Willee
Member
Of all the Pen kits available today the SlimLine is still my favorite pen to turn.
The possibility's are limited only by my imagination and creativeness.
This is one I just turned using two brass washers and a plastic bead for the center band.
The material comes from Brunswick bowling alley lanes.
The Brunswick bowling alley that was in the Flour Bluff area of Corpus Christi Texas closed
many years ago and the lanes were dismantled and stored.
About 6 years ago the owner decided to sell them off as bench tops.
I bought a few sections for the old aged maple (makes super pool cue shafts) but also found some black material I used in this pen.
It was the foul line and the pin placement markers inlay-ed into the wood lanes.
It is a very hard rubber and is layered with one black layer and one lighter grayish layer.
When turned it the layered grain structure comes out very subtle and looks like an Ebony.
The eye can see what is very hard to photograph but I will give it my best to show the grain pattern in this material.
Photo #3
Such beautiful material almost trashed.
Still need a bit more polishing on this one.
The possibility's are limited only by my imagination and creativeness.
This is one I just turned using two brass washers and a plastic bead for the center band.
The material comes from Brunswick bowling alley lanes.
The Brunswick bowling alley that was in the Flour Bluff area of Corpus Christi Texas closed
many years ago and the lanes were dismantled and stored.
About 6 years ago the owner decided to sell them off as bench tops.
I bought a few sections for the old aged maple (makes super pool cue shafts) but also found some black material I used in this pen.
It was the foul line and the pin placement markers inlay-ed into the wood lanes.
It is a very hard rubber and is layered with one black layer and one lighter grayish layer.
When turned it the layered grain structure comes out very subtle and looks like an Ebony.
The eye can see what is very hard to photograph but I will give it my best to show the grain pattern in this material.
Photo #3
Such beautiful material almost trashed.
Still need a bit more polishing on this one.