LittleSister
Well-Known Member
If it's not too long, a domestic oven might make a reasonable kiln!
I think even a long domestic oven could do the trick!
If it's not too long, a domestic oven might make a reasonable kiln!
About four feet long and up to about four inches in diameter, but rather thicker at one end, giving it a vaguely anatomical appearance....at 8kg falling to 5.6kg it can't be a whole log - I don't think you've ever said what it was you'd actually retrieved...
Interesting, very interesting...perhaps a row of disposable barbecues under a large-diameter iron or clay pipe, would serve? I think I'm joking.
About four feet long and up to about four inches in diameter, but rather thicker at one end, giving it a vaguely anatomical appearance.
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There it is, strung up by my old lazyjacks.
The speed at which it dries really doesn't matter, I've no plans for it although it might be of abstract artistic interest, sanded, varnished and set over the fireplace (or somewhere else where its purpose might be less easily misinterpreted).
Would it be unwise to seal it by varnishing, unless it had first been kiln-dried to remove internal moisture?
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A saw mill won't know. Judging by now much new timber warps and twists as soon as you look at it, any saw mill I have ever seen does not wait for the wood to be dry before they saw and plane it.No idea, I'm afraid. I'd ask a local saw mill if I were you; they must know how long it takes for wood from a tree to dry naturally. But I expect it depends on the species of the wood. But I think it's years, not months.
That will depend on how dry the atmosphere is.Is it possible to estimate how long (if ever) it might be before my branch will fully dry naturally, slung in the rafters of an often-stifling garage?
The ones I know saw it and then stack it to season.A saw mill won't know. Judging by now much new timber warps and twists as soon as you look at it, any saw mill I have ever seen does not wait for the wood to be dry before they saw and plane it.
Right now, I doubt there's any more moisture in the garage than outdoors. It seems well ventilated by a 20mm gap beneath the door plus small vents in the walls. It's also terribly hot in there. In winter (in fact as recently as April, when the log had shed 2kg in 30 days) it's often pretty dank in there.That will depend on how dry the atmosphere is.
I'm not sure it can be 'art' if it isn't seen or otherwise sensed. Does its photo here make it art? On that basis there's a risk that untold heaps of Ebay rubble in storerooms globally, could be classed as art, or at any rate worthy of interpretation and pretentious pondering.Is it art while it's hanging in the garage, or must it first be put over the fireplace, or in a gallery, to become so?