This was in the 5 I posted a week or two ago, but finally put a wrap on it. Black Lizard wrap.
Paul Dayton said:In woodworking, a veneer is a thin piece of wood. You have 4 pieces of wood and 5 pieces of paper. I don't see any fancy grain in your paper.
This method of glueing a piece of paper between two pieces of wood has ben practiced for almost 1,000 years. It is the method used to produce what are called split turnings. I myself have done it to produce mulltiple identical turnings that have a flat back and turned front. You simply just center the axis of your turning on the paper layer. When you are done turning the wood, you remove the turned piece, put it on end and align a wedge or knife with the paper then force the pieces of wood apart along the weak surface, the paper'
It looks nice and I told Ron Haley this some years ago when he started doing this in his cues.
WilleeCue said:If the paper creates a "weak" bond is it a good idea to use it in the points of a cue?
Perhaps the glue saturates the paper enough that there is no weakness.
Paul, despite your excellent explanation, I still dont understand quite how a "split turning" would be used in cue making. (other than decorative as in this cue)
Where and how would you use the pieces once separated at the paper bond.
I don't see any fancy grain in your paper.