mickthetree
Established Member
I had this in mind for the box challenge, but circumstances mean my workshop is mostly packed up and I'm working out of storage boxes at the moment. Long story.
The wood was from an old victorian wardrobe we got at the local auctions a couple of years ago for £10. Once we were done with it I decided to reuse the wood rather than scrap it.
The base is made of from a piece of the trim at the bottom of the wardrobe. Looked a bit rough at first, but book matched it and it came out quite nicely. Makes a plain box a bit more interesting when opened. (just realised you cant see it in the photos, I'll take some more).
The handle is some offcut from my bag of "exotic off cut bits and bobs" that I have gathered. Not sure what it is.
I struggled for ages to decide on a finish and have been testing loads of different ones on some more offcuts of the oak. Decided in the end on a few thin coats of shellac then some of my homemade beeswax polish, knocked back (quite aggressively) with some 0000 steel wool.
All of the edges got 7 swipes from my block plane then sanded to a radius.
Overall quite please. Managed to drill the hinge holes much more accurately on this one with the pillar drill at work and a lip and spur bit.
Lessons learnt: Use a wax with carnauba wax in future. The beeswax polish seems to get quite soft in warm conditions and can get fingerprints in it. Much less so since knocking it back hard, but would rather something harder.
Remove scribe lines fully before finishing. missed a couple and it spoils the look.
The wood was from an old victorian wardrobe we got at the local auctions a couple of years ago for £10. Once we were done with it I decided to reuse the wood rather than scrap it.
The base is made of from a piece of the trim at the bottom of the wardrobe. Looked a bit rough at first, but book matched it and it came out quite nicely. Makes a plain box a bit more interesting when opened. (just realised you cant see it in the photos, I'll take some more).
The handle is some offcut from my bag of "exotic off cut bits and bobs" that I have gathered. Not sure what it is.
I struggled for ages to decide on a finish and have been testing loads of different ones on some more offcuts of the oak. Decided in the end on a few thin coats of shellac then some of my homemade beeswax polish, knocked back (quite aggressively) with some 0000 steel wool.
All of the edges got 7 swipes from my block plane then sanded to a radius.
Overall quite please. Managed to drill the hinge holes much more accurately on this one with the pillar drill at work and a lip and spur bit.
Lessons learnt: Use a wax with carnauba wax in future. The beeswax polish seems to get quite soft in warm conditions and can get fingerprints in it. Much less so since knocking it back hard, but would rather something harder.
Remove scribe lines fully before finishing. missed a couple and it spoils the look.