Popular Post rdatelle Posted Tuesday at 10:02 PM Popular Post Report Posted Tuesday at 10:02 PM (edited) Well my grandkids wanted to know if I could make some bangles out of wood for them to sell and make money. I found a pattern on Sue Mey’s site. There were 15 different designs and three siges, sm, med, and lg. I have to say they were not that easy to make. Very slow process. Uses 1 1/2 x 1 1/2 x 4 inch square. Made some out of Walnut, Cherry and Birch, also made two out of Cedar and Butternut which I didn't take a picture of. Used a #7 skip blade Edited Wednesday at 04:01 PM by rdatelle heppnerguy, TexasDIY, Dave Monk and 9 others 12 Quote
Scrappile Posted Tuesday at 10:06 PM Report Posted Tuesday at 10:06 PM I say those are really first-rate. Never have seen ones made with a scroll saw before. I'm anxious to know how well they sell. Great job! rdatelle 1 Quote
Ber Gueda Posted Wednesday at 08:00 AM Report Posted Wednesday at 08:00 AM Wow... Just curious to know how are they done on the scroll saw? Any tutorial available? rdatelle 1 Quote
barb.j.enders Posted Wednesday at 12:06 PM Report Posted Wednesday at 12:06 PM Those are lovely. Hope they sell well. rdatelle 1 Quote
jerry walters Posted Wednesday at 01:24 PM Report Posted Wednesday at 01:24 PM Nicely done Ralph. Jerry rdatelle 1 Quote
rdatelle Posted Wednesday at 02:08 PM Author Report Posted Wednesday at 02:08 PM 5 hours ago, Ber Gueda said: Wow... Just curious to know how are they done on the scroll saw? Any tutorial available? There done like a normal compound cut. Here's a sample pattern. You fold the dotted lines which go around the side of the wood your using and the circle part will be on the flat part of the wood. The only thing different with these patterns is the circle part is four inches which you really can't drill through so what you do is once the pattern is glued on the wood, you cut it in half on the solid line. You now have two separate pieces to work on. Once cut out you glue the two rings back together to get your bangle. Then sand it. Hope that helps. wombatie, Scrappile and barb.j.enders 1 2 Quote
Scrappile Posted Wednesday at 02:15 PM Report Posted Wednesday at 02:15 PM (edited) @rdatelle I could not find them on Shelia Landry's site but found some on Sue Mey's site. I was hoping to see something about how it is done And there you go, answered before I got through asking! Edited Wednesday at 02:16 PM by Scrappile rdatelle 1 Quote
Wichman Posted Wednesday at 02:37 PM Report Posted Wednesday at 02:37 PM Too bad it's Sue May ( I don't like the conditions of use; 1 pattern = 10 items, 2nd purchased pattern = 10 additional items, if it's a hot seller, or you have lots of family, buy a commercial license, no details of what that would cost. And it's poisoned the well of pattern companies, The Winfield Collection has changed to the same concept. ) rdatelle 1 Quote
Denny Knappen Posted Wednesday at 03:30 PM Report Posted Wednesday at 03:30 PM 1 hour ago, rdatelle said: There done like a normal compound cut. Here's a sample pattern. You fold the dotted lines which go around the side of the wood your using and the circle part will be on the flat part of the wood. The only thing different with these patterns is the circle part is four inches which you really can't drill through so what you do is once the pattern is glued on the wood, you cut it in half on the solid line. You now have two separate pieces to work on. Once cut out you glue the two rings back together to get your bangle. Then sand it. Hope that helps. Hi Ralph. Under which category is it listed? rdatelle 1 Quote
rdatelle Posted Wednesday at 03:47 PM Author Report Posted Wednesday at 03:47 PM 1 hour ago, Scrappile said: @rdatelle I could not find them on Shelia Landry's site but found some on Sue Mey's site. I was hoping to see something about how it is done And there you go, answered before I got through asking! Sorry Paul, you’re right. It was Sue Mey. Scroll saw artist. Quote
rdatelle Posted Wednesday at 03:57 PM Author Report Posted Wednesday at 03:57 PM 20 minutes ago, Denny Knappen said: Hi Ralph. Under which category is it listed? Hi Denny, it’s under Sue Mey’s site, not Sheila’s. Here’s the number. Hope that helps. Quote
Ber Gueda Posted Wednesday at 04:18 PM Report Posted Wednesday at 04:18 PM 2 hours ago, rdatelle said: There done like a normal compound cut. Here's a sample pattern. You fold the dotted lines which go around the side of the wood your using and the circle part will be on the flat part of the wood. The only thing different with these patterns is the circle part is four inches which you really can't drill through so what you do is once the pattern is glued on the wood, you cut it in half on the solid line. You now have two separate pieces to work on. Once cut out you glue the two rings back together to get your bangle. Then sand it. Hope that helps. Thanks, after reading your comments, I think that it's not for me yet. But I will keep the instructions for later on. rdatelle 1 Quote
jpburcham Posted Wednesday at 05:46 PM Report Posted Wednesday at 05:46 PM 3 hours ago, Wichman said: Too bad it's Sue May ( I don't like the conditions of use; 1 pattern = 10 items, 2nd purchased pattern = 10 additional items, if it's a hot seller, or you have lots of family, buy a commercial license, no details of what that would cost. And it's poisoned the well of pattern companies, The Winfield Collection has changed to the same concept. ) WOW - I need to read the fine print - Could get expensive ! Thanks for that "Heads Up" - BTW - I verified the site, and this information is accurate. Wichman and rdatelle 2 Quote
barb.j.enders Posted yesterday at 12:17 PM Report Posted yesterday at 12:17 PM 21 hours ago, Wichman said: Too bad it's Sue May ( I don't like the conditions of use; 1 pattern = 10 items, 2nd purchased pattern = 10 additional items, if it's a hot seller, or you have lots of family, buy a commercial license, no details of what that would cost. And it's poisoned the well of pattern companies, The Winfield Collection has changed to the same concept. ) In a previous discussion, someone asked "who is checking?" It does seem rather skimpy for use. rdatelle 1 Quote
don in brooklin on Posted yesterday at 03:33 PM Report Posted yesterday at 03:33 PM I really think these are cool. The pattern for a few in Issue 61 of Scroll Saw Workshop. I am going to give one a try so I can use as show and tell in the compound cutting course I do. barb.j.enders and rdatelle 1 1 Quote
rdatelle Posted 23 hours ago Author Report Posted 23 hours ago 1 hour ago, don in brooklin on said: I really think these are cool. The pattern for a few in Issue 61 of Scroll Saw Workshop. I am going to give one a try so I can use as show and tell in the compound cutting course I do. You can do it Don. Quote
rdatelle Posted 23 hours ago Author Report Posted 23 hours ago On 4/1/2025 at 6:06 PM, Scrappile said: I say those are really first-rate. Never have seen ones made with a scroll saw before. I'm anxious to know how well they sell. Great job! I sold a few for $20 Quote
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