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Tampilkan postingan dengan label quick. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label quick. Tampilkan semua postingan

Kamis, 02 Februari 2017

A Quick Windsor Repair

We do this repair pretty often ... Broken bow .... We set it up so we can rout accurately with a small laminate trimmer, first the fromt usually, then the back, which is a little more complicated. we glue the repair pieces on as we rout. This bow was hickory and we had some ... Rout, glue, rout, glue, file trim, sand, color ... Will did this one and it went by so fast I didnt even get pictures of the intermediate steps... The chair was a worthy example though and it looked good when it was done ...
Broken
Front view finished ... A good save ..
Repair zones ... one side is usually longer than the other to (hopefully) eliminate new weak spots
Close up .... cant hardly tell ...
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Rabu, 28 September 2016

Quick Tip Suitcase Style Cases

Im working to keep regular postings to The Penultimate Woodshop the norm. Its my goal to post at least once a week. Based on that schedule I should be posting again on Sunday. As life will be getting in the choice this weekend with a trip to Pennsylvania and Ive brought home a few hours of work to do tonight, Im squeezing in this quick post now.
One of the regular features I hope to have on The Penultimate Woodshop are Quick Tips. Im hoping that I can share some of my own, point you towards others I find on the web and include some sent in by readers. So here is the first: what Im calling "Suitcase Style Cases." They are plastic cases with clear plastic lids and multiple compartments on the inside. Some have fixed compartments, some have adjustable compartments and some have removable compartments. The two featured here are of the fixed and removable compartment variety. I use the fixed one to hold and organize all of my screw gun bits. Its more than big enough to house them and is small enough to fit in my tool bag when I need to take it with me. The one with removable compartments pictured is for my Kreg screws. When I pull out my Kreg jig it lets me have quick easy access to any screw I might want. Ive even written a chart on the side that tells what length Kreg screw to use for what thickness of wood (not pictured). I also have "Suitcase Style Cases" for: DeckMate screws, framing nails, co-axial cable splicing tools, pan head stainless steel screws and flat head stainless steel screws.
The universal advantage I find to "Suitcase Style Cases" is that they keep all of a particular category of tool or supply easily grouped together, portable and dust free. In the future I plan to build a rack with drawers to house the cases. The drawers will be plywood bottoms with small lips around the sides. A "Suitcase Style Case" will fit on each drawer. When the cabinet is closed it will let me store them when not in use. Ill be able to pull out an individual drawer and flip up the lid of the case to access the contents without having to use up valuable bench space for the "Suitcase Style Case" and if I need to use the contents of the case outside the shop, I can just pick it up off the drawer and take it with me.
How do you store small parts? Whats your shop tip?
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Sabtu, 04 Juni 2016

State of Craft Show The Bennington Museum

State of Craft ... Exploring the Studio Craft Movement in Vermont: 1960-2010. Runs from May 22nd to October 31st at The Bennington Museum, Bennington, Vermont . Curated by Jamie Franklin and Anne Majusiak, it displays the work of 85 craftspersons, (is that how we call us?) 125 objects, oral histories, studio interviews .... I dont generally look for shows to be in, but this one found me and Im glad it did .... Click the pictures to enlarge them ....
"Bridges", our piece, is a collaboration between Dan (b. 1947) , Sam (b. 1982) and Will (b. 1984) Inspired partly by my grandfather, Irvin Seeders, a bridge riveter for Bethlehem Steel for 52 years (b. 1902), BS from 1916 to 1968. For the show, I thought it would be good if his generation, my generation and the next generation were represented. You know, a 100 years of craft or something .... just a thought ...Our piece started as a couple of different ideas, based on other designs we had created, but took on a life of its own. For a while it was going to be gold leaf and bubinga, then high finish walnut and blued steel, but in the end, it came to be made of recycled oak (heritage and tradition) and painted steel, with the rivet connection to my grandfather the coup de grace. Sam did the steel work and the green paint; Will did the burning and finishing, and I did a little roughing out of the wood and assembly and helped with the conceptual stuff. On the whole, a lot of fun. The show opens next Saturday and I am really looking forward to it ... Should be a good party ...
Early on .. after we decided on the recycled oak, but before the rivets ... The burnings seemed unrelated ...
The initial paint job, which was later toned down by sanding through to the red primer and glazing ...
The rivets ... I forget exactly whose brainstorm that was, but it was a good one ...
Will, burning the oak prior to staining and glazing ....
After the burning and stain, before the sanding and glazing ...
Its a bridge ...
A rusty one in Shelburne, MA
A soaring and inspirational one in New York, the GW, which Im pretty sure my grandfather worked on ...
Some of the other pieces in the show .... this is the underside of the quarter bench below
There was no label and I dont know the artist, but hes from Brattleboro.
Other objects ready to go ..
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