Saturday, July 13, 2013

New Click Pens! Now online!

 We Present The Click Pen



You spoke and we answered. The new Click Pen is thicker and heavier than our Slimline Twist pens and takes a Parker refill. It can come in any of the styles you have already come to love from Bassett Handcrafts so if you don't see what's already pre-made, drop us a line and we'll do a Custom Creation-- Just for you!

Now available in our Etsy Shop for $27, including sales tax!


Saturday, July 6, 2013

The Pen Making Process

Back in May, Bassett Handcrafts spent the entire weekend down in Mission Viejo at their annual Art's Alive festival to do LIVE wood-turning demos and showcase some of our inventory. While we were there, we decided to document the step by step process for making a slimline twist pen.

Step 1- Mark the length of the pen
on the wood or "pen blank" for
each pen half.

Step 1: Marking
After you have selected your pen blank and have your tools and pen kit available, the first thing you need to do is take one of the brass tubes from your pen kit and mark how long it is on your pen blank. A sharpie will do because any marks you make will eventually be sanded away so don't worry here.

Then, remove the brass tube and place it right on the mark you just made and measure the length out again and place another mark on the wood. This will give you the correct size for both the top and bottom half of your pen. Since both tubes are the same size, you can just use the one to mark the wood.






Step 2- Cut off the excess wood
carefully.

Step 2: Cut your blank to size
Whether you use a band saw, a hand saw, or some other power tool, you need to remove the excess tip from the markings you just made.

If your careful, you can have the lathe run on a low speed setting and carefully press down with a handsaw and let the lathe do the cutting for you... but this is not something someone inexperienced should do.

(Just use a hand saw)











Step 3: Drill your blank
This gets a bit tricky if you need to drill on a lathe and don't have a separate tool for drilling pen blanks. You need to make sure you drill straight, otherwise when you turn the blank later, the wood will chip and blow out on you. The easiest way to get started is to start making a small divot in the blank, as pictured below.

Once you have your starter hole, select the proper sized drill bit for your tube diameter. If your brass tubes are 7 mm, use a 7 mm drill bit. If the tubes are 8 mm, use a 8 mm drill bit.



Step 4: Cut and Tube
After you have drilled your blank all the way through, you will need to cut the wood along the first marker you placed in step one to split the wood in two equal sized pieces.

After your wood is cut, you will need to insert and glue your brass tubes into the wood and let them dry. This can be done really fast with superglue and an instant superglue hardening spray. It helps to take some sandpaper to the brass tubes to give them a little rough surface to help the glue grab and hold on. Once the tubes are dry and secure, you will slide them back onto your lathe, making sure to put your busings at the from, middle, and end of each piece. (your lathe should do BUSHING-WOOD-BUSHING-WOOD-BUSHING-- If you are doing a wood center band instead of a metal one, then you would set up your lathe with (Bushing-Wood-Centerband-Wood-Bushing) 


Step 5: Turn!
 Now the fun, take those tools and turn and shape your pen!

Step 6: Sand and Buff
 Once you get the shape and feel for your pen, then take either sand paper, or sanding sticks and polish and smooth the finished wood.



Step 7: Assemble
 Take you pen off the lathe and assemble it with the rest of the hardware...