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I’m playing with multi-axis turning, doing both circular cross section as well as intersecting arcs stuff - specifically simple stylized standing human forms. You’ve probably seen them - the legs and hips turned on one axis, the waste, torso, neck and head turned on another. When viewed in profile the results are recognizable as a standing human form. Viewed from the front or rear things get less recognizable - humans not being symetrical about just one or two axis (axisese, or is it axi?).
So I added an additional axis, allowing the stomach and the front of the chest to be flattened a bit. Then I added two more axis, their centers being 90s to the three. Ib line, axis already turned. The latter let me flatten the sides of the thighs, hips and derriere to get more of a trapezoidal cross section rather than a circular or oval cross section. Another axis and just the face side of the head was changed, making it less rounded.
That’s when it occured to me - “Hey, this isn’t turning anymore - it’s carving.”. Then I thought of the works of Bin Pho, Malcom Tibbet, Escoulen, Sfirri, Hunter - carvers/sculptors - some also painters - the lathe and turning being only one of many tools and techniques used to create their pieces - the wood often merely one of the mediums in their works.
And that raised the question - when does a piece go from a turning to a piece of sculpture? If you aren’t cutting all the way around the piece, are you still “turning” - or are you carving?
Of all the forms of woodworking, “Turning” seems to have the least defined boundaries. Turning - The Fuzzy Edges Form Of Woodworking.


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I would say you are in the "Fuzzy Edges" when you are no longer turning the complete piece. Using a router, or sculpturing holes in certain areas and things like that would fall into sculpturing.


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