My wife is allergic to white-gold and can only wear her ring for a little bit. This is the perfect solution and she asked me a few days ago to make her a wooden ring with turquoise! Boom thank you! You earned my Patreon support 🖒
Thank you fabian this is beautiful and inspiring. This is a pendant I have made for my wife from burled oak and crushed stone thank you for the inspiration.
Hey Fabian. Echt ein Klasse Tutorial und wunderschöne Idee. Das Video ist zwar mittlerweile schon etwas älter, aber genau daher wollte ich fragen wie langlebig der Ring eigentlich ist? Besonders bei dem Sekundenkleber bin ich mir unsicher wie beständig, der so ist auf Dauer. Dachte vielleicht hast du da ja Erfahrungen sammeln können.
That was great! what kind of glue do you use? and the liquid to make the wood shiny, what is the name of that product? Do you put anything to protect the wood? thank you so much. AIDA.
Glad you like it! The glue was super glue (cyanoacrylate). The finish was a mixture of shellac and boiled linseed oil, it's basically a friction polish like for example shellawax.
A mini lathe. It's a Dema DM 300 It seems to be nearly identical to the "sealey mini" or the "Apprentice 812 VS" or the "Harbor Freight mini. I do not recommend buying this lathe!!!
Schönes Video, Fabian. Was für ein Holz hast du genommen? Waren es Türkis steine, die du noch kleiner Gemacht hast? Was war das für ein Schleifgitter? Schönes Wochenende gewünscht. Grüße aus dem Ruhrpott.
Vielen Dank Günter! Das Holz war Apfelholz Die Türkissteine sind von einer billigen Splitterkette (ca. 3€) von Ebay, die ich mittels Hammer zerbröselt habe. Das Schleifgitter habe ich vor längerem auf Rolle gekauft, ich weiß gar nicht mehr wo bzw. welche Marke. Grüße aus Hessen :)
Danke für die Antwort. Das Schleifgitter war evtl. kein Abranet, weil die sind doch so Rot-Braun. Weil solche Schleifgitter habe ich. Oder es war Schleifgitter für den trockenbau. Aber wie war das >Egal, Hauptsache es funktioniert
Wenn man verschiedene Stücke entgegen dem Maserungsverlauf verleimt, bricht es nicht so leicht - so wie bei Sperrholz. Außerdem wollte ich erst einen einfachen Holzring machen, hab mich dann aber dazu entschieden die Steinsplitter einzufügen.
I was wondering, why not using a thicker wood piece to start with instead of glueing the three together? Sorry I am in the process of trying to make one myself and looking at all the options.
If I remember correctly I used cut-offs. Of course you can make a ring out of one piece. Although I think I altered the grain direction of the middle piece to prevent splitting along the grain.
Hello Fabian, excellent job... and thanks a lot for sharing. Could you just explain me why you stuck 3 thin layers of apple wood at the beginning, and why not taking only 1 piece that would be thicker ? Is there any reason ? Cheers, Julien
Thank you Julien! If I remember correctly I used cut-offs. Of course you can make a ring out of one piece. Although I think I altered the grain direction of the middle piece to prevent splitting along the grain.
What sanding substance did you use initially on the stone inlay to smooth it out? Since you didn't use lathe tools to smooth it.. I'd rather not have to buy more tools when switching to stone but dont want to destroy my current set. So curious about that rough sander you used first. Thanks
Fantastic video! One question... I've been binging on ring creation vids because I need to replace my lost ring. However a lot of vids show the rings being immersed in a UV coating, then "sealed" under light, etc.. Would that process only be needed if one was wearing their ring outside, etc??
Thank you. I have no idea! I know there are UV finishes which cure under UV light. That has nothing to do with UV resistance but with the curing speed. Also there are finishes that provide UV protection. That means the development of the natural patina will be slowed down (If that's what you want). I don't know what type of finish was used in your example but I would say use the type of finish you like and you are compfortable to work with.
Hallo Fabian, kannst Du mir bitte sagen, in welchem Projekt Du die Clou Ballenpolitur verwendet hast? Ich finde es nicht mehr. Will das auch mal ausprobieren. Danke !!! Grüße aus der Heide Eugen
Hallo Eugen. Oje gute Frage, die Ballenmattierung von Clou habe ich hier verwendet: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-Fi8hlhLaKjk.html Ich bin gar nicht sicher, ob es noch weitere Projekte gab!?
Ganz wunderbar! ... hast du die Angebetete damit rumgekriegt - musst du jetzt auch für alle ihre Freundinnen Ringe anfertigen? :-) ... ES LEBE DIE WERKSTATT!
Can I have all the names of the tools you used such as the specific type of lathe and where you got the stones what kind of glue specifically anything you have descriptions of and for
To cut the blank I used a scroll saw. The lathe is a cheap mini lathe I can't recommend buying but any lathe will do. The stones I bought on ebay. The glue is ordinary CA Glue (super glue). Als lathe tools I used a scraper and a mini scraper made from a small screw driver.
@@FabiansTinyWorkshop what kind of wood is that also. And did you use and chisels. Also, lastly, what kind of wood did you put on the lathe that held the ring up. Sorry I'm asking so many questions but I want to know what I need
Vielen Dank :) Bei ebay z.B. mal nach "Splitterkette" suchen. Die gibt es für wenige Euros. Diese Steinsplitter habe ich dann einfach mit einem Hammer kleiner gehauen.
Hi! very beautiful! What is a glue that you use to glue like stones? I have a hard time finding the right glue. Sorry for the bad english, kkk, I'm Brazilian! Thank you!
love watch'n your stuff man, could you PLEASE do an old artisan a favor though. . . i know it sounds "off" to some and I've been called "metro-sexual" over the following . . . .BUT, go see a manicurist at least once a month, your hands man! . . . .I mean burns, cuts, scars all part of the landscape. . . but its almost painful see'n the condition of your nails, cuticle and skin! :) maybe its cause I'm a Ginger-Ogre I notice that more heh. Cool ring. . . great vid, keep it up!