cb

charlie b

10/08/2004 5:53 PM

Harry Potter Magic Wands + Scraps + Kids = FUN

The summer's almost over and none of the neighborhood kids
could come up with summer woodworking projects. Then
the Harry Potter movie came out. "Can we make me a magic
wand?"

Magic Wands are perfect projects. A handle about 4 to 5
inches long, maybe 3/4 to one inch in diameter, the wand
end - 7 to 10 inches long, tapering from maybe 5/8 inches
to almost 1/4 inch. All those scraps and cut offs suddenly
become magic wand material and half the tools in the shop
get used.

Rip to get a square piece then turn them loose with a
block plane, SurForm or spoke shave to knock off the
corners then off to the mini-lathe to get the handle
round. You do the turning and they do the sanding to
make it nice and smooth. They block plane or spoke
shave or SurForm or sand the wand taper. You set up
the handle on the drill press and they drill the dowel
hole. Another drill press set up for drilling the
dowel hole on the wand part and they do the drilling.
They do the dowel glueing. They pick the finish and
Viola! - their very own magic wand!

So far
a rosewood handled bubinga wand
a maple handled ebony wand
a padouk handled pruple heart wand

On the list
mahogany handled maple wand
teak handled sage orange wand

Fun projects for kids and adult sorcerer's
assistant. And a worthy use of those precious
scraps you just couldn't part with. The
memories created will linger long after
a belief in magic is lost.

Will post some pics to a.b.p.w. when I can get
the ones already done back for a photo session.
Am hoping to include kids' descriptions of their
magic wands as well.

charlie b


This topic has 7 replies

DH

Dave Hinz

in reply to charlie b on 10/08/2004 5:53 PM

11/08/2004 2:54 PM

On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 23:11:59 -0400, J. Clarke <[email protected]> wrote:
> charlie b wrote:
>
>> So far
>> a rosewood handled bubinga wand
>> a maple handled ebony wand
>> a padouk handled pruple heart wand
>
> But where do you get the phoenix feather? :)

Mail order from Ollivander's, Diagon Alley, London UK, of course.

Dave Hinz

cb

charlie b

in reply to charlie b on 10/08/2004 5:53 PM

11/08/2004 11:54 AM

> J.Clarke
> But where do you get the phoenix feather? :)

In Phoenix of course

> Dan V
> You got fancy with it. My 8 y.o. HP wannabe is stuck with a pretty
> little piece of cherry turned down. I did all the work, handed it to
> him. I told him to let me know if it worked.

Kid + imagination = magic (the wand is merely a catalyst

> Wayne K.
> Just imagining all these kids running around the neighborhood now
> playing Pirates of the Caribbean.

Pirates of the Caribbean?

> It's all fun and games till somebody
> loses an eye. Then the inquisition starts "where did you get that pointed
> stick?" "Mr. Charlie made it for me."

Wands are delivered to parent(s) along with a suggestion
"The Two Foot Rule"
(the tip of the wand can't get closer than two feet of another
human or the magic stops working) and that if the child
misbehaves the wand goes away for a day or two.

> You should put a warning label on them.
> Some people just have to take the fun out of everything.

Not in my neighborhood. The adults all keep an eye on
the kids and don't hesitate to intervene if te kids are
doing something they shoulldn't.

Kids sure keep things interesting

charlie b



.

GT

"Gene T"

in reply to charlie b on 10/08/2004 5:53 PM

11/08/2004 11:47 AM

Charlie,
Someone is selling the same type of wands on Ebay.
Gene
"charlie b" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> The summer's almost over and none of the neighborhood kids
> could come up with summer woodworking projects. Then
> the Harry Potter movie came out. "Can we make me a magic
> wand?"
>
> Magic Wands are perfect projects. A handle about 4 to 5
> inches long, maybe 3/4 to one inch in diameter, the wand
> end - 7 to 10 inches long, tapering from maybe 5/8 inches
> to almost 1/4 inch. All those scraps and cut offs suddenly
> become magic wand material and half the tools in the shop
> get used.
>
> Rip to get a square piece then turn them loose with a
> block plane, SurForm or spoke shave to knock off the
> corners then off to the mini-lathe to get the handle
> round. You do the turning and they do the sanding to
> make it nice and smooth. They block plane or spoke
> shave or SurForm or sand the wand taper. You set up
> the handle on the drill press and they drill the dowel
> hole. Another drill press set up for drilling the
> dowel hole on the wand part and they do the drilling.
> They do the dowel glueing. They pick the finish and
> Viola! - their very own magic wand!
>
> So far
> a rosewood handled bubinga wand
> a maple handled ebony wand
> a padouk handled pruple heart wand
>
> On the list
> mahogany handled maple wand
> teak handled sage orange wand
>
> Fun projects for kids and adult sorcerer's
> assistant. And a worthy use of those precious
> scraps you just couldn't part with. The
> memories created will linger long after
> a belief in magic is lost.
>
> Will post some pics to a.b.p.w. when I can get
> the ones already done back for a photo session.
> Am hoping to include kids' descriptions of their
> magic wands as well.
>
> charlie b

JC

"J. Clarke"

in reply to charlie b on 10/08/2004 5:53 PM

10/08/2004 11:11 PM

charlie b wrote:

> The summer's almost over and none of the neighborhood kids
> could come up with summer woodworking projects. Then
> the Harry Potter movie came out. "Can we make me a magic
> wand?"
>
> Magic Wands are perfect projects. A handle about 4 to 5
> inches long, maybe 3/4 to one inch in diameter, the wand
> end - 7 to 10 inches long, tapering from maybe 5/8 inches
> to almost 1/4 inch. All those scraps and cut offs suddenly
> become magic wand material and half the tools in the shop
> get used.
>
> Rip to get a square piece then turn them loose with a
> block plane, SurForm or spoke shave to knock off the
> corners then off to the mini-lathe to get the handle
> round. You do the turning and they do the sanding to
> make it nice and smooth. They block plane or spoke
> shave or SurForm or sand the wand taper. You set up
> the handle on the drill press and they drill the dowel
> hole. Another drill press set up for drilling the
> dowel hole on the wand part and they do the drilling.
> They do the dowel glueing. They pick the finish and
> Viola! - their very own magic wand!
>
> So far
> a rosewood handled bubinga wand
> a maple handled ebony wand
> a padouk handled pruple heart wand
>
> On the list
> mahogany handled maple wand
> teak handled sage orange wand
>
> Fun projects for kids and adult sorcerer's
> assistant. And a worthy use of those precious
> scraps you just couldn't part with. The
> memories created will linger long after
> a belief in magic is lost.
>
> Will post some pics to a.b.p.w. when I can get
> the ones already done back for a photo session.
> Am hoping to include kids' descriptions of their
> magic wands as well.

But where do you get the phoenix feather? :)

> charlie b

--
--John
Reply to jclarke at ae tee tee global dot net
(was jclarke at eye bee em dot net)

JC

"J. Clarke"

in reply to charlie b on 10/08/2004 5:53 PM

11/08/2004 3:37 PM

charlie b wrote:

>> J.Clarke
>> But where do you get the phoenix feather? :)
>
> In Phoenix of course
>
>> Dan V
>> You got fancy with it. My 8 y.o. HP wannabe is stuck with a pretty
>> little piece of cherry turned down. I did all the work, handed it to
>> him. I told him to let me know if it worked.
>
> Kid + imagination = magic (the wand is merely a catalyst
>
>> Wayne K.
>> Just imagining all these kids running around the neighborhood now
>> playing Pirates of the Caribbean.
>
> Pirates of the Caribbean?

Currently playing on one or the other of the premium cable channels. Rather
amusing actually, if you go in for humorous ghost stories.

>> It's all fun and games till somebody
>> loses an eye. Then the inquisition starts "where did you get that pointed
>> stick?" "Mr. Charlie made it for me."
>
> Wands are delivered to parent(s) along with a suggestion
> "The Two Foot Rule"
> (the tip of the wand can't get closer than two feet of another
> human or the magic stops working) and that if the child
> misbehaves the wand goes away for a day or two.
>
>> You should put a warning label on them.
>> Some people just have to take the fun out of everything.
>
> Not in my neighborhood. The adults all keep an eye on
> the kids and don't hesitate to intervene if te kids are
> doing something they shoulldn't.
>
> Kids sure keep things interesting
>
> charlie b
>
>
>
> .

--
--John
Reply to jclarke at ae tee tee global dot net
(was jclarke at eye bee em dot net)

DV

Dan Valleskey

in reply to charlie b on 10/08/2004 5:53 PM

10/08/2004 10:44 PM


You got fancy with it. My 8 y.o. HP wannabe is stuck with a pretty
little piece of cherry turned down. I did all the work, handed it to
him. I told him to let me know if it worked.

-Dan V.

On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 17:53:35 -0700, charlie b <[email protected]>
wrote:

>The summer's almost over and none of the neighborhood kids
>could come up with summer woodworking projects. Then
>the Harry Potter movie came out. "Can we make me a magic
>wand?"
>
>Magic Wands are perfect projects. A handle about 4 to 5
>inches long, maybe 3/4 to one inch in diameter, the wand
>end - 7 to 10 inches long, tapering from maybe 5/8 inches
>to almost 1/4 inch. All those scraps and cut offs suddenly
>become magic wand material and half the tools in the shop
>get used.
>
>Rip to get a square piece then turn them loose with a
>block plane, SurForm or spoke shave to knock off the
>corners then off to the mini-lathe to get the handle
>round. You do the turning and they do the sanding to
>make it nice and smooth. They block plane or spoke
>shave or SurForm or sand the wand taper. You set up
>the handle on the drill press and they drill the dowel
>hole. Another drill press set up for drilling the
>dowel hole on the wand part and they do the drilling.
>They do the dowel glueing. They pick the finish and
>Viola! - their very own magic wand!
>
>So far
>a rosewood handled bubinga wand
>a maple handled ebony wand
>a padouk handled pruple heart wand
>
>On the list
>mahogany handled maple wand
>teak handled sage orange wand
>
>Fun projects for kids and adult sorcerer's
>assistant. And a worthy use of those precious
>scraps you just couldn't part with. The
>memories created will linger long after
>a belief in magic is lost.
>
>Will post some pics to a.b.p.w. when I can get
>the ones already done back for a photo session.
>Am hoping to include kids' descriptions of their
>magic wands as well.
>
>charlie b

WK

"Wayne K."

in reply to charlie b on 10/08/2004 5:53 PM

11/08/2004 12:46 AM

Just imagining all these kids running around the neighborhood now playing
Pirates of the Caribbean. It's all fun and games till somebody loses an
eye.
Then the inquisition starts "where did you get that pointed stick?" "Mr.
Charlie made it for me."
You should put a warning label on them.
Some people just have to take the fun out of everything.
Wayne K.

"charlie b" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> The summer's almost over and none of the neighborhood kids
> could come up with summer woodworking projects. Then
> the Harry Potter movie came out. "Can we make me a magic
> wand?"
>
> Magic Wands are perfect projects. A handle about 4 to 5
> inches long, maybe 3/4 to one inch in diameter, the wand
> end - 7 to 10 inches long, tapering from maybe 5/8 inches
> to almost 1/4 inch. All those scraps and cut offs suddenly
> become magic wand material and half the tools in the shop
> get used.
>
> Rip to get a square piece then turn them loose with a
> block plane, SurForm or spoke shave to knock off the
> corners then off to the mini-lathe to get the handle
> round. You do the turning and they do the sanding to
> make it nice and smooth. They block plane or spoke
> shave or SurForm or sand the wand taper. You set up
> the handle on the drill press and they drill the dowel
> hole. Another drill press set up for drilling the
> dowel hole on the wand part and they do the drilling.
> They do the dowel glueing. They pick the finish and
> Viola! - their very own magic wand!
>
> So far
> a rosewood handled bubinga wand
> a maple handled ebony wand
> a padouk handled pruple heart wand
>
> On the list
> mahogany handled maple wand
> teak handled sage orange wand
>
> Fun projects for kids and adult sorcerer's
> assistant. And a worthy use of those precious
> scraps you just couldn't part with. The
> memories created will linger long after
> a belief in magic is lost.
>
> Will post some pics to a.b.p.w. when I can get
> the ones already done back for a photo session.
> Am hoping to include kids' descriptions of their
> magic wands as well.
>
> charlie b


You’ve reached the end of replies