best thing is to take a class where you can learn.. however with the current Corona virus it will be many months before classes become available.
One of the easy said hard to do things:
If you don’t let the wood drive onto the tool you won’t get a catch
A big difference in spindle and bowl turning is that in spindle turning the tools are held in front of your body in bowl turning the handle of the tool is almost always against your body.
you may benefit from watching the video of demo I do on roughing a bowl.
I can answer questions about my video and can take a look at any video you can take of your gouge work.
what I do.
Cut with the gouge nearly level to floor.
Set the tool rest so the the gouge is cutting at center when level to the floor.
Hold the handle against you body. The forward hand let the thumb push the slightly in the direction of the bevel. The cutting is done moving your body.
Shift weight from your back foot to the front foot whose toe is in the direction you are cutting.
Roll you hips slightly to turn curves.
Begin the cut with the flute at 3 o’clock or 9 o’clock depending on how you are holding the tool.
Then rotate the tool so the flute points up slightly at 3:00 or 10:00
You can pick up a lot of the basic watching the video below.
All bevel riding cuts with an Ellsworth ground gouge
Also shape has a lot to do with ease of hollowing. Hemispherical easiest for most to hollow,
here the gouge is positioned to make a cut
you can see the cut.
Fast forward to 10:10 to see the bevel riding in “slow motion”
Fast forward to 20:19 to see hollowing the bowl. ( this starts with the handle across the ways. I pull it to my body..
Roughing green bowl
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lo0bGSafZq4