Transit80
Established Member
Shame you are so far away, Ive always got ideas to use them.Do you know any kitchen fitters or builders who fit kitchens? I often get offcuts up to three or four feet from a neighbour.
Shame you are so far away, Ive always got ideas to use them.Do you know any kitchen fitters or builders who fit kitchens? I often get offcuts up to three or four feet from a neighbour.
Novocaine:
Was that an AC Uke or DC ?
Cheers
John
After fitting oak tops in my kitchen 4 years ago I kept the leftovers as so many do and never use them. I then used one on top of a shop bought bathroom cabinet and another under a surface mount sink in a weird 70 degree corner of another bathroom. All that remains are a few smaller chunks and I have been pondering ripping it and attempting to make an end grain board for the kitchen. If it fails I gained experience and firewood. If it works i've gained experience and a hopping board!This is the "scrap" from the cut out where our sink was installed -
View attachment 96265
Photo only taken the evening before last, so I have no finished shots.
It's just a basic job. No fancy inlays or anything. It's just as the other half wanted a new chopping board, not to show off any skill.
Do keep me apprised of how it goes!
Nice! Did you use the polyx to finish it? I'd have thought that would get beaten up quite badly from knives, no?
Oh yours is one of these modern houses thenYeah. It will get trashed. It's a chopping board.
80 grit finish from new, for that pre-used look -
Again, it's a chopping board in a house that's at least 150 yrs old.
Oh yours is one of these modern houses then
I only meant that with the polyx being a sort of film it might need more regular attention than something else (not that I can say what). Though saing that the only thing that's upset my 3032 covered worktops has been one particular bottle of oven cleaner that turned the surface black in a few places, easily remedied.
Looks great, I'll have to make my one now!
I did hear something a while ago suggesting that mineral oil only became recommended as manufacturers wanted to save money and get people to oil their own boards with something they all had at home many years ago. That was on the woodtalk podast but it might have been a modern episode or a 10 year old one, i don't recall.I think the proper thing to do is use mineral oil. Smith and Allan sell it on eBay for not much money, but, being a skintflint, I didn't want to buy another pot of stuff, so used stupidly expensive osmo instead... Hmm...
You can really up your price further with things like laser engraved names or whatever too.
This is the sort of stuff I do for paid work -
View attachment 96366
That job is silk screen printed, but I do a fair bit of mechanical engraving also.
Indeed, whilst I mostly did the board by hand, I must admit I loaded it to the CNC mill to take the last 0.75mm off.
I didn't want to, but it would have been a simple enough job to load some tool path other than a flattening program.
All that would be fine for branding, but personalisation is one step further than I'd want to go.
(Not that I want to get into the chopping board market anyway!)
But for £200 a hit, it would be a consideration!
Did you just make the front panel for someone or did you rebuild the synth as well?
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