When he retired about 10 years ago from
a career as a biochemistry teacher, Malcolm Zander had "no
knowledge of woodturning, and no interest in it." That has
changed.
The first step in his road to
woodturning came about when someone suggested he go and look at the
creations of his wife's executive assistant's son. Woodturner Jason
Russell's work "looked interesting" to Malcolm -- "it
looked like fun."
Back then, Malcolm had done well enough
in the stock market that he was able to buy a lathe, wood and
equipment in order to try out turning. Actually, he said, when he
bought the lathe, he was told, "'If you don't like it, you can
sell it in six months for what you paid for it.' So there was no
risk."
Malcolm started out turning functional
things like salad bowls. He started attending craft shows in order to
demonstrate he was making an effort to generate income -- necessary
"if you asked the tax man for a deduction" - and started to
become more interested in ornamental turnings. "It's boring to
do salad bowls all the time," Malcolm said.
Instead, he happened upon his niche in
woodturning "by accident." Malcolm was in the midst of
turning some natural edge vases from African blackwood, and was
looking for a means of making the sapwood, which he considers an
uninteresting brown color, more exciting, when he heard about a
turning demonstration in Albany, New York. That's about a five-hour
drive from Malcolm's location in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
"The incredible thing about the
woodturning community is that everybody shares techniques. There are
no secrets," Malcolm said, and the demo by Binh Pho on piercing
with a dental tool "blew my mind. I went home and bought a
compressor, an air brush and a dental drill, and went to work. It
evolved from there."
Among the directions his work evolved
into was the project "Lacemouse," which Malcolm said "was
a lot of fun." After letting his mind wander and seek
inspiration, it had come to him that "it would be fun to make a
mouse. It sat in my mind for two years to figure out how to make it."
Malcolm notes that, due to his pension
from teaching, "I'm very fortunate in that, unlike a number of
other professional turners who have to make a living at it, I don't.
I can spend as long as I want to play around with details and try to
get it right. If you're turning to make a living, you can't afford to
do that."
He's able to spend time trying new
things, a process he likes, "because that's how you grow."
His latest project, for instance, was a turned teapot. "I'd
never made one before. It took a month to figure out how to do it and
another month to make it. It was so much fun, I'm going to make some
more."

For his projects, Malcolm frequently
uses hard exotic woods like African blackwood and pink ivory. "When
you're piercing wood, it needs to be strong to take the fine detail
in the fine little cuts," he said. "It helps if the wood is
pretty, too."
Malcolm, who is originally from New
Zealand, has also made a couple of items from some of that country's
unique woods. Swamp kauri, for example, is "very turnable,"
Malcolm said. One piece of the certified 40,000-year-old wood he had
turned was a burgundy color, while the other was green.
Unless you get the root or crotch wood
of kauri, though, Malcolm said it tends to be rather grainless -- and
he thinks the wood from New Zealand's' rimu tree is much more
beautiful. Part of the flora that developed during New Zealand's long
isolation from other continents, rimu is, however, a restricted wood
-- so turning with it is a rare occasion.
Not so rare these days is Malcolm's
participation and interest in the woodturning world. Before picking
up the post-retirement activity, he had dabbled in woodworking by
making simple things like cheeseboards. Today, in addition to
producing all of his own turnings, he serves on the board of the
American Association of Woodturners. "In 10 years, I've come a
long way," he said.