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Google the question.
https://www.google.com/search?client=saf...urces&nfpr=1It's a favorite of turners and it's been heavily covered on other forums. I've seen coverage on wood central. Amazon sells the inlace kits.
http://www.woodcentral.com/woodworking/f...go;srchid=http://www.hotsheet.com/search_results.p...rtner-pub-1316004166504112:dg922ostef6&cof=FORID:10&ie=ISO-8859-1&sa=Search&q=inlace%20instructions
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Location: Orlando, Florida
The link would be my suggestion. I'd fill up most of the voids with epoxy and save the inlay for the final surface application. No sense wasting money on inlay material that won't be seen. You might also try coloring your epoxy black and using the turquoise inlay for the final leveling.
Still Learning,
Allan Hill
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Location: South Alabama
You've gotten good advice here. Turquoise works pretty much the same for inlay as any crushed rock or fine metal filings. Other popular materials are malachite (green), coral (pink, red, white), copper, and aluminum. Regardless of what you're using, you can fill in much of the gap underneath the turquoise with something solid like epoxy or a sawdust/glue paste if you want to save materials.
Fill the void with powdered stone and heap it up a little above the surface of the surrounding wood. Saturate the surface with the thinnest CA glue (superglue) you can find. (If the void is deep, you can do this in a couple layers.) Once the glue is dry, sand the inlay level with the wood.
It's really not hard at all. Once a turner showed me how to do it, I was amazed at how easy it was.
Steve S.
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The Literary Workshop
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Location: southeastern VA
If you have any lapidary/rock/gem clubs or shows in your area, you might check with them. Friends around here have found sandwich-sized baggies of turquoise (chips and dust) for $5/bag.
The local turners seem to use CA and turquoise to fill small voids and epoxy and turquoise for larger voids.
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