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- Newsgroups: rec.woodworking
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- From: badboy@netcom.com (Jay Keller)
- Subject: Re: Hey! Lets have a survey....
- Message-ID: <1993Jan25.072659.8490@netcom.com>
- Organization: Netcom - Online Communication Services (408 241-9760 guest)
- References: <WOODWORK%93012212041503@IPFWVM.BITNET>
- Date: Mon, 25 Jan 1993 07:26:59 GMT
- Lines: 60
-
- In article <WOODWORK%93012212041503@IPFWVM.BITNET> HUNTRESS GARY B
- <HUNTRESS@NPT.NUSC.NAVY.MIL> writes:
-
- > ... I'd like to hear about the projects that everyone is
- >working on, just finished, or is planned for the future.
-
- My daughter Diana turned three a couple of weeks ago and I built her a big doll
- cradle, using the plans that come with the little Delta bandsaw. It was my
- first real bandsaw project since I bought the thing 4 months ago.
- The ends were cut out of blanks 16"x22" (poplar), glued up from a 1x10 and a
- 1x/8. Just for fun, and to practice planing with my newly sharpened blades
- (I just bought the Veritas sharpening jig), I hand-planed about 1/8" off of the
- faces of the end blanks before cutting them. The plans called for using
- the bandsaw to bevel the edges on the bottom of the cradle, but I used the
- table saw. I also beveled the sides so the edges are parallel to the floor
- when the cradle's at rest.
-
- Someone asked about bright-colored stains, sorry I forgot who, but I hope
- he reads this. I went to Home Depot and got a stain by Deft which was tinted
- to a nice pink ("Rose Quartz"). Lots of other colors were available, mostly
- pastels. I played with scrap wood and decided that 4 coats of stain was about
- right, really pink but still letting the wood grain show through. Then I
- coated it with a Deft lacquer-based clear gloss which is supposed to be non-
- toxic when dry (but it's about the foulest thing I've ever smelled when wet,
- I had to do it outdoors to survive the stench!).
-
- The cradle was completed the morning of the birthday, that's cutting it close!
- My mother is a seamstress and she provided a beautiful set of mattress, pillow,
- and quilt. Diana was thrilled and for the first time ever she didn't want
- her dolls to sleep with her ("No, daddy, they have their own bed now").
-
- My current project was started yesterday A.M. and is nearly finished tonight.
- It's a table for the kids (I also have a 5-year-old son), out of oak. I
- guess I undertook this as practice for a maple table I want to build for
- our kitchen appliances (I'm fairly new at fine woodworking, although I've
- hacked together a few nice things over the years).
-
- I glued up two oak 1x10's, so the table top is 19"x36" (this table is going
- to against a wall in the kids' room, for art projects and such). I rounded the
- corners with a jig saw and rounded-over the top edge. The skirts are 1x3 oak
- with 1/2" thick by 3/4" deep tenons which I cut on the table saw. For legs,
- I bought 4 oak stairway balusters, square on each end with turnings in-between,
- and I cut off one of the square ends. These make perfect legs for this child-
- size table. To mortise the legs, I built a router-jig (similar to Tage Frid's
- jig in "FWW on Joinery" and used my new Bosch plunge-router, then squared them
- up by hand. The tenons had to be beveled to clear each other in the corners.
-
- The frame is all glued up and tomorrow I can screw on the top to complete the
- table. I'm experimenting with some grain fillers, I'd like to make the top
- surface as glass-smooth as possible, under polyurethane. Maybe I'll try
- some kid-chairs next.
-
- I'd like to take this opportunity to thank the participants of this group for
- all I've learned here, it's definitely a valuable resource.
-
- Regards,
-
- Jay Keller
- Sunnyvale, California
- badboy@netcom.com
-