I wonder if I am the exception that proves the natural history rule of the woodturner's life. Please agree or disagree or tell us of your personal turning journey, whether hobby or profession. Here's mine.
I started in the late thirties with makeshift equipment, under powered, under engineered, under sharpened and used it with less than understanding. I read and gabbed and practiced and of course the more I learned, the more I upgraded. The tools became more expensive, more dedicated and more sophisticated. The bowls got bigger, the timber got rarer and my turnings spent less and less time on the kitchen table and more and more time on the coffee table or displayed on a shelf somewhere. Their surfaces became strangely 'enhanced', even assaulted and their shapes became less and less round and more and more asymmetrical until some were quite grotesque, but always pretended to be art in my mind's eye.
Over time I began retracing the same path I took as a fledging, then later a decently competent 'up to date' turner. Slowly I happily regressed back toward simple and small. I have a cache of 'big' blanks of fancy timber that's slowly rotting, I have a 16 in. lathe with 22 in. outboard capacity and a shop made mammoth contraption when in the day I tried to progress from bowls to tubs. I have a cabinet of long, and absurdly heavy turning tools and a bin of large chucks, fitments and accessories, all beginning to gather the dust of neglect.
More and more I find myself going to the shop, picking up a small nondescript blank, putting it between centers on my Jet mini, and nonchalantly turning some small, round, coved, beaded, tapered and sometimes sanded sometimes not object that's almost never given a chance for a drop dead gorgeous finish. Then tiring or bored and quickly losing some of my previous drive and turning enthusiasm, I opt for a glass of ice cold sweet tea or maybe a beer and sit down to watch a game on TV or read a rcw that's being taken hostage by spam, but still has life. Don't misunderstand me, I still love the hobby, just not with white hot enthusiasm and it's not my living or be all and end all.
Sometimes I turn a small toy. a tiny lighthouse, a chain pull, a pen, maybe a tool handle or a birdhouse or two and truly enjoy doing so. Or I might turn a useless spindle or finial and call it art or more likely throw it in the 'no need to keep, too good to dispose of' bucket. Anyone need a a useless 'thingamajig'? I've got a few dozen laying around, not to mention various purpose made tools, fitments and other abortions made over the years on my now little used mill and metal lathe.
The old axiom that the older we get, the smaller our toys (and woodturning pursuits) become, certainly applies to me. How about thee? Just be sure to know that altho I'm now in my late eighties, I can still applaud with respect and admiration all the new and innovative approaches to a turned wooden object and my return to 'small and simple' is not to denigrate any one of the great new breed of Turners. Rather, I'm just musing and have been known to exaggerate just a little. :)
Turn to Safety, Arch Fortiter