Incorporating fordite to a bowl: design options please.

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Alpha-Dave

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Hi all,

I’m making a retirement gift for someone at work, the wood is from some trees with sentimental value, and we have bought sime ‘fordite’ (multi-layer paint from a car body shop) because they have spent many years formulating paints during their career. I have turned some bowls so I have a few to work with, but I now need to add the fordite in some way. Unfortunately the piece is an odd shape, and full of fissures that I have been dribbling thin super glue in, in the hope that it won’t fall apart when I cut it.

Any design suggestions please of how to incorporate it into one of the bowls?

I have a CNC, so my main thought is to try slicing it with a hacksaw, then cutting shapes into the bowl, and then shape the fordite to match, and inlay the fordite.

I have left the walls chunky at ~20 mm, so I have plenty of thickness to play with.

Any comments or suggestions welcome!

DA5B4A98-7409-4AD9-AFE1-2E7F980B2938.jpeg


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You could try putting a square groove in the rim, cut shavings of the fordite, add into groove and fill with resin?
Other option if your base is thick enough, is to turn a circular recess into the bottom of the bowl, turn section of fording and glue into the bowl?
 
I've no idea what fordite is like to work with. 2 ideas. Cut plugs of fordite, drill holes, maybe 10 or 12mm dia 6mm deep, in a straight line across a centre line of the inside or in a circle, glue plugs in, finish and polish on the lathe

Or, if you really doubt the integrity of the material, make a plinth with the fordite as an insert on front or top edge, present bowl on plinth.
 
Thank you all for the input, having put off doing anything through not wanting to mess it up, and dribbling thin super glue into the fissures & cracks over a week I could delay no more.

So I cut the small end off:
3973F1EB-E31B-45C1-B58F-FF3408DA221A.jpeg


Then marked 6mm in on the flattest side and cut a slice off.
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It looks pretty good!
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Then I needed to work out how to incorporate it.
 
I filed the joining edge smooth, then mixed up some black epoxy and glued the sheets together.
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I hot glued it to a block:
BDE6A8F1-B70F-407D-BE60-D693E66AC270.jpeg


Then added a hot-glue border, I think the bits flying off would hurt a lot.
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Initial shaping with a point-tool:
47D8DC1F-C61F-4EC5-9D7F-28E17B604CA4.jpeg


Then a bowl gouge to smooth the surface:
4D8FB32B-EBF8-4B2B-B356-923336FD0BD5.jpeg


Then a bowl-gouge in a shearing cut gave a remarkable finish:
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Then choosing the largest, flattest bowl I just had to cut a flat area in the bottom:
CC865E87-B7A9-49D8-B0DC-26B590279B47.jpeg


Then I glued the disc in with 5 min epoxy, then put back on the lathe and sanded the epoxy overflow off:
08603CE2-344D-409B-8F79-897E695E9B50.jpeg


Now it needs many coats of Danish oil over the next few days, then perhaps a carnuba wax polish.
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Stunning, very well executed and a really pleasing finish. A worthy gift.
I'd never even heard of Fordite, now, like so many things I see on this forum, I want some 🤔
 
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