{"id":8979,"date":"2010-03-16T18:19:45","date_gmt":"2010-03-16T22:19:45","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.woodworkersguide.com\/?p=2591"},"modified":"2016-01-23T00:18:05","modified_gmt":"2016-01-23T00:18:05","slug":"a-day-with-bowl-turner-mike-mahoney","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ravenview.com\/a-day-with-bowl-turner-mike-mahoney\/","title":{"rendered":"A Day With Bowl Turner Mike Mahoney"},"content":{"rendered":"
This one day seminar on green bowl turning was part of the Celebrating Woodturning In Nova Scotia week, hosted by Lee Valley in conjunction with the Nova Woodturners Guild. <\/p>\n
The project that was planned for the day was a Calabash bowl turned from green Poplar. We got off on a bit of a late start (Mike was grounded in Newark the night before because of an East Coast storm – surprise, surprise \ud83d\ude42 so the class started a few hours later than scheduled) but once it began it was like ‘all get out’.<\/p>\n
Mike started with a brief introduction of himself and then showed and explained a few examples of his work:<\/p>\n
From there he went into an in-depth demonstration on his sharpening principles. Using the white board he explained the differences of a bad grind and those of a good one, as well as his personal experience in gaining ‘the perfect grind’. From there we went to the grinder for a demonstration:<\/p>\n
There was so much information given here that it’s likely best to have this explained by Mike himself in his video here:<\/p>\n