Waiting List Information
All my woodwork is custom made, after you place your order. Wait times vary depending on my workload and the intricacy of the item you order - anywhere from two weeks to several months. Please contact me before placing your order if you have any questions. Thanks!
Showing posts with label Wood Bowl. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wood Bowl. Show all posts
Purpleheart Wood Bowl - Practical Art
Zebrawood Sushi Hangiri
Price: $50.00
By clicking on "Order Now," buyer agrees to these terms
7"x4" Ambrosia Maple Bowl
Purpleheart Hand-Turned SQUARE Wood Bowl
Purpleheart, also sometimes called amaranth or violet wood, comes from several species of tropical trees native to Central and South America. The heartwood is a light purple when cut, and darkens upon exposure to sunlight, reaching first a darker purple and eventually a brown with a purple cast. It is hard and strong, and takes attention when turning, requiring sharp tools, gentle cuts, and patient sanding.
This was actually made live at the Ogden Farmers Market. Price for similar bowl: $35.00.
By clicking on "Order Now," buyer agrees to these terms.
Natural Edge Elm Bowl
This natural-edge wood bowl is made from a crotch from a Chinese Elm tree, and measures 9-1/2" diameter and 5-1/2" deep, and about 3/8" thick. The bark has been treated with cyanoacrylate to make it hard and firmly attached. The bowl is finished with a mineral oil and beeswax finish so that it's food-safe and sealed. It was turned while partially seasoned, and then microwave-dried to make sure it's sterile. The result is a slightly ovoid bowl with a unique, classy look and intriguing wavy grain pattern.
Chinese Elm wood is similar to European Elm wood, except perhaps twistier and more prone to warping for dimensioned lumber. For bowl turning, however, it works every bit as well and looks every bit as beautiful. It's much easier to find too, since most European Elms were wiped out by Dutch elm disease in the early 20th century. Elm wood is hard, with coarse, interlocking grain. It polishes to a satin sheen with no finish applied, and has a comfortable woody smell when cut or sanded. It is hard, and resistant to cracking and splitting.
I have about 50 pieces of this wood. You can buy a blank from me for this size of a bowl for $20 and turn your own, or you can buy a finished bowl like this with a natural edge for $124.50. If you'd rather have one with a smooth, finished edge, it would come to $98.50.
Natural Edge Bowl - $124.50
Elm Bowl, Smooth Edge - $98.50
Elm Bowl Blank, 10"x6" - $20.00
By clicking on "Order Now," buyer agrees to these terms.
Cocobolo Sushi Hangiri or Bowl
Cocobolo is a medium sized Central American tree growing up to 2' diameter and 90' tall. The heartwood is typically orange or reddish-brown in color, often with a figuring of darker irregular traces weaving through the wood, while the sapwood is a creamy yellow, contrasting sharply with the heartwood. Its fine texture and excellent color make Cocobolo one of the most popular exotic woods. Grows along Pacific seaboard of Mexico and Central America. Considered one of the most important woods in cutlery business for knife handles (can be soaked in soapy water with minimal ill effects). Also used for tool handles, brush backs, bowling balls, chess pieces, carving, jewelry boxes, canes, utensils, buttons, musical and scientific instruments, especially guitars and basses, but some woodwind instruments such as clarinets and oboes have been successfully made using cocobolo instead of the more usual African blackwood. It is also used in making luxury pens, and decorative veneer and inlay.
Because it is so sought after, cocobolo is a little pricey. Price for a 8"x2" Cocobolo Bowl or Hangiri like this one: $62.00 - and be sure to specify whether you want sapwood if it's available, or if you prefer the dark colors only.
Purpleheart Wood Bowl - 7.5"x2"
Purpleheart, also sometimes called amaranth or violet wood, comes from several species of tropical trees native to Central and South America. The heartwood is a light purple when cut, and darkens upon exposure to sunlight, reaching first a darker purple and eventually a brown with a purple cast. It is hard and strong, and takes attention when turning, requiring sharp tools, gentle cuts, and a LOT of sanding.
Price for this bowl or one like it: $37.00.
Click here to buy this item
Oregon Myrtlewood Bowl, Enclosed
The bowl is 5.5" diameter and 4" high. Price for a similar bowl: $55.00
Ambrosia Maple Bowl - Green-turned
This ambrosia maple wood bowl measures 8" diameter and 2" high. It was made for an order, and the wood was shipped after the order was placed. There is never any guarantee as to the moisture content of bowl blanks when ordered this way, and it turns out this one was still pretty green. This means that as it dries over the next month or two it will elongate slightly and get a really cool, natural, organic shape to it. It was already a gorgeous piece of wood, and I think it will only get better.
Ambrosia maple is one of my favorite woods to work with. It's regular maple, left moist and warm and exposed to the elements after the tree dies, so that the ambrosia beetle can attack the tree. The beetle bores into the tree, bringing ambrosia fungus spores with it. The fungus attacks and stains the tree and then the beetle can eat the fungus as it reporduces. The net result: Beautifully figured wood. Price as shown: $40.00
Purpleheart Bowl - Oh, and Don't Forget the Bloodwood, Maple, and Walnut
This set was made for a custom order. A customer, originally from Guyana where the people are known for their craftsmanship with purpleheart, was looking for a purpleheart bowl. her Father had promised her one but had passed away before he could get it for her. She had google-searched for a purpleheart bowl, and saw my segmented bowls. She wanted a fuller shape, but the same woods. To emphasize purpleheart, each has a purpleheart base whereas the other set alternates.
Aromatic Cedar Bowl
This bowl is 6" in diamter and 2" high. Cedar is less expensive than a lot of fancy bowl materials, so it's not a lot of money - this bowl or one like it can be ordered for about $25.00. Click here to buy this item
Eucalyptus Burl Bowl
This bowl is 5-1/4" diameter and 1-3/4" high, available for $30.00. Click here to buy this item
Walnut Fruit Platter or Bowl
Below you can see the heartwood more dramatically, as well as the decorative finish on the base and how it was assembled.
This was made for a customer who had a specific order, but for something similar, including wood, I would charge $55.00.
Segmented Bowl Set - Salad Bowl and Serving Bowls
The large bowl pictured is $108.00, and the small bowls are $34.00 each, for a total of $244.00 for the set as pictured.
Wood Serving Bowl - Segmented with Purpleheart, Maple, Bloodwood, and Walnut
Wood Salad Bowl - Segmented with Purpleheart, Maple, Bloodwood, and Walnut
For segmented bowls, I charge $1.00 per square inch of profile ($47.50) plus $0.50 per piece of wood ($30.50) plus the wood ($30 in this case) so this bowl would be $108.00.
Spalted Maple Wood Bowl - 8"
This wood bowl is 8" wide and 2.5" deep. It's made from Spalted maple, which is maple that was kept moist while the decay process started, and then cut, dried, and now hand-turned into a traditional form wood bowl. Food-safe, hand-washable, ready to use or display.
Price = $1" per square inch of profile, plus wood, or in this case, $42.50 (the wood was kind of pricey, sorry).
Walnut Wood Bowl
This was a simple and quick to shape bowl, so I spent a lot of time getting a smooth surface and nice finish, It's great for keys or candy on your desk or counter, and as with all the wood bowls I make, it's an individual, quality piece that feels great in your hands. Bowls like this cost the price of the wood plus $1.00 per square inch of profile. This bowl is $12.50 plus shipping.
Walnut Bowl, Enclosed Form
With this one, one challene was how to hollow it out without specialized hollowing equipment. The other challenge was sanding the inside - sticking your fingers in through a 3" opening with a sharp edge on a lathe spinning at 1200 RPM is a little troublesome - the sandpaper would catch and my fingers would get bounced around inside the rim like a marble in a bowl that you're shaking - ouch. They make specialized tools for both jobs, but unless someone orders enough of these to cover the cost, I'm doing it the old hard way - hence the extra charge for enclosed forms.
Enclosed bowls are the price of the wood plus $1.50 per square inch of profile. This bowl would be about $19.75 plus shipping.
Square Turned Bowl - Maple
One of these bowls is not like the other...one of these bowls just isn't the same...
This Square Turned Bowl is made, i think with maple. It turned very nicely. Its closed-grain nature finishes smooth and shiny, it's hard, and it cuts cleanly. The dimensions are 7" wide x 2" tall.
I don't usually include views of the bowl from the bottom, but you just don't get the full effect of this one without the bottom view. It's a bit treacherous to make, with sharp corners whirring at 850 or 1250 RPM to bang up your fingers, and takes a lot of care, but the effect is way cool.
Price for a bowl like this: diameter x height x $1.50, plus wood. In this case, about $30 total.
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