Monday Night Recap, May 15, 2023

It was a great meeting, Monday May 15th, 2023.  The 2×4 Challenge was very well received. Thank you to all the participants, the work was beautiful and very well made. We had 4 entries in each category.

Peoples choice award:  Wayne Schroder for the SPF 2×4 Christmas Tree.

Golden Stud Award:   Kade Bolger for his SPF Thin Walled Victorian Lidded Bowl with a Finial.

Non turned; 

1st:    Wayne Schroder for his SPF Christmas tree.

2nd:   Guy May for his Pine Car Hauler and Display Shelf

3rd:   Don McFarland for his SPF Gnome Birdhouse on a swing

Turned;

1st:    Kade Bolger for his SPF Thin Walled Victorian Lidded Bowl with a Finial.

2nd:   Wayne Schroder for his SPF Biplane

3rd:   Neil Fickling for his SPF Wig Stand

Our Judges were; 

Colleen Samila, the WGO Past President who Judged  the Turning Category

Glenn, the owner of Peacock Lumber who judged the Non Turning Category

They both judged the Golden Stud Award.

Congratulations to all!

The prizes were donated by Woodchuckers, William Wood Write and Peacock Lumber.  We had 19 door/raffle prizes that were raffled off to the Membership.

50/50 Winners:

Dan Alexander

Mike Kellar

This weekend is Victoria Day Long Weekend, so there will not be a meeting Monday May 22nd, 2023.  Have a safe and enjoyable long weekend!

Our next meeting will be May 29th, 2023.  This is our last meeting before our summer break.  See you there.

Monday Night Recap, May 1, 2023

Announcements

Safety first- fire exits and defibrillators were pointed out as usual.

Shop Cleanup on Sat May 6th 9:00 to 11:00, need about ten members.

Doors Open 10 a.m. To 4 p.m. Contact Chad Shaw to help out.

Next week – Hand Planes with Bernie Visser, structure and adjustments, uses

Lottery won!!! (3 free plays)

Ongoing Education

Turning 101 is up and running currently. Contact Kade if you want in on one of the future courses.

Scrolling 101 with Don McFarland. Contact Don

Flatwork 101 sessions likely to run twice this spring/summer – PLEASE email Paul Kidson even if you asked to be on the list a couple years ago!!

Community Activities

Chad Shaw – the BackDoorMission FOOD DRIVE will continue weekly

Presentations

FINISHING and Finishes, with Mr, Shiny himself – Kade Bolger!!

Top-coat vs Penetrating finishes. Durability of various finishes. Quick and Easy vs Longlasting. Some oils and waxes need to be continually replenished..!

Lacquers are fast drying top-coats, but lots of VOCs, smell, dangers. Easy to repair. Shellac is a topcoat build-up finish, easy to repair.

Polyurethanes and varathanes are plastic type top coat finishes. Very durable and water resistant. Can be thinned with varsol, mineral spirits, acetone, but acetone will eat away finishes, very tricky. BE Careful of vapours! Use good ventilation always.

Water based finishes can be thinned with distilled water (not tap water).

Water based finishes might raise the grain a bit and need fine sanding between coats. Oil based finishes tend to penetrate deeper into the wood.

Most oil finishes have an ambering effect.

APPLYING the finish: can wipe on some oils with blue shop towels that wont tear and leave micro shreds like paper towels can. Dip and wipe from wet to dry to cover the piece, overlapping strokes, avoiding excess dripping/pooling at the ends. Wipe off any remaining oil after 15-20 minutes. Softwoods and some softer hardwoods will absorb finish faster. Always work in the direction of the grain as far as possible. For finishing turned work, use interwoven cotton (t-shirt), gun-cleaning cloth is good to use (amazon). Apply, wipe off excess after 15-20 min, wait few hrs or longer depending on humidity, smell.

Can apply oil based over oil-based, wax can only be your final top coat.

Oily woods can take longer for a finish to cure fully. Wiping the oily wood with a varsol/etc may help, before applying finish.

Can do both dry and wet sanding, some use automotive sandpaper, torn not scissor cut to avoid aggressive edges. Can use the oil finish or water to wet-sand.

Soft sanding between coats results in better finish adhesion.

Can buff using ‘micro-mesh’ 1500 to 12000 grits, with water, as an alternative to other buffing methods. Wipe off any excess water/grit between grits.

Always dispose of oily rags in water. Saturate with water and store in a ziploc, keep in freezer! Oily rags can combust spontaneously!

Gallery, Show & Tell

Gord T. Oak basket with brass nails.

Neil F. Oak maple ash cherry ‘Quilt Bowl’

Noel G. Maple or Locust bowl, Maple and Walnut bowl from some cracked wood, and a cored out inner bowl!!

Kade B. Ash bowl, maple crotch bowl, live edge honey locust bowl, footed olive ash box with finial.,

Doug R. Fish and fishing rod from oak and pine, with magnets

Next Meeting: 2023-05-08