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Come check out our brand new shop launch! https://formanwoodworking.com/ _____________________________________ Check out my Instagram! https://www.instagram.com/formanwoodw... _____________________________________ Want to use the same resin shown in this video? Check out the following affiliate code for a discount on SquidPoxy products! https://squidpoxy.ca/?sacode=duo8gk&u... _____________________________________ Today's video: This may come as a surprise, but this was by far the hardest project I've turned to date, both literally and figuratively. I don't know exactly what happened, but I think the paper and the resin somehow combined to make an insanely hard material that my steel bowl gouge could barely cut through; the finished bowl is far heavier, and therefore denser, than you'd expect. I had to sharpen my tool probably a dozen times or more just to finish this bowl. I'm not sure if I just need to get some carbide tools for projects like these or what, but until then, I don't think I'll be doing another paper/resin project for a while :D Anyways. To start this project off, I made a rectangular mould from foam core that was just slightly larger than a typical 8.5x11 sheet of paper. I then selected a bunch of different card stock papers in various greens and browns to give it a really earthy/foresty look and layered it all outside of the mould first. For resin, I used SquidPoxy's Squid Cast. This resin is a very thin, slow setting epoxy that has a 10+ working window, which you definitely need for a project like this. You can't tell from the video, but it took me over two hours to get all the paper into the mould and thoroughly coated in resin. I first poured most of the resin into the mould and then inserted the card stock paper in afterwards, one page at a time. As the mould was too large to go in my pressure pot, I simply placed a piece of oak on top of all the paper and weighed it down with as much weight as I could find, hoping that the pressure would force out any air that might have been trapped between pages. Once it fully cured over the course of a week, I cut the blank into a square (I think I might turn the off cut into a few pens?), mounted it on a waste block, and began turning. Like I said, this was where I ran into my difficulties. After struggling to get the thing round and the outside turned, I turned out a mortise, mounted it on my nova check, and hollowed out the inside. Typically, I sand all my epoxy projects up to 3000 grit, but I noticed early on that the sanding scratches were really difficult to see on this paper/resin material. I think I only went up to 320/400. I then finished it with some Yorkshire Grit polishing paste. If I were to do things differently: Like I mentioned, this project was very difficult just because of how hard the paper/resin material was to turn. I'm slightly confused by this, simply because I've recently turned paper pens of the exact same material (video here if you'd like to see: • Woodturning | Paper to Pens! Using card st... ), and for that project, I don't recall it being so hard. Maybe that's just because there was so little material to remove relative to this bowl? Who knows. I've been meaning to get some carbide tools for quite some time now, so once I do, perhaps I'll give this paper/resin idea another shot and see how hard/easy it is to remove material with some harder tools. This difficulty aside, I really do love these sorts of projects. The layering of the paper makes for some really unique looks, and I definitely do want to try some more of these in the future. Key equipment/products I used: Rikon 70-220 VSR Midi Lathe: https://www.leevalley.com/en-ca/shop/... Woodstock 1/2 inch bowl gouge: https://www.amazon.ca/gp/product/B005... Hamlet 1/8 inch parting tool: https://www.elitetools.ca/en/product/... SquidPoxy Squid Cast: https://squidpoxy.ca/collections/thic... Yorkshire Grit: https://www.woodsleesummercraft.ca/pr... Music provided by Epidemic Sound Can't Stay No Longer - Daxten Lovers Lane - Tomas Skyldeberg Perfect Colours - Tomas Skyldeberg