Monday, June 5, 2017

Create Your Own Hand Turned Wood Bowls And Vessels

By Larry Fisher


It is a common belief among the more spiritually minded that human beings are meant to be creators in our third dimensional realm. It may be that when we fail to implement creative pursuits in our daily lives, we lose sight of our potential. It is for this reason that some people take up the hobby of making hand turned wood bowls and vessels.

They sometimes work with oak and sometimes with pine. Artists will say that the time spent turning a piece of oak on the lathe is a meditative, Zen type of activity that brings them great inner peace. Some even elevate their art form by learning to carve patterns or pictures into the pieces, making them even more beautiful and personal to the artist.

While people often set these out as mere decoration, they are made to be used on a regular basis. Often the artist will create items as gifts for family members or friends. This makes the piece of art very personal.

Anthropologists claim that our predecessors would spend a great part of their lives working on a single piece. In fact, they often learned the skill from their grandparents, and their piece might be handed down, along with those made by their own ancestors, for many hundreds of years. These people would painstakingly carve out the bowl or vessel with stones or even sand, and the process remained the same for thousands of years.

The power of holding a vessel made by a great, great, great ancestor is something modern humans can barely even comprehend. While making such items on a lathe might not take the lifetime of effort that our predecessors were known for, but the outcome is just as special. When we give such items to our friends and family, we cannot know how long they will be used and cherished by the recipients.

These hobbies can also provide the creator with an additional source of income. Homemade items fetch a high price both online and in the specialty marketplace. It is not uncommon for local antique shops to sell the creations of local artists who also have other jobs within the community.

As we mature, our hobbies often become more important than the jobs we work on a daily basis. This is because the act of creation is more rewarding to us than simply making money to pay bills with. If a person can make a career out of a hobby, then they begin to learn what true job satisfaction means.

Spiritually minded people may be right about creative and artistic expression being so vital to our sense of personal well-being. Unplugging the television and taking up a hobby that allows us to express ourselves may be the perfect rescue from the ills of daily life. Perhaps more hobbies would mean fewer harmful lifestyle behaviors that are often based on boredom and a sense of futility about life.




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