Saturday, September 18, 2010

Claude Lethiecq's Chinese Ball display at the 2010 AAW symposium

Here's a video I put together from the 2010 AAW symposium where I interviewed Claude Lethiecq about his amazing work.

2 comments:

  1. Anonymous11:43 PM

    It would have been nice if he said how he gets those little balls inside the bigger balls on top of the star and who was the person he was competing with? did that other person's things look the same or different, I wonder. Pretty nice except he mumbles so.

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  2. Chinese balls are turned from a single piece of wood. The technique involves a sphere jig and some specialized tools, plus lots of patience.

    Here's a write-up from Bill Neddow on another site where I posted this video:

    I have known Claude for quite a number of years and he is
    probably the biggest undiscovered treasure in woodturning
    in North America. (He is actually quite well know in
    Europe.)

    He was demonstrating at the first organized woodturning
    meeting I ever attended. He was showing us how he does
    flutes on his deep hollow turnings. His approach was
    different. His concepts were incredibly well thought out, his
    jigs were gems of construction and the results were
    fantastic. I was mesmerized. I became aware that my
    mouth was very dry, which brought me out of my
    mesmerized state enough to realize that the reason my
    mouth was dry was that my mouth was hanging open. I
    looked around the room. Everybody was doing the same
    thing. It was quite a demonstration (of turning, that is!)

    I got to know him after this, and realized he is a very open
    and giving man, willing to share his experiences and pass
    on his knowledge. In the video he mentions how he
    had a friend who was doing the same type of turning and
    there was a friendly competition between them. The friend
    was Dan MacDonald, who died recently from cancer. It
    was a friendly competition that went on for years. One of
    them made a simple Chinese ball, the other doubled the
    number of balls inside. This went on until you could not
    pack more balls inside -- then they came up of the idea of
    adding a star to the center (still all made with one solid block
    of wood). When they exhausted this concept, they started
    making intertwined bundles of balls -- and when this started
    reaching the limits of physics -- they added stars to this
    mix. For years, they did things everyone thought was
    impossible.

    Quite a pair of guys. I hope someday, someone writes their
    story.

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