What are your inspirations for shape and style?
How do you design the piece that you're about to make?
Is there a body of work by one or more woodturners that inspires you to try to expand your skills and designs?
As a new woodturner I cannot say much about shape or style. I have a Delta LA 200 that sat in the corner for several years. Just before Christmas I was in the shop meditating (that spot between "I need to do this" and "Man, I really want to do something different") when the lathe caught my eye. I found a 4 inch block of something or other and dug out the tools that came with the lathe and mounted the blank up. This was an exercise in: Where is the center, how high is the toolrest, would a faceplate go on the bottom or top, does grain matter...etc.? The answer was 'screw it', center it up, go for the lowest speed and go nuts with a roughing gouge (I learned some of this from a general woodworking class I had taken years ago). As you all know, something happens as a shape takes form and you move from the click,click,click of the roughing gouge on square stock to something round and smooth and the gentle hiss of a sharp tool on wood. And time is a deep afterthought.
The bowl shape was determined by the heavy stock removal required after HUGE catches. The style was Newbie Effort One. The inspiration? Unknown and not repeatable. I made three very different bowls that day and I love all of them (I even gave one away as a Christmas present). I dressed them with Tried and True and Bison wax while they spun on the lathe...oh man, was that fun!
Since then, I have tried to do it again with something in mind before I start and, well, it just doesn't work that way for me right now. I am sure as my skill level improves I will be able to bring a stronger intentional design element to the turning, but for now, what gets me back to the lathe is simply the notion that something different is going to show up.
As a new turner, I marvel at the lathe work just about anyone. I have no idea how Betty Scarpino makes her pieces but they flat out glue me to the page. I am enamored of the turned vessel, so obviously David Ellsworth got my attention. But for now, the simple open bowl inspires simply because that is what usually shows up at the end and I like making it better and different. I know I have a loooong ways to go, but I hope the unkown continues to inspire me all the way.