odie
TOTW Team
- Joined
- Dec 22, 2006
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Anyone work with Tasmanian Myrtle before? This is my first attempt at this wood......very beautiful reddish coloring, but a real bear to get a clean cut.
Unfortunately, I was suckered into buying this piece! It was advertised as Australian Myrtle Burl, but there is no burl figure here at all. It's embarrassing to tell you I paid $90 for this piece of wood! I saw a photo, but the wax coating was very thick, and I couldn't see very clearly what was being offered. All in all, it's a beautiful shade of red that I haven't seen before, and the grain is tight and dense.....a very aesthetic look to it.
Took a lot of extra time to do the final turning yesterday, because it was very difficult to get a clean cut on the end grain.......best I could do was to start at 180gt, and at that, was very time consuming. Just wondering if anyone else has turned this wood into a bowl?.......and if so, did they have a similar experience? I'm well aware that some woods of the same species can turn entirely differently, but since this is my first piece of Tasmanian Myrtle, I'm not too interested in getting more of this wood, unless I can expect a different turning experience.
ko
Unfortunately, I was suckered into buying this piece! It was advertised as Australian Myrtle Burl, but there is no burl figure here at all. It's embarrassing to tell you I paid $90 for this piece of wood! I saw a photo, but the wax coating was very thick, and I couldn't see very clearly what was being offered. All in all, it's a beautiful shade of red that I haven't seen before, and the grain is tight and dense.....a very aesthetic look to it.
Took a lot of extra time to do the final turning yesterday, because it was very difficult to get a clean cut on the end grain.......best I could do was to start at 180gt, and at that, was very time consuming. Just wondering if anyone else has turned this wood into a bowl?.......and if so, did they have a similar experience? I'm well aware that some woods of the same species can turn entirely differently, but since this is my first piece of Tasmanian Myrtle, I'm not too interested in getting more of this wood, unless I can expect a different turning experience.
ko