17 February 2015

Adirondack Chairs - tick

New Year's resolution No. 4 was to build two Adirondack chairs (often called, incorrectly, Cape Cod chairs in NZ).  These chairs have been around since the turn of the 20th century and come in all shapes and colours.

So where to go for a good design?  The chairs are named after the Adirondac Mountains in upstate New York and are more carpentry than fine woodworking.  Possibly the most well known American carpenter is Norm Abram of the New Yankee Workshop fame - a legend in a plaid shirt.

He produced a version of the Adirondack chair on one of his shows and then subsequently America's Popular Woodworking magazine profiled it (and Norm) in one of their issues.  The article, with basic drawings can be downloaded free here.

To make this and any subsequent builds go as smoothly as possible I first made a full set of MDF patterns.


Next, the patterns were traced onto the timber using the most appealing grain and avoiding timber defects like splits and knots.



For this project I used macrocarpa (Cupressus macrocarpa) because... well, there is a sawmill down the road specialising in it.  But also because macrocarpa heartwood has natural durability and is easy to work.

And because when I was a boy my father made a boat from macrocarpa.  The distinctive smell of the wood still takes me back to the boatshed in our back yard, when as a 10 year old boy I watched this huge hull take shape.  I am still in awe at my dad's abilities to turn his hand to anything from fixing electronics to building an extension on the house.

The shapes were cut out with the bandsaw, sanded and rounded over with the router.


Next, a little assembly and dry fitting...


Followed by disassembly, gluing with a waterproof adhesive and reassembly, then a couple of coats of outdoor furniture oil.


And there we have it, ready for use.  A bit late for summer maybe, but no doubt ready for many summers ahead.



19 January 2015

The Free Boat

Who could turn down a free boat?  And since we built a dam and created a small pond about a year ago we now have the perfect place to launch it.  Of course the boat was free for a reason.  This is no QE2.  It is a tiny six foot dingy.  Once several holes in the hull were repaired with fibreglass...


...the inside was painted with leftover house paint (to cover up some ugly spray paint tagging) and a new seat was made from a plywood off-cut, which was glued and screwed to the old one...


...and a central support was added to strengthen the broken seat using timber from an old barbecue stand...


....it was then ready for sea trials....


Just don't mention that I managed to tip out of it while showing off to my lovely wife.

01 January 2015

New Year's Resolutions

I'm not sure where the last three months went but Happy New Year!

Resolutions for 2015:
  1. Write more blog posts.
  2. Finish the Entertainment Unit (covered here).
  3. Build the kitchen.
  4. Build two Adirondack chairs.
  5. Restore a second wardrobe.
  6. Get hand surgery for a 27 year old injury, which will make achieving 1-5 a challenge.
October to December were not completely given over to earning a living.  As a Not Christmas Present, I built a 'shoe tower' for Shirley to match the recently restored wardrobe No.1 (covered here).


It's made from plywood and stained to match the antique wardrobe.

And Shirley bought me a Not Christmas Present - a macadamia nut cracker (from Ohiwa Macadamias - a very good quality mechanism), which I mounted on a nice piece of Australian silky oak.  (It seemed only fitting as macadamias originally come from Australia and it has a particularly lovely grain).



So we will have to see how the year progresses....