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	  by: Richard Raffan 
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	  Taunton's Complete Illustrated Guide to Turning features step-by-step descriptions for an abundance of wood turning techniques, including both spindle and faceplate methods. Over 900 color photos accompany detailed, hands-on instructions for turning wood, including how to use lathes, turning tools and materials, chucks, as well as sharpening tools. 
 
	  A woodworker's 'bible' on master techniques  -- Richard Raffan's Taunton's Complete Illustrated Guide To Turning is a woodworker's 'bible' on master techniques for turning bowls and spindles. Turning is typically covered in general woodworking guides; not afforded its own specific title: a quick access organization makes for specific tips and techniques paired with over 800 photos and drawings on using turning tools, specialty finishing techniques, and more. 
 
        Taunton's Complete Illustrated Guide to Turning 
Richard Raffan 
Master techniques for turning bowls, vessels, and spindles 
This step-by-step pictorial reference covers all of the essential techniques for turning wood. Organized for quick access, this book makes it easy to find exactly the technique you are looking for. Overt 850 photos and drawings illustrate how to hold, sharpen, and use turning tools, use specialized chucks, deep hollow elegant vessels, finish at the lathe, and much more.  
 
About the author  
Richard Raffan has been internationally acclaimed for both his turning and his teaching. Well-known for his gallery-quality production work, he is the author of Turning Wood, Turning Projects, Turning Boxes, and Turning Bowls, all from The Taunton Press. He lives in Canberra, Australia. 
 
		Reviews: 
        Taunton's Complete Illustrated Guide to Turning 
 
Richard Raffan 
 
Master techniques for turning bowls, vessels, and spindles 
Introduction  
 
How to Use This Book  
 
PART ONE: Tools and Materials  
 
SECTION 1. The Lathe and Attachments  
The Lathe  
Lathe Attachments  
 
SECTION 2. Shaping Tools  
Tools for Center Work  
Tools for End Grain  
Tools for Face Work  
Wood-Saving Tools  
 
SECTION 3. Ancillary Tools  
Tools for Sharpening  
Wood Preparation Tools  
Tools for Measuring  
Drills  
Sanding and Finishing  
 
SECTION 4. Wood  
Where to Find Wood  
Selecting Wood  
Recognizing Defects and Problems  
 
PART TWO: Preparation  
 
SECTION 5. Setting Up the Lathe  
The Workspace  
Tuning Your Lathe  
Dust Collection  
 
SECTION 6. Laying Out and Measuring  
Laying Out  
Measuring  
 
SECTION 7. Preparing Blanks  
Preparing Blanks  
Converting Logs  
 
SECTION 8. Fixing Wood on the Lathe  
Basic Fixing  
Reverse Chucking  
 
SECTION 9. Sharpening  
Preparing and Shaping  
Sharpening  
 
PART THREE: Spindle Work  
 
SECTION 10. Spindle Techniques  
General Approach  
Spindle Detailing  
 
SECTION 11. Spindle Projects  
Handles  
Legs  
Sundry  
 
PART FOUR: Turning End Grain  
 
SECTION 12. End-Grain Techniques  
Shaping End Grain  
Detail on End Grain  
End-Grain Projects  
 
SECTION 13. End-Grain Hollowing and Shaping  
Rough Hollowing  
Internal Shaping  
End-Grain Projects  
 
SECTION 14. Chasing Threads  
Chasing Threads  
Threads and Grain  
Threading Project  
 
PART FIVE: Face Work  
 
SECTION 15. Face-Work Profiles  
Face-Work Techniques  
Face-Work Details  
Face-Work Projects  
 
SECTION 16: Face-Work Hollowing  
Hollowing the Work  
Face-Work Projects  
 
SECTION 17: Sanding and Finishing  
Preparation  
Basic Sanding  
Advanced Sanding  
Finishes  
 
Further Reading  
 
Index  
 
 
      Taunton's Complete Illustrated Guide to Turning 
 
Richard Raffan 
 
Master techniques for turning bowls, vessels, and spindles 
 
The wood lathe is one of the oldest means of mass production, along with the potters wheel and metal casting. Round wooden objects so pervade our daily lives that we tend to forget that all those variations on spindles and knobs are turned. Most turnery is now mass produced on automatic copy lathes, but almost within living memory most was done by hand on man-powered machines.  
 
In the 17th century mechanically minded European aristocrats became the first hobby turners, working on lathes that cost more than most families earned in a year. And although small inexpensive hobby lathes were marketed through the great mail order catalogs of the early 20th century, it was not until the mid 1970s that woodturning started to become a popular retirement hobby.  
 
Since the mid-1970s interest in woodturning has increased exponentially and been transformed by a new breed of professional studio woodturner who creates one-off objects rather than mass producing just a few standard items. In the 21st century, lathe-based art is working its way into art galleries.  
 
Much of the attraction of woodturning is the speed with which an object can be completed. Its very low establishment costs are also a factor, and the fact that raw material abounds often costing little more than your time to retrieve it. But a lathe only spins the wood. What is crafted from that spinning wood depends on the skill and the vision of the individual at the lathe. This book can set you on the way to a new passion, and happy hours turning wood. 
 
      
      
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