MarkDennehy
Established Member
Love that bench. Nice clean lines to it.
Buckeye":4o6eaksg said:Made this wall cabinet from cherry and elm (drawer front and back slats). Copy of a piece by Michael Pekovich who writes for FWW http://www.pekovichwoodworks.com/furnit ... rk/4580764
A few firsts for me like through tenons, half blind dovetails. Made a lot of mistakes but reasonably happy with the way it has turned out.
custard":2eo23qs7 said:Buckeye":2eo23qs7 said:Made this wall cabinet from cherry and elm (drawer front and back slats). Copy of a piece by Michael Pekovich who writes for FWW http://www.pekovichwoodworks.com/furnit ... rk/4580764
A few firsts for me like through tenons, half blind dovetails. Made a lot of mistakes but reasonably happy with the way it has turned out.
Excellent work Buckeye! You've made it to the place on the woodworking ladder where you can confidently produce attractive and well made furniture, that's a terrific achievement and the fun really begins from here on out!
=D>
Just one tiny point, the wedges in the through tenons are going in the wrong direction, they're acting to split the grain of the side pieces apart. You've gotten away with it this time so no harm done, but next time flip them through 90 degrees and then you can hammer them home to your heart's content.
custard":3l2dcl19 said:Just one tiny point, the wedges in the through tenons are going in the wrong direction, they're acting to split the grain of the side pieces apart. You've gotten away with it this time so no harm done, but next time flip them through 90 degrees and then you can hammer them home to your heart's content.
thetyreman":20t3846t said:here's the stool again finished with a few layers of shellac, it looks far better now.
DennisCA":43zonsij said:thetyreman":43zonsij said:here's the stool again finished with a few layers of shellac, it looks far better now.
I love that design! Great work!
NazNomad":l1ysplvo said:Last thing I made ...
No prizes awarded to the correct guess. :-D
Clue-ish: it's Maple.
Lignum":2r0rill0 said:I made a towel rack, which is more or less the first thing I've made since my last woodworking lesson in school about 20-odd years ago.
Things I have learnt:
- Cutting mortises for the first time ever probably would have been easier if they weren't only 6ml wide.
- Can't help but feel that tenons aren't really meant to be wedge-shaped
- Despite laborious picking out the straight bits of wood from homebase, they were in fact still crooked as a dog's hind leg
- 18mm dowel is not necessarily 18mm
- Probably no-one needs a towel rack that's almost a metre wide
- ...but the dowels aren't glued and I do own a hammer...
- The time to shape wood is probably not when you've already glued it all together
- If I was doing it again I'd cut away some of the bottom pieces so it has feet, although whether that would stop it being off-level is beyond me.
- Those bridle joints on top were meant to be mortice and tenon - I just didn't think it through very well.
- Levering the waste out of the mortices crushed their edges. Note sure if this is a technique problem or just blancmange wood.
- Pencil marks are harder to sand off than I thought.
- Splitting. Just splitting.
Lignum":3a3vwvs7 said:I made a towel rack, which is more or less the first thing I've made since my last woodworking lesson in school about 20-odd years ago.
thetyreman":9g9cm877 said:drawer handle?
NazNomad":16idvzun said:thetyreman":16idvzun said:drawer handle?
Nope, it's a thumb rest for a very expensive Rickenbacker bass which, according to its owner, was equipped with a too-small plastic version. He wanted a thicker one that matched the fretboard and I just happened to have a scrap of old flooring sample laying about.
+1 =D>custard":mqtinran said:Lignum":mqtinran said:I made a towel rack, which is more or less the first thing I've made since my last woodworking lesson in school about 20-odd years ago.
Good for you Lignum. You've got all the important stuff right, i.e. you went into your workshop with some wood and came out with some furniture.
Woodworkers fall into two groups, those who actually make stuff and those who talk about making stuff. The first group are the only ones who ever show any improvement.
Lignum":iqsdqig7 said:Things I have learnt:......
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