Sunday, April 4, 2021

Making an extravagant wood and epoxy resin pencil

 






















Tools and materials I propose:

Lathe

Mini machinist’s lathe

Wood turning tools set

Vacuum chamber kit

Forstner bit set

Micro mesh sanding pads

Jeweler's saw

2mm pencil refills


I wanted to see if it is possible to make a resin and wood pencil. It took much time, resources and effort to actually do it. But it worked! 


I begun by turning pieces of oak, maple, basswood and olive true. 


I then tried to split them in half using a chisel. Oak had pretty straight grain so it split really nicely. 


To make a mold, I turned a piece of spruce true. I drilled a long hole using a forstner bit. 


Then I epoxied a 2mm pencil refill in place. I then epoxied the whole piece in the mould. 


I filled the mould with epoxy and then de-gassed it in the vacuum chamber. 


I started turning the piece on the lathe to reveal the core of the mould. 


Once I was close to the core, I used the skew chisel to avoid adding too much pressure on the piece.


I then recounted the piece between centres using the graphite of the pencil as centres. I turned the piece true on the edges and then moved on the machinist’s lathe.


The machinist’s lathe is more accurate and has less vibrations. 


I dry sanded from 100 to 300. I wet sanded from 400 to 1000 grit. Then I polished using my micro mesh pads. 


You can sharpen the pencil with a regular sharpener but it’s kind of hard. So I used the belt sander instead. 


And my pencil was ready. It was a really cool experiment but that was it. See you soon with a new project video.



I would like to thank jedrek29t  because he made a similar project from which I got much inspiration. You can check it here.






Disclosure: Some of the links below are affiliate links, meaning, that at no cost to you, I get a small commission if you click through and make a purchase.


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