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One of our members has moved to a new shop.

Mike Pankion

Michael “Mike” A. Pankion passed away peacefully at the age of 83, at Hospice of Cincinnati, May 25, 2025
 



    


Anyone that would like to write a memory or tribute to Mike please forward it to webmaster@ovwg.org I will add your memory to this page.

See some of Mike's work here:  Mike Pankion


Obituary and some of Mike's friends comments below.


Dave Kratzer


Mike & I met nearly 20 years ago at one of Doc Bryant's Thursday woodturner gatherings. In addition to a love of woodturning we shared a previous love of aviation. We quickly became fast friends. 

Over the years we did a lot of things together. We shared side-by-side booths at the Appalachian Fest, we did Open Shop together at the OVWG Learning Center, made woodturning tools, cut and shared wood, carried on a friendly banter criticizing each others work and techniques. Others enjoyed watching our performances. 

Mike was very money and profit conscious. He made and sold a lot of beautiful turnings. He did as many as 12 to 15 craft show each year for many years. On the other hand he was generous to a fault, when the mood struck him, he gave away a lot of beautiful wood, tools and turnings.

He was a hard working helper. On one occasion he helped me move from Loveland to Evendale. All I had was a small trailer. We made many trips moving all my heavy shop equipment, benches, cabinets & tools to my new basement shop lowering the heavy stuff down the basement stairs with jerry-rigged rope setup attached to an Oak tree. We also move all the household goods.

Beside hard-working Mike was tough. He had many life threating hardships in his life including the cancer that finally beat him. Even near the end he would show up at meetings and Open Shops with his walker and Oxygen setup. He never really complained about those things, just faced them with strength and resolve. 

I will greatly miss Mike. His friendly banter, willingness to help and share his resources, expertise and just being a loyal friend. These are the qualities that made him special to me.

Rest in peace friend.





Tom Dresch

 

Friend, mentor, turner, great finisher and extremely frugal.

Mike ate lunch every other Friday with a few of us and passed along many of his turning secrets. He also gave you a lot of flack and received it back graciously. Mike finished almost everything on the lathe and shared his knowledge with anyone that would listen. Mike also understood form, and what sells. He sold a lot.

At Friday Open shops, at the OVWG Learning Center, he taught us all how to make bottle stoppers. He was a master with drilling on the lathe and taught easy steps to get long straight holes with different bit sizes. He never hollowed vases yet he drilled “sellable” vases.

Aside: When Mike moved from his previous house, he sold off much of his stock. I bought some nice pieces of ambrosia maple. Two years later Mike is like “anybody have a piece of ambrosia maple sized at …”. So I gave it back to him and he just said “thanks friend”.

Mike was fun to demo, bringing simplicity in pen turning to the masses. Yet he never gave one away. He was also a great commentor if you might be demoing. “Surely you could do better” was a nice comment as he entertained the crowd.

 

In closing, the woodturning world lost a master. He never made a mistake, just a design improvement and then he would make it shine (“cause shiny sells”). I still today have a 2 oz airplane liquor bottle in my demo bag with Mike’s liquid friction polish.

Peace be with you Mike.

 


Mike's Obituary

Michael Alexander Pankion

March 10, 1942 — May 25, 2025

Michael “Mike” A. Pankion passed away peacefully at the age of 83, at Hospice of Cincinnati. He was born March 10, 1942, the second child of Alex and Ann (nee Wasiunyk) Pankion in Cleveland Ohio. He is preceded in death by his parents and his older sister Norma Jean Johns. He is survived by his wife of 60 years, Judy Marie (nee Bell) Pankion; his children Michael Scott (Sheri) in Anchorage AK, Karen Marie DeWine in Cincinnati OH, and Kathleen Marie Lynch (Brian) in Bellingham MA; his grandchildren, Michael DeWine (Abby), Matthew DeWine (Maria), Brian DeWine, Colin Lynch, Aidan Lynch, Alex Pankion, Charlotte Pankion, Alden Pankion, and Andy Pankion.

When Mike was in elementary school, his family moved to Pennsylvania where he graduated from Conneaut Valley high school. After high school he served in the Navy, stationed aboard the aircraft carrier, Franklin D. Roosevelt. Then, after his honorable discharge, he attended Penn State University earning a degree in Engineering.

Mike and Judy met and began dating in high school. They stayed connected writing letters while he was in the Navy, then college, and she was in nursing school. After both graduated, they married on June 27, 1964 and started a family, settling in the Cleveland area. He built the family’s third home in Concord Township, Ohio, and 5 years later, they moved to the Cincinnati area.

Mike was a sportsman who enjoyed everything outdoors - hunting, fishing, camping, sailing on Lake Erie, skiing, and hiking with his son, Michael, in Alaska. He was adventurous. He held a private flying license and flew small planes all over Ohio whenever he got a chance.

Mike began woodworking in his mid-20s, building doll cradles for the Methodist church Fall craft shows. He built a two-story doll house for Karen and Kathy complete with working lights, shaker shingles, wallpaper, and miniature furniture. He was featured in many local publications in the Cleveland area for his work. In retirement, he traveled the United States demonstrating woodworking equipment at trade shows. That is when his passion for woodturning was born. He was immensely talented with the lathe, creating beautiful vases and bowls made from a variety of carefully selected native and non-native woods. When he stopped traveling, he taught his craft to others at the Ohio Valley Woodturning Guild and for a short time at the Applied Science Department of the University of Cincinnati. He sold his woodturnings at art fairs in Southwest Ohio. One of his favorite venues was MadTree in Oakley where he had quite a following and held his final show in December 2024.

He loved standing on the sidelines or sitting in the stands, in Cincinnati, Chicago and beyond, supporting and cheering on his grandchildren in soccer, baseball, basketball, lacrosse, hockey, track and cross-country. He was a favorite among the K-8 teachers at St. Mary in Hyde Park as he never missed a Grandparents’ Day lunch.

Last October, he was thrilled to be a participant in the Honor Flight Program traveling to Washington D.C., with fellow veterans.

Mike's final services will be held at Bethany Church in Liberty Twp., Ohio, where family and friends will gather for visitation on June 9, 2025, from 10:00 AM to 11:00 AM, followed by a memorial service from 11:00 AM to 12:00 PM. Memorial donations may be mailed to Hospice of Cincinnati,  P.O. Box 633597, Cincinnati, OH 45263 or by donating online