your kind words. Cheers, Jim
you continue to amaze me with you beautiful work... I really enjoy spending my evenings watching you working
Thank you very much Keith, I'm very pleased you like what I do. I will hopefully get to the post office on Monday! Cheers, Jim.
Thanks sooo much for this video Jim! I really enjoyed all your videos using Milliput Expoxy. I, like Alan, see a 'Greek' influence in your turning/inlay and like it very much. Again, THANKS for such a wonderful idea and we all appreciate your efforts and expertise! Safe turning to you always!
Thanks so much for your kind words, more videos soon ! All the best, Jim
Wow I really like the end result, the quality of the finishing is awesome and the bowl looks great!
Thank you so much, I'm really pleased you like it, thanks for taking the time to watch and comment. All the best, Jim
Wonderfully well made video, very clear and instructional, comprehensive detail on every aspect of the process. Excellent still photos of your work at the end, it's really beautiful to behold. Thank you.
Thank you Kevin. I really appreciate your very kind words. I am gradually trying to improve my videos, I have included much more commentary in my latest videos. All the best, Jim
I've just finished watching all your inlay videos, and I think this a great idea! You've done some very nice patterns, and I'm looking forward to more. Thanks for sharing this. Clyde
Thanks for taking the time to watch them all and commenting, I've got quite a few videos planned. All the best, Jim.
Jim, it was good to meet you at UKIWS today. The bowl looks lovely on you tube, but it doesn't do it justice - in real life it was utterly stunning. Thanks - now I need to go any buy some milliput ;-) !
Thanks Phil. I'm really pleased you liked the bowl. It was great to meet up at UKIWS, I thoroughly enjoyed the whole day. Cheers, Jim.
Your work is stunning! I absolutely love your pieces, all that I've seen thus far, and enjoy watching the process of making them.
Thanks Amanda, I'm glad you like my work. Cheers, Jim
Inspirational. I'm definitely going to try this out. Great to see you at UKIWS.
Thanks Jamie. It was great to meet up. Try the Milliput it is great to use. Check out my first Milliput videos as there is more info about the process on those. All the best, Jim
That was quite relaxing to watch ! Beautiful piece Jimson. I'm actually inspired to take this up as a hobby!!
Thanks I'm glad you liked it, give it a try, it is a very satisfying hobby. All the best, Jim
Wow Jim another one of your fantastic bowls, the wood color is awesome. The pattern you made in it is stunning.
Thank you very much Kobie, one of my favourite patterns.
Cheers
Jim
Hi Jim
That is a beautifull bowl
I used to use milliput for model making and still have some somewhere
I will definitly give it a go on a bowl
Thanks for sharing a great idea
All the best !!............Andy.
Milliput is great stuff, I've used it for years for creative things and repairing things, thanks for commenting. Let it set well before turning it, it feels set after 3 hours but actually gets much harder if left overnight. All the best, Jim
That is awesome. The semi hollow formed bowl is nice as is, with the decoration its amazing!
Thanks I really appreciate your comments, I was really pleased with how it turned out. All the best,Jim.
I absolutely adore that pattern you did with the Milliput! And the inside of the bowl, it's so nice to look at! I need more bowls like that in my life. You've got another subscriber from me!
Thanks for subscribing. I really appreciate you taking the time to watch my videos. Thanks, Jim
Another fantastic bowl I love the inlay, it really looks the business and makes an interesting bowl great
Thanks John, this bowl is a family favourite! Cheers, Jim
Lovely bowl Jim. It reminds me of T Bone Steaks. Very Beautiful. Thanks for sharing
Thank you very much Beverley. Cheers, Jim
Jim, nice work and unique ideas, enjoy your videos!
Thank you very much David. Cheers, Jim
Magnificent piece Jim, absolutely stunning effect.
Geof Harris
Thanks Geof, I really enjoyed turning this piece, I'm very pleased you like it. I have another bowl video that I will be posting in the next couple of days, using a different technique. All the best, Jim
It looks kinda like you made hieroglyphs in there! Really like the look! Thanks for bringing us along.
Thanks again Rick, this bowl is another family favourite. A few people have said it looks a bit Greek or ceramic. Cheers, Jim
Jim, Hello from Baltimore, MD USA. Absolutely amazing. I've never seen this technique before. I love the different designs you've "invented". Going to order some from Amazon tonight.
Thanks John, I'm very pleased you like it. Great results can be achieved once you get used to how Milliput handles. Some of my earlier videos give a bit more info on mixing etc. All the best, Jim
Another nice job Jim. I've ordered some to spice up my projects.. Thanks.
Thanks Paul, it is well worth trying and gives very satisfying results, mix it thoroughly and give it lots of time to set before finishing. It feels hard after 4-5 hours but it actually continues to harden after this and is best left overnight. All the best, Jim.
Nice job Jim looks great and thanks for sharing
Many thanks Mike, glad you liked it. All the best, Jim
That is an outstanding idea with excellent results
Thanks Jim, glad you like it. All the best, Jim
Beautiful result! Well done!
Thank you very much Dave, glad you like it.
Cheers
Jim
Absolutely beautiful. Hope you will make more videos of your works.
From a Canadian friend.
Thanks Michel, I really appreciate you taking the time to comment, more videos coming soon. All the best, Jim
Wow Jimson, that is a beautiful piece. I just subscribed
Many thanks and thanks for subscribing. All the best, Jim.
hello, good job, very amazing the past mixed which give interessant drawing Alain France
Thank you very much Alain
Cheers
Jim
Cool idea. I will be watching more of your videos.
Thanks, I'm really glad you enjoyed it, more videos soon. All the best,Jim
That is one beautiful looking bowl Jim, and the finial will just top it off, if you excuse the pun ;)
Take care
Mike
Thanks Mike, I'm very pleased you like it. I have not turned a finial in Milliput yet, I will have to leave it fairly chunky or I will turn away all the pattern. Cheers, Jim.
very nice piece I'll with have to get some milliput look forward to your next project
Thanks from a fellow carp fisherman, ( the thumbnail picture was a bit small to see clearly but it looked like a carp ). Cheers, Jim
Just looked at your channel page, bigger picture, nice carp ! Cheers, Jim
You do some amazing work! Thanks for sharing your work!!
Thanks, I really appreciate you taking the time to watch and comment. More videos coming soon. All the best, Jim
Nice work. Beautiful piece!
Thank you very much Tom. I really appreciate you taking the time to watch and comment. All the best, Jim
Hi Jim, I am a subscriber to Mike Waldt and now I'm a subscriber to you. I hope to see much more of your innovative work here in Arizona. I have been looking for some one that makes a segmented bowl without the segments. Keep up the good work!
Bill
Thanks for subscribing Bill, I'm glad you like my work. More videos soon. All the best, Jim
Hi Jim That,s one beautiful bowl. I have never used milliput but I will be trying that out, thanks for the tips on how to let it harden. rely like what I see and want to see more, I have subscribed to your channel.
Best Wishes Alan.
Thanks Alan for subscribing and for taking the time to watch and comment. I'm glad you like the videos, I've got another one coming out this week hopefully, showing a method of colouring Milliput and then using it in a different way. All the best , Jim
That is amazing - really good. And I've never seen anyone using Milliput as an inlay - very clever idea. I would imagine you are going to be copied but never mind. Going to watch your other vids now. Thank you.
Thank you very much. I have done a playlist of my Milliput videos. Many thanks for watching
Cheers
Jim
Hi Jim,the bowl looks great, just subscribed after watching Mike.
Cheers Harry
Thanks for watching and subscribing, glad you like them, all the best, Jim
Great idea..really stunning bowl!
Thanks for taking the time to watch and comment, glad you like it, all the best, Jim
That's a great technique but I have to say as nice as your inlay looks it's easy to miss what a nice form you got on that bowl. Well done!
Steve Krumanaker
Thanks, I really value your opinion, I enjoyed turning this piece a lot. All the best, Jim
Fantastic piece of work. Going to give this a go.
Give it a try, it gives really satisfying results with endless variations possible, thanks for watching and commenting, all the best, Jim.
Very cool approach. Love the result.
Many thanks, you never know quite how it is going to turn out until the end. All the best, Jim.
Love Your creativity. Thanks for sharing.
Thank you very much William , I really appreciate you taking the time to watch and comment. Cheers, Jim
Looks amazing. Nice work.
Many thanks Stokie Joe, glad you like it. Cheers, Jim
Great process!really ejoyed this. Great way to embelish the piece. Thank you for sharing!
Thanks, give it a try, it gives great results. All the best,Jim.
That came out incredibly beautiful! Love the idea of the putty. I was also thinking as I watched you mix and blend the putty that I could probably use polymer clay for that as well. The temps I bake polymer clay at don't hurt wood as I have baked plenty of things on or with wood in the past. - Heidi
I think you could do much more intricate designs with polymer clay because it is much easier to handle, but it does not stick so well and any movement in the wood whilst baking would result in gaps appearing. Try it with a kiln dried blank and see what happens, it could be good, I know it sands and polishes OK. All the best,Jim.
Jimson's Stuff Yes I could but I would have to practice making canes :) I do well with a mokume gane pattern though and could do some neat things with that. :)
As for the sticking I would hope that adding liquid clay between the wood and clay would help. It usually does help in other projects with creating a strong bond between clay and other materials or with baked clay. I always keep some on hand. :)
Outstanding piece!
Thank you very much
Cheers
Jim
That is stunning! Thanks for the video!
Thank you Tom, glad you like it. Cheers, Jim
Great project enjoyed watching. I have some milliput myself but have had it for sometime what is the shelf life.
Thank you. No absolute shelf life but best used fresh, it gradually hardens in time. Best stored cool.
I’m assuming you used sycamore again. It’s a fairly nice, somewhat grainless wood which I’m sure allows your milliput designs stand out. You are very creative with the milliput. I like this turning a great deal.
Thanks again, glad you like it. Sycamore is ideal for Inlay work because it is a bit bland on its own.
Cheers
Jim
Excelente trabajo 👏👏
Una pregunta, esa pasta de 3 colones es para pegar halgo en específico ,
Soy de Costa Rica y quisiera saber como hacer algo parecido,,
Gracias.
Many thanks for watching. The putty is called Milliput, it is an epoxy putty.
Beautiful piece. I'll try and source the Milliput product in Canada and give it a try.
Glad you liked it ! Give it a try, it gives great results, once you get used to the way it handles. All the best, Jim
Another inspirational vid. Thanks Jim. Incidentally, I'm Lymington too, and the hardware store in Brock stocks Milliput but haven't got black. Peter
Thanks Peter, glad you liked the video. I love Streets in Brock ! Shops like that are unfortunately a dying breed , the stock they carry is amazing. Black Milliput is often the harder one to find in shops. Are you a member of any Woodturning clubs ? All the best, Jim
That's really nice, mate. You do some gorgeous work.
I'd love to be able to do stuff like this this but I just don't have access to the tools and space. :(... so I'll just live vicariously through you, lol.
Keep it up.
EDIT.. just been reading some of the comments.. It's very civil of you to take the time to answer in the different languages, I don't see enough of that kind of care.
Thanks Bob, I'm very pleased you like what I do. More videos coming soon.
Cheers, Jim
Very good presentation. Thank you for sharing. Fred
Thank you very much Fred. Cheers, Jim
Just beautiful. It has a hint of Classical Greek style about it.
Thanks, glad you liked it, I was thinking while filming the summary what it reminded me of but my mind went blank, I think it does look a bit Greek. Cheers, Jim.
That looks great!
Thank you very much, one of my personal favourites. Cheers, Jim
It kind of has a greek key look to it! Looks really neat
Thank you very much Nicholas, yes it does look Greek.
Cheers
Jim
Excellent...! Beautiful piece...
Cheers...
Thank you very much, glad you like it. Cheers, Jim
enjoyed looking at your work cannot what to try it out thxs adrian
Thank you Adrian, it is well worth trying Milliput, the creative possibilities are limitless. Mix it thoroughly and give it plenty of time to set. All the best, Jim
Fantastic idea! Thanks for sharing.
Thanks, lots of variations possible with this putty. All the best, Jim
Jim, can you mix the colors to create variations or are you limited to the set colors. I am trying to work out what colors would work well with purple heart. I was going to put an ash band around it but you have opened my eyes to milliput
Many thanks for watching Mark. it is possible to stain white Milliput but it is a messy process and best stick to the manufactured colours.
Really cool project thanks for the vid!
I'm really pleased you like it, I have lots more projects planned when I get the time. Thanks, Jim
This is a really cool bowl! It turned out very nice. I'm not familiar with working with sycamore. Is it a soft wood?
Thank you Jennifer, Sycamore is like Maple, technically a hardwood but relatively easy to work.
Cheers
Jim
Great stuff. I am going to try this, thanks for the inspiration.
Thanks Ken, I'm glad I've inspired you to try it. It is sticky stuff but turns well once thoroughly set and you can get a great finish on it. All the best, Jim
JIMSON`S ...MUY BELLO TU TRABAJO Y EL ACABADO ELEGANTE, ME GUSTO MUCHO.
MIS SALADOS DESDE ESCANDINAVIA.
ALBERTO
Muchas gracias Alberto
Hi looks great, just subscribed after watching Mike
Thanks for watching and subscribing, I've got quite a few videos planned, cheers, Jim
Excelente trabajo sr mui original un saludo.
Thank you, more videos coming soon. All the best, Jim
Great and thanks for the ability to give it a try and I liked and subscribed
I'm really pleased you like it, and thanks for taking the time to watch, comment and subscribe. All the best, Jim
Jim, Once again I love the bowl. I notice you use a lot of sycamore, is there any reason why other than it comes out beautiful when turned.
~Kevin
Thank you very much Kevin. I use Sycamore because it is relatively cheap and readily available but also because it does not tend to have very interesting grain and lends itself well to embellishment. With more fancy woods I would rather leave the wood to speak for itself.
Cheers
Jim
Beautiful!
Thank you very much Tom.
Cheers
Jim
Really nice project
Thanks, I'm glad you liked it, and thanks for taking the time to watch and comment. Cheers, Jim.
that turned out superbly. i'll definitely be trying the milliput. And great idea slicing it up. Was that your idea?
Thanks , I'm glad I've inspired you. Yes all my idea, I've not found any previous reference to it although I have seen a few similar since. Cheers, Jim
Love it Jim
David
Thank you very much David. Cheers, Jim
Hi Jim - another amazing bowl. I really like this design, looking forward to the lid/finial. I just received this month's edition of Woodturning Magazine and can you believe there is an article on using modeling clay as an insert. It is a different brand and method but similar process.
I'm glad you like the bowl. I have not seen the latest copy of Woodturning yet. The editor is meant to be calling me about my work, perhaps they are not so interested now! All the best, Jim.
Well I think your technique is much better. The article in the mag requires baking your wood which seems like a recipe for shrinkage and cracking....anyway keep up the great work!
+Simon Leach I will try and get a copy of the mag later in the week. It sounds like they are using polymer clay, I looked into this and have had people ask me about it but I totally agree with you, it is highly likely to move and crack, polymer clay does not stick so well either. Cheers, Jim
I followed Mike's suggestion to your channel this blows me away never heard of this technique this is super the putty is an auto body filler or ?????
I'm very glad you like it. The putty is multipurpose, it sticks well and sets very hard, not really designed for automotive work. The best thing is to follow the link in the description to the Milliput website, there is loads of info on there. Give it a try, it's great to use. I've got lots more videos planned. All the best, Jim.
love it really nice piece.
Thank you Lee. Glad you like it. All the best, Jim
simply beautiful.
Thank you James, much appreciated. Cheers, Jim
Nice bowl mate
Thanks, glad you like it. All the best, Jim
Nice bowl!!!
Thank you very much Jack. Cheers, Jim
Here I thought I was the only one who inlays weird materials in odd ways into turnings... ;)
Never heard of Milliput before - something else to play with!
It's great to experiment. The man who never made a mistake , never made anything ! Give Milliput a try, mix it thoroughly and it is best left overnight to set completely. All the best, Jim
Hallo Jim That is a Beautiful bowl gr vorm holland
Thanks for your kind words, all the best, Jim
I really love the bowl you made - truly lovely stuff!
Just a bit of (hopefully) constructive criticism - I came to you from Peter Brown, and I think you might do well to skip some of the process (as he does).
I loved the process, but I had to watch it at 9x normal speed! I usually watch things at 2x though, so maybe I'm just a tad batty ;-)
All the best mate, and keep it up!
JL
Thanks Jake, I am still fairly new to the video making thing, I have tried to skinny my later videos down a bit. It is difficult to get a balance, some people want to see the whole process, particularly when I am doing the more complex bits. I will work on it. Cheers, Jim
Love your Milliput bowls. You've inspired me to do one. There's a video on my TH-cam feed about it. I'd appreciate your critique. 🙂
Thank you very much, I took a look at your video, great job.
Cheers
Jim
@@JimsonMakes thank you so much 🙂
Super boulot
Many thanks. All the best, Jim
Does all Sycamore have a pink hue to the wood?
No usually just a light wood but Ca be very variable. Sometimes the lighting and camera can make it look a different colour.
Loved it!
Thanks, much appreciated, cheers, Jim
Потрясающе у нас про такую красоту говорят ЗОЛОТЫЕ РУКИ)))))
Спасибо
Gorgeous.
cheers.
Thank you very much. Regards, Jim
i ordered some from a place in north carloina i found a linc thanks
That's great, I'm glad you managed to find some. Mix it thoroughly , you have plenty of working time, and it is best left overnight as it will get even harder and give a better finish. All the best, Jim.
stunning
Many thanks, kind regards, Jim
Cool! I don't know much about sycamore wood. Is it the same species as American Sycamore, Platanus occidentalis?
Thanks Gary. No this is European sycamore, Scientific Name: Acer pseudoplatanus. Cheers, Jim.
Ah! So it's a type of maple (Acer). Anyway, it's a pretty wood and I like what you've done with it.
Lovely !!
Thanks, glad you liked it. Cheers, Jim
yeh I thought you were a Carp fisherman by the ccmoore T-shirt I've been carping since the 80s but living in Sussex there's not many decent Carp lakes so I spend most of my time fishing in the Cotswolds £90 a year so you can't beat that around here at £35 per 24hrs tight lines mate
I've carp fished since the 80s too but limit myself to 1 small syndicate only these days. tight lines, Jim
What is the name of your rotary sanding system? Where might someone look to buy the same type of sander?
I use the Simon Hope pro sander which is available from several U.K. Retailers or direct from his website hopewoodturning. There are other similar designs from Robert Sorby and Axminster tools. They are self powered, running on a bearing and the spin of the wood makes them spin. Cheers, Jim.
amazing
Thank you very much. Cheers, Jim
Very nice video.Thx for posting.Pm
I'm glad you like it, thanks for taking the time to watch and comment. All the best, Jim
LOL...uh, Jim you may want to change your closed caption at 0:38...you sound as if you are saying you were a tool while on the bench..lol. I know that's not what you meant.
too late to change it now😂😂😂
@@JimsonMakes 🤣🤣🤣
I found the Milliput and turned a bowl from elm. Check out my facebook page to see a picture of it.
I'm glad you tried it Harold, unfortunately I am not on Facebook, I will see if my wife can find as she is on Facebook.
It is Harold McLellan - Woodsmithon facebook
+Harold McLellan . We found you ! A lovely bowl, I'm very pleased I inspired you. All the best, Jim.
+Jimson's Stuff Thank you for the inspiration. I'll show a couple of my pieces at our Nova Woodturners meeting on Monday.
+Harold McLellan . That sounds good. I've got a more ideas coming soon. Cheers, Jim
Great process!really ejoyed this. Great way to embelish the piece. Thank you for sharing!
I'm glad you liked it, thanks for watching and commenting. All the best, Jim