Комментарии:
You are definitely guilty of making it look and sound easy!
ОтветитьGreat idea Gary, anxious to try that! Very nice, merry Christmas to you and yours.
ОтветитьAs always beautiful work brother👍🏽I wanna do one of those 🤙🏽. merry Christmas and happy new year 🎉 to you and your family, my friend 👍🏽
ОтветитьExcellent turning Mr. Gary. Merry Christmas to you and your family God bless.
ОтветитьHey Gary, That is a very pretty little bowl. Cute little rascal really. I am sure I am wrong but I just dont see that as an "emerging" bowl. It is more of a bowl with a plate on the side. To me an emerging bowl would be an end grain bowl growing from a limb and leaving the bark on the lower portion of the limb with only part of the outside of the bowl exposed. I have not made one of those yet but I did make an emerging goblet, again an end grain turn with the goblet and some stem growing from the branch. It was looking great but there was a small spot on the stem that I wanted to fix (should have used sandpaper and I learned that for the future) and I ended up busting the stem and sadly ruining the the piece. That is ok though we learn as we go I am still learning from folks like you. Yall have a Merry Christmas. :)
ОтветитьThanks for making this so easy and simple to understand. Have a Merry Christmas.
ОтветитьReally great tutorial! Great idea with the crayon witness line, I will be using that one!
ОтветитьLooks great, Gary...neat little project!
ОтветитьLove it wao nice
ОтветитьI like it! Thanks for the fun tutorial.
ОтветитьYou are very talented, thanks for sharing your knowledge and tips, 👍👍👍Ernie smith from brisbane Australia
ОтветитьThank you Gary for making another cool video and making it look so easy. I was out trying to make a Phil-like bark on oak bowl last night. Had the wood burner and my antique torpedo heater going. Around 2 degrees and 30mph wind in Pa. “It’s beginning to look a lot like…” Merry Christmas! Cya next Year
ОтветитьRe gouge size - Generally the Brits go by the flute size, the Yanks go by the shank size. You might think of it as two countries divided by a common language. (paraphrasing G.B. Shaw)
ОтветитьI absolutely love those bowls. When I have a go myself I’ll watch your video again and it will improve your ratings 😊. Have as Merry a Christmas with your family as I am having with mine 🌞
ОтветитьWell i reckon i can manage one of those after the festive and it warms up a bit. great vid everything i was thinking Phil has put so here's wishing you and yours a Merry Christmas and all the best from Lincolnshire UK
ОтветитьIt's a great idea Gary and 1 I should add to my to do list! Seems a much easier way than what my mind could come up with!!
ОтветитьVery nice bowls. I like the raised bowl emerging from the block. These look great. Thanks.
ОтветитьYou make it look so easy. Very nice. Merry Christmas
ОтветитьThanks again Gary for sharing your knowledge and talent. Merry Christmas!
Stuart
Great idea Gary.
ОтветитьGary, I have yet to make one of these so thanks for the "how to" and Merry Christmas!
ОтветитьCool little merging bowl
David and Maria
Merry Christmas
Gary. Do you have the link for the first emerging bowl? Merry Christmas Gary
ОтветитьGood Christmas Eve Evening, Gary.
I love this project and remembered the one you turned in and earlier video. Now it's on my list to turn. All the best to you in this coming New Year.
Merry Christmas!
Great tutorial!
ОтветитьSalut Gary oui c’est un processus assez compliqué mais qui a rendu superbe bravo Gary 👍👏
ОтветитьThey look great can't wait to try well done sir 👌 👍
ОтветитьHi Gary, Definitely keeping this video for when I give it a go.
Both look fantastic but the raised lip wins it for me.
Take care my friend.
Hwyl, Huw
I agree with Phil, Gary! Great video and they both look very nice, my friend!
Ответитьnice job
ОтветитьThat's so cool.
ОтветитьThis was an awesome video Gary. I think I'll give this a try soon. Thanks for sharing! 👍🏾
ОтветитьGary, you sure have a way of making the complex look simple. Have a Great New Year! Dan
Ответитьgood job gary
Ответитьvery nice Gary.
ОтветитьOutstanding! 👍👍
ОтветитьThanks for the detailed explanation! I’ve never seen how one of these were turned. Now I just might have to try one myself! Your help here makes it look so simple! Thanks again and keep on turning!
ОтветитьSlick!
ОтветитьThat’s adorable!
ОтветитьMERCI👍
ОтветитьI am really enjoying and learning a lot watching your videos. Well done from Charles City, VA. George
ОтветитьThose turned out great! I can’t imagine working with a small piece of wood like you started with, yet get 2 beautiful pieces out of that one block! You are amazing! Bravo!
ОтветитьJust a very enjoyable video. This is what I will do week. Thank you for sharing.
ОтветитьGreat information! Thank you for sharing! That's on my list to turn.
ОтветитьVery ingenious. The order of the cuts is key. Thanks.
ОтветитьThank you, sir, for two examples from a single piece of wood. I appreciate seeing what you have to teach.
ОтветитьHi Gary Fantastically informative video, Thank you for sharing , really enjoyable 🙌🙌🙌🙌👍👍👍👍
ОтветитьAhhh... So that's how you do it! 😲 I've seen a couple of those and just couldn't wrap my mind around how it was done.
Of course, it all seems so simple once you've seen the trick... 😀
Interesting idea Gary. I've never seen anything like that before.
ОтветитьCame back for a refresher course.
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