Hi, I'm relatively new to woodturning and had some questions about wood selection.
I had a pecan tree taken down 5 days ago that was growing a few feet from my house and am interested in using some of the wood for future turning projects. The cut ends of the logs look unusually colorful to my eye, but I was hoping to get other opinions about what this might look like when turned. The end grain looks mostly light-colored without much grain definition, but there are these nice rings of reddish-brown on all the logs to varying degrees. Is this spalting? Whatever it is, I'm wondering if it's going to be visible in the wood once I've turned it into a box, bowl, pen, chess piece, etc?
I don't own my own lathe yet, so I don't go through wood very quickly at all and probably won't keep all of these logs for turning, but I'd like to pick a few of the interesting pieces for projects. Any tips on which parts of the tree I should look for that might yield beautiful, interesting grain patterns?
Thanks!
I had a pecan tree taken down 5 days ago that was growing a few feet from my house and am interested in using some of the wood for future turning projects. The cut ends of the logs look unusually colorful to my eye, but I was hoping to get other opinions about what this might look like when turned. The end grain looks mostly light-colored without much grain definition, but there are these nice rings of reddish-brown on all the logs to varying degrees. Is this spalting? Whatever it is, I'm wondering if it's going to be visible in the wood once I've turned it into a box, bowl, pen, chess piece, etc?
I don't own my own lathe yet, so I don't go through wood very quickly at all and probably won't keep all of these logs for turning, but I'd like to pick a few of the interesting pieces for projects. Any tips on which parts of the tree I should look for that might yield beautiful, interesting grain patterns?
Thanks!