barkwindjammer
Established Member
I hope this will inspire other noobs, like me,
before last year I found wood to be a completely mysterious and difficult material, then I found this forum :wink:
and a whole new world of possibility opened up, helped along by the many inspiring posts and projects that is held in this encyclopedia of knowledge.
A hearty thanks to all who make this forum what it is
, and to Chems for allowing me to pick his brains with those annoying noob type questions
Sorry there's no WIP pics, as I became so consumed in what I was doing.
This bookcase was made of 'fixboard' a pine laminated board,
the back is 6mm ply which sits in a groove (dado, groove, rabbet) which I cut with my cheapo biscuit jointer (makes a blerdy good job)
and the finish (this was the bit I had the sleepless nights over) was 'Sadolin-earth balance- stain and varnish
There is a tiny routered detail that I added to the sides with my cheapo router, its kinda hard to see, but its there
I started with a very simple 'Sketchup' drawing (thanks DaveR) just to determine scale and for 'setting out' .
The 500x18x2400 boards were ripped down with my Bahco Ergo handsaw £12, squared on a homemade shooting-board with a modern 'Faithfull' £28 plane, the cut-outs in the shelves and small detail to the inner sides of the bookcase sides were done with a Lidl (or Aldi) router £22 I think? .
Sure, you get what you pay for when it comes to tools, but to fellow 'noobs' out there-its what you do, with what you have. What I have learned is patience, and that timeless saying "keep wood as long as you can, as long as you can".
Jeez, I wish I had found this hobby 20 years ago :wink:
before last year I found wood to be a completely mysterious and difficult material, then I found this forum :wink:
and a whole new world of possibility opened up, helped along by the many inspiring posts and projects that is held in this encyclopedia of knowledge.
A hearty thanks to all who make this forum what it is
Sorry there's no WIP pics, as I became so consumed in what I was doing.
This bookcase was made of 'fixboard' a pine laminated board,
the back is 6mm ply which sits in a groove (dado, groove, rabbet) which I cut with my cheapo biscuit jointer (makes a blerdy good job)
and the finish (this was the bit I had the sleepless nights over) was 'Sadolin-earth balance- stain and varnish
![P1010539.jpg](https://proxy.imagearchive.com/720/720bb030a16702140c3676f850db5704.jpg)
![P1010536.jpg](https://proxy.imagearchive.com/cb8/cb8098b7e42b880bbd9fab81b593555d.jpg)
![P1010535.jpg](https://proxy.imagearchive.com/61e/61ea7d2869a11328a34a7f582a46152a.jpg)
![P1010537.jpg](https://proxy.imagearchive.com/3ac/3ac81ed7b48fb4eff4fec7501ce199dc.jpg)
There is a tiny routered detail that I added to the sides with my cheapo router, its kinda hard to see, but its there
![P1010538.jpg](https://proxy.imagearchive.com/62f/62f24ca0bec1f1a1e73af165dbe7941d.jpg)
![P1010540.jpg](https://proxy.imagearchive.com/7c7/7c7c6f84245ee75ea93f1646693a804a.jpg)
I started with a very simple 'Sketchup' drawing (thanks DaveR) just to determine scale and for 'setting out' .
The 500x18x2400 boards were ripped down with my Bahco Ergo handsaw £12, squared on a homemade shooting-board with a modern 'Faithfull' £28 plane, the cut-outs in the shelves and small detail to the inner sides of the bookcase sides were done with a Lidl (or Aldi) router £22 I think? .
Sure, you get what you pay for when it comes to tools, but to fellow 'noobs' out there-its what you do, with what you have. What I have learned is patience, and that timeless saying "keep wood as long as you can, as long as you can".
Jeez, I wish I had found this hobby 20 years ago :wink: