Olive wood cutting boards

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Serious question: Are we buying just to buy because it's olive wood? Or are they big/cheap enough to cut into pen blanks at a great unit cost?
they typically stock what they call an olivewood charcuterie board for the holidays. They're usually between 3/4 and 1 inch thick and are all burls. They make really nice looking pens with a great pattern to the blanks.

Here's a couple pics of one I made a while ago

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they typically stock what they call an olivewood charcuterie board for the holidays. They're usually between 3/4 and 1 inch thick and are all burls. They make really nice looking pens with a great pattern to the blanks.

Here's a couple pics of one I made a while ago

View attachment 379439
That is very nice looking. Seems that might be worth hunting down.
 
We have a trader joes about 20-25 minutes from us. I was in the area last year and stopped by for the heck of it. I walked out with a board for me and a board for another turner who lives near me. The boards are pretty randomly shaped which I'd expect for a charcuterie type board. If you were to put a rectangle around mine when it was new I'd guess 12x15 (from memory) or 12x18? I don't remember. Either way, I think I paid maybe 15 bucks a board? Quite cheap when you think about the number of pens you can get out of that.
 
I stopped in one this morning but didn't buy one. They're $30 and probably 12x15. Not sure how many blanks I could have gotten from it. I'd have to pick through and find the less knotty most boring shaped boards and fix my straightening/jointing jig
 
I found a couple of nice olive wood boards at Marshall's and one at Home Goods about 2 yrs ago. I think they were around $10 each.
But as we all know, prices on everything are up.
After a little study to determine best attack angle, I clamped them on my sled and ran them thru the band saw to get a straight edge and went from there.

Mike
 
I stopped in one this morning but didn't buy one. They're $30 and probably 12x15. Not sure how many blanks I could have gotten from it. I'd have to pick through and find the less knotty most boring shaped boards and fix my straightening/jointing jig
A 3/4" to 1" thick 12" X 15" board will yield 36+ 4-7/8" blanks. The plus is because it depends upon what you're making. I can make slimlines starting with a 1/2" X 1/2" X 4-1/4" blank so the yield would be higher.
This doesn't take into account cutting for the best looking blanks; it's just straight cutting.
 
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