01 / Manifesto

Walnut hollow form — member workshop, Vermont

The Grain Community

"Every piece of wood has already decided what it wants to become.

Your job is to listen while it spins."

from the community, for the community.

A place for the retired engineer who finally has time for the lathe he bought in 1997. The young maker selling bowls at weekend markets. The hobbyist watching roughing videos at midnight.

4,200+Members Turning
31K+Pieces Shared
680+Guides & Plans
02 / Maker Stories

The people behind the shavings

Elderly craftsman in workshop apron holding a smooth osage orange bowl with natural edge, warm workshop lighting
01 / Asheville, NC
68 years old·Asheville, NC

Robert Hensley

The Engineer Who Came Home

Thirty-one years at Caterpillar designing hydraulic systems, and Robert always kept the lathe in the garage. "I told myself I'd get to it when I retired," he says, running a thumb across the lip of a freshly turned osage orange bowl. "Turns out the wood was more patient than I was." Now he turns six days a week, giving pieces to grandchildren and selling the rest at the Asheville Saturday market. His bowls have a mechanical precision softened by something warmer — the kind of work that happens when an engineer finally lets his hands lead.

"The tolerances in woodturning are different. The wood decides. You negotiate."
Close up of weathered woodworker hands examining end grain pattern on a turned wooden bowl

Signature technique: thin-walled natural-edge bowls from locally foraged timber.

Young woman with natural hair standing at a lathe in a bright workshop, focused expression, wood shavings on floor
02 / Portland, OR
29 years old·Portland, OR

Maya Okonkwo

Bowls at the Saturday Market

Maya started turning at 24 after a YouTube rabbit hole that lasted three weeks and ended with a secondhand Jet lathe in her apartment building's storage room. Two years later, she has a proper shop, a waitlist for her work, and a following built on showing people what cherry looks like when you cut with the grain instead of against it. "People think it's the finish that makes a bowl beautiful," she says, pulling a piece of figured maple from the drying rack. "It's not. It's the cut. Every decision you make at 1,200 RPM is permanent." She sells at the Portland Saturday Market every weekend, rain included.

"Every decision at 1,200 RPM is permanent. That's what I love about it."
Beautifully finished maple platter with live edge and natural figure on wooden workshop bench

Known for: live-edge platters and thin-walled vessels in Pacific Northwest hardwoods.

03 / The Library

Guides, techniques, and turning lore

Browse Full Archive
04 / Community

Signal from the shavings

I found Grain six months into turning and immediately felt like I'd walked into the right workshop. The people here actually answer questions — they don't just send you to a YouTube search.

Middle-aged man with grey beard smiling warmly, workshop apron visible
James Whitfield
Hobbyist turner, 3 years · Knoxville, TN

Currently turning: elm burl bowl

The technique library alone is worth the membership. I spent two weeks on the skew chisel guide and finally — finally — stopped getting catches. Grain taught me what my local club couldn't.

Woman in her 50s with reading glasses and warm smile, natural light background
Patricia Sorensen
Weekend turner, 7 years · Madison, WI

Currently turning: lidded boxes in maple

I sell at three markets and Grain is where I developed my eye. Seeing what other members make — the forms, the finishes — raised my standard without anyone telling me to. It just happened.

Young Black man with close-cropped hair and focused expression, workshop background
Darius Osei
Market seller, 4 years · Atlanta, GA

Currently turning: natural-edge platters

4,200 turners. One bench. Infinite grain.

05 / Join

Pull up a stool. The lathe is running.

Warm workshop interior with lathe in foreground, finished bowls on shelves behind, sawdust on floor and amber light
Full technique library access
Member-only project plans
Monthly turning challenges
Direct community forum

Membership is free. We ask only three things — and only one of them is about you as a turner.

This community cares about craft before credentials.

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