More sanding on this one,
In the next ones.
Hollowing the inside rim takes practice. It’s an interrupted cut. Taking a big cut will pull fibers. Difficult to maintain the bevel through the air space. Too much bevel contact drags the tool down a bit setting up a vibration.
I Face off the rim before hollowing. I start each hollowing cut slowly until i nibble away a space for the bevel to float over.
Light cuts, sharp tools, float the bevel
Grinding the heel of the gouge reduces bevel drag.
If you own a small bowl gouge 3/8 diameter - try that tool for the first 1-2” of the inside wall.
The smaller tool is sharper, takes a small cut, has a short bevel usually makes a clean tear free cut.
Jimmie Clewes’s teaches this in some of his classes with a traditional grind on a 3/8 bard bowl gouge.
See the light cuts
Light cuts with bowl (5/8 bar) gouge.
Finnish cut 3/8 bar bowl gouge
I return a dried sycamore bowl in a demo video a tips thread on working with green wood
You can see how I do it and the use of the small gouge.
The August 2015 AAW JOURNAL has great article by David Ellsworth on working with green wood. This is followed by 11 marvelous ways turners turned cracks into features. One of David's themes is that the deck is stacked against newer woodturners successfully working with wet wood. Might be a nice...
www.aawforum.org