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Turning a Wooden Bowl on a Lathe — Faceplate Turning
Woody

Créé par

Woody

23. March 2026

Turning a Wooden Bowl on a Lathe — Faceplate Turning

Turn a wooden bowl from a solid blank on a wood lathe using faceplate turning techniques. Bowl turning removes material from a spinning blank with handheld gouges, transforming a rough chunk of wood into a thin-walled vessel that reveals the wood's grain, figure, and colour.

Intermediate
2-4 hours

Instructions

1

Mount the Blank and Turn the Outside

Attach the bowl blank to a faceplate using screws driven into what will become the bottom of the bowl. Mount the faceplate on the lathe headstock. Set the lathe to a low speed appropriate for the blank diameter — as a guideline, a 20cm diameter blank should start at approximately 600-800 RPM. Stand to the side (not in line with the spinning blank) when first starting the lathe in case the blank is unbalanced. Using a bowl gouge, round the outside of the blank by cutting from larger diameter toward smaller, riding the bevel of the gouge against the wood. Shape the exterior profile — a gentle curve from the rim down to the foot. Form a tenon (a short cylindrical projection) on the base that will fit your scroll chuck jaws.

2

Reverse-Mount and Hollow the Interior

Remove the faceplate, grip the tenon in a four-jaw scroll chuck, and remount the bowl with the open face toward the tailstock. Begin hollowing from the centre outward using the bowl gouge. Cut from the centre toward the rim in a sweeping arc, riding the bevel. The wall thickness should be approximately 8-10mm initially — measure frequently with calipers. Never reach over the spinning bowl to cut the far side — always cut on the near side (between you and the centre) to maintain control. As the interior deepens, reduce lathe speed to maintain safe peripheral speed. Hollowing the bottom flat last provides maximum support during wall cutting.

Step 2 - Image 1
3

Refine the Wall Thickness

Make finishing cuts with a freshly sharpened gouge, taking light passes to achieve the final wall thickness of approximately 5-8mm (thinner for decorative bowls, thicker for functional kitchen bowls). Uniform wall thickness is important: thick spots dry at a different rate than thin spots, causing warping. Check thickness by holding a light source inside the bowl — light transmission through thin areas reveals thickness variations. The interior curve should be a smooth, continuous arc with no ridges, bumps, or flat spots. A sharp gouge produces a surface that requires minimal sanding. Tool marks indicate the gouge needs sharpening or the cutting technique needs adjustment.

4

Sand on the Lathe

With the lathe running at moderate speed, sand the bowl progressively through grits: 80 (to remove tool marks), 120, 180, 220, and 320 or 400 (for a smooth finish). Sand the interior first, then the exterior. Sand across the grain direction as well as with the rotation to avoid circular scratch patterns. Between each grit, stop the lathe and sand briefly by hand with the grain to remove any circular scratches. Remove all sanding dust between grits with a clean cloth — residual coarse particles will scratch the surface during finer sanding. End grain areas require extra attention as they resist sanding and show scratches more prominently.

5

Apply Finish and Part Off

Apply finish while the bowl is still mounted on the lathe. For food-contact bowls, use food-safe mineral oil, walnut oil, or a friction polish made from shellac and oil. Apply the finish with the lathe spinning slowly, distributing it evenly over the surface, then increase speed and buff with a clean cloth to build shine from friction heat. For decorative bowls, lacquer or oil-wax blends provide more durable protection. After finishing the interior and exterior, remove the bowl from the chuck and address the foot. Either turn a decorative recess in the base using a jam chuck (a waste block turned to friction-fit the bowl rim), or simply sand the chuck marks smooth by hand and sign the base. The finished bowl should be thin, symmetrical, and smoothly curved with an even finish that highlights the wood's natural beauty.

Matériaux

  • Bowl blank (hardwood, 15-25cm diameter, 8-12cm thick) - 1 piece pieceEspace réservé
    Voir
  • Sandpaper (80 through 400 grit) - assorted sheets pieceEspace réservé
    Voir
  • Food-safe finish (mineral oil, walnut oil, or friction polish) - 50-100ml pieceEspace réservé
    Voir

Outils requis

  • Wood lathe (variable speed, minimum 30cm swing)Espace réservé
    Voir
  • Bowl gouge (10-13mm, fingernail grind)Espace réservé
    Voir
  • Faceplate or screw chuck
  • Four-jaw scroll chuckEspace réservé
    Voir
  • Face shield (full face protection)Espace réservé
    Voir
  • CalipersNOK 134.40
    Voir

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