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Turn a Green Wood Bowl
By Alan Lacer
Purchase the complete version of this woodworking technique story from AWBookstore.com.
Making
a functional object directly from
raw material in
its natural state is
incredibly satisfying.
Just ask any potter.
For woodworkers,
green woodturning
captures that feeling.
You literally start with
a log and end up with a
beautiful bowl.
If you’ve never turned green
wood before, you’re in for a treat.
Green wood is easier to turn than kiln-dried
wood. It cuts cleaner and produces very little dust. To
top it off, the wood itself often costs nothing.
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 1. Cut green bowl blanks in  | 
 Click any image to view a larger version.  | 
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 5. Screw the faceplate into what will  | 
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 6. Rough the bowl with a bowl gouge.  | 
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 9. The bowl is now  | 
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 12. Start the hollowing process by drilling out the center of  | 
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 15. Establish the bowl’s final depth with a heavy scraper.  | 
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 21. Cut away the waste block where the screws were  | 
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 22. Undercut the bowl’s base to create  | 
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 24. Sand the bowl after it has dried  | 
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 This story originally appeared in American Woodworker September 2007, issue #130.  | 
 Purchase the complete version of this woodworking technique story from AWBookstore.com. 
  | 
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