Making Captive Rings on a Baby Rattle
by Dennis Daudelin
In this photo tutorial, I will show how to make captive rings. The final
object happens to be a baby rattle.

Here is a hunk of cherry. It is about 3 inches square and 6 inches long.
It is dry and has been sitting in the shop for about 1 year.
The first step in all spindle work is make the work piece round. Here
I am using a 1 1/4 inch roughing gouge.

I am using a set of calipers to check for the 1 5/8 inch dimension that
I wanted for the rattle.

In this picture, I have now rounded off the headstock end of the
rattle (left side), created a bead on the tailstock end of the
rattle (right side) and then decided how much room to set aside
to make the captive rings. I used a spindle gouge for the shaping
and a parting tool for cutting each side of the captive ring
stock.

. Here is a close
up of the area set aside for the captive rings.

Making captive rings is relatively easy. The first step is to determine
the internal stem size and cut out the ring stock. Here I've
decided that I have enough stock for 2 captive rings. So, I've
cut down to the stem size on each side of the future captive
rings. For this step, I used a parting tool.

I have now rounded off the individual captive rings using a spindle
gouge.

This is a dental pick that I purchased a the local hardware store. I
have ground the tips into round headed scrapers; one for right
cuts and one for left cuts.

Pardon the poor picture but it shows that I've cut under the ring
from both sides and the ring has fallen to the right. The wood remaining
under the ring is now exposed.

I have taped the first captive ring to the tail stock hub and have cleaned
up the stem of the rattle. I'm not starting to cut under the second
ring to release it from the wood.

Now the second ring is cut and the wood underneath the ring is exposed
and the final part of the stem is now ready to be cleaned up. Once
I cut the stem round, I will sand it.

After sanding the stem, I want to sand the bottom (or underneath) of
both rings. To do this, I've taken a piece of 100 grit sandpaper
and wrapped it around the stem, sandpaper grit out. I've used blue
masking tape to hold the tape to the stem The sandpaper is beneath
both rings and is ready for the lathe to be turned on. I will hold
each ring in my hand as the lathe is running. The lathe drives
the sandpaper and I turn the ring and hold it against the sandpaper
to clean it up.

Here is the project after the rings have been sanded underneath.

Here is a close-up of the final rings, all sanded.

This is the project that we've made in this tutorial in it's completed
stage.

Here's a second example of a baby rattle with a thinner handle and a
single captive ring.
Now that you know how they're made, you can see that they are not that
hard!!
Best of luck in your attempt!!
Dennis