Afternoon Steve, thank you for the micro turnings. Very well done, it amazes us beginners to the skew. Gotta tell you I just did a few Texas tooth-Picks, it was really enjoyable to do. The biggest thing I noticed was it made me use a very light touch and a big improvement in tool control. Hey all you turners out there, knock out a few for practice the man is not a braggard . He is showing us with practice we too can learn the skew, very, very generous on his part. I Thank You!
Sweet Steve, the part I really appreciate about your turnings: you put down the skew for another tool is when it is absolutely necessary, that is confidence. thanks for the post.
@@woodturner21 I would love to see some more tutorial videos from you. Seeing your speed and accuracy as a production turner is amazing. I am very new to wood turning and would love the opportunity to learn from a master like you. Thank you for sharing what you do. 😊 👍 🇦🇺
Ah! I am back to work operating a backhoe putting in water line for irrigation. I will have to be satisfied watching talented people like yourself. Keep turning, love the videos....!
Amazing work as always. That has to be the most fanciest toothpick I've ever seen, even for Barbie, lol When you retire I think you have a new line of business, making dolls houses.
Thank you Paul, as for retirement none of my family retired they have all worked until their health stopped them. Woodturning is an addiction you just can’t stop. :)
I've worked out that you are not Steve Jones, but Paul Daniels!! If I wanted to feel even more inferior I would have a conversation with the wife (duck, ha). Once again effortless brilliance, I love watching your videos, thank you
I wach your videos often just for the joy of it. Are the dolls furnitures not just made in factories now a days, is it practised in small shops any more? Júlíus
Once again you did it again Steve, as usual I am in AWE again. What kind of wood did you use for the toothpick? Looked just like some of the pen blanks I have laying around.
Thank you for another show of your skew mastery. Always a treat. But, so odd to see your spindle turning slower than the usual 35,000 RPM (at least that is how it looks most of the time). :D
@@woodturner21 , thanks for getting back to me. I'll be practicing making finials all day. I belong to a club in California, but no club meetings do to the virus.