28 November 2023

More 2023 Projects

 

A footstool for a friend's mother.  Oak, stained, and two coats of Osmo.


Two pot plant stands for my lovely wife.   Oak again, with Danish oil.


A chest of drawers for camping gear for the back of my new old 1997 Land Cruiser.


And of course the Land Cruiser itself, here getting the bullbar fitted, along with many other jobs to turn it into a very capable offroader.










11 January 2023

Two Chairs and an Ottoman

 My lovely wife picked up two 1960's chairs for $20 in need of a rescue.


After some frame repairs and woodwork re-finishing they were re-padded and re-upholstered.  What would go well with a pair of chairs?  A matching Ottoman.  Legs were cut with a taper, a 12.5 degree rake and a 3 degree splay to match the originals.



They were then fixed to a new frame with webbing stretched over to support the foam padding before some Danish oil was applied.


Then my lovely wife upholstered the Ottoman to match the chairs.


Result!  And the first project for 2023 is done.

02 January 2023

2022 and the Case of the Missing Posts

 I have been meaning to record something for a while - about a year as it turns out - so a quick summary of the year's projects:

A flood-damaged upper half of a French country house sideboard was turned upside down, repaired, re-shelved, re-trimmed and finished with chalk paint.  There was not much left of the original:


But after swapping around some of the original broken glass panes, putting on a new top, bottom and back it now looks like this, complete with some subtle 'weathering' of the chalk paint to give it character.  There are some nice original features like the square dowels and the original latches.


I made a couple of bench seats, one for my sister and one for a friend:


My first project with my new welder was a garden trailer:


It received two wheels from a hand trolley and plywood sides and a base from an offcut of trailer ply:



Back to woodworking, and I made a couple of dart board cabinets, one for myself and one for a friend:



There are magnets to keep the doors closed and some recycled cupboard knobs and hinges:



And then over the Christmas break a welded workshop tool cart on castor wheels:


So while the blog posts have dried up the workshop has been well used during 2022.  Onwards and upwards into 2023!


06 December 2021

Check, mate

 A good friend of mine mentioned that he was interested in getting a chessboard.  A few years ago we cut up an old celery pine at his property and I have had the wood seasoning in the shed.  A lot of it was punky (hence why it died I think) but there was still some good useable pale-coloured timber.

Also in the woodpile was the remains of the two-foot long purpleheart wharf beam offcut previously used for picture frames.  The two timbers would make a nice contrast for a chessboard.

Strips were jointed, thicknessed, ripped to size and then laminated together before being cut into strips on the tablesaw sled.


These were then laminated again to produce the chessboard pattern and this was then epoxied onto a plywood substrate to keep it stable.  A thin border of recycled jarrah was glued on to cover the plywood end grain.


With all of the various offcuts utilised, there was enough for two chessboards - one for my mate and one for us.  Sanded to 320 grit, they were then oiled with two coats of Danish Oil and some beeswax.


Your move.








09 November 2021

Picture this

 With lockdown still on and the timber pile shrinking I have been moving on to some smaller projects.  I was given a two foot long wharf beam offcut a while ago.  It was full of nails and old bolt holes but beneath the surface was brightly coloured purpleheart, ideal for some picture frames.


The corners were splined with oak and a boarder was cut from leftover MDF, spray painted black.  Some nail holes were left in for character.


Also in the leftover pile was some 25mmx25mm oak, which I ebonised with a solution of white vinegar and steel wool.


All up, eight picture frames as gifts for family.






 



28 September 2021

White on White

 Another couple of recent projects to pop out of the workshop made with offcuts and salvaged fittings, all finished with leftover white house paint.

An electric vehicle charger holder for my lovely wife's new Nissan Leaf (new to her anyway):


Balancing out all of that good karma, a mobile fuel cart for the chainsaw and mower fuels, oils etc:



21 September 2021

Pentominoes

 A small project with some 3mm MDF offcuts and a bit of leftover spray paint.  Pentominoes are one of the polyominoes, popular as puzzles and for recreational maths.  Because there are 12 different shapes of 5 squares each they can fit in a 6x10 rectangle (or a 5x12 or a 4x15).  According to Wikipedia there are 2339 solutions to the 6x10 puzzle.



Back to Work, Mate

I inherited my Dad's old Black & Decker Workmate but the jaws had a significant bow in them, making clamping difficult.



I still had some leftover birch plywood from the previous projects so I laminated two pieces together for each jaw, making a nice solid improvement on the original.


Back together again and complete with dog holes and grooves it should be good for another forty years.




01 September 2021

Another Lockdown in Paradise

Off to the workshop to see what we have: 
Two sheets of birch plywood
An old (very solid) chipboard fire door recovered from a friend's office alterations 
Some leftover decking
My Dad's old vice

How about a mobile sanding and sharpening bench with the vice attached:






Still some leftover plywood, so how about some mobile wood storage:



Now, what else do we have to make with...

08 August 2021

The Cabinet of Doom

 I bought a partly wrecked oak china cabinet off TradeMe for $40 nearly a year ago.  Various previous repairs had only partly succeded in keeping the cabinet as useful piece of furniture.  It had a broken door frame, cracked glass, loose backboard, broken drawer sides, odd drawer pulls, jamming drawers and it was limping on three legs.  Perfect.  Could it be rescued?


Broken screws were removed using my vintage Dormer screw extractors.



New oak floating tenons were morticed into the broken door frame to give it strength.



Not much of the door frame left here:


The broken leg was cleaned up ready for a new mounting plate.




After repairs, it was fully stripped down to remove the remains of the old shellac.


After some frustrations with the leadlight glass doors, new period-correct handles were sourced and hidden rare earth magnets were glued in place to keep the doors closed. It was given two coats of Danish oil.


Was it 'worth' the effort?  Probably not.  Was it satisfying to save from the bonfire?  Yes!