Projects from This Weekend

Forum for people who are new to woodworking. Feel free to ask questions or contribute.

Moderator: admin

charlese
Platinum Member
Posts: 7501
Joined: Fri Dec 08, 2006 10:46 pm
Location: Lancaster, CA

Post by charlese »

holsgo wrote:Here's a jewelry box I got to the pre-finish stage.
Hand cut the dovetails. Carved the top.

Dimpled the details with a hand made 5 pointed star dimpling tool I made. Got the knowledge from the Tommy Mac Bombay Secretary series

Nice box- nice dovetails - nice lid design - nice selection of wood! In other words, Super project!!! Love the show of rays on the front.
Octogenarian's have an earned right to be a curmudgeon.
Chuck in Lancaster, CA
User avatar
mrhart
Platinum Member
Posts: 938
Joined: Thu Nov 25, 2010 4:38 pm
Location: Meridian Idaho

Post by mrhart »

Nice job sir! how much time do you have in it to that stage?
R Hart
User avatar
holsgo
Platinum Member
Posts: 740
Joined: Sat Jul 04, 2009 9:48 pm
Location: Manassas, VA

Post by holsgo »

I have a few hours spread over a couple weekends. Maybe 2 hours for the dovetails (second try). Base was about 2 hours of fittment and about 1 hour to glue up the top. Carving was about 2 hours for the dimpled design on the top. Milling and cutting plus hand planing was additional. Much of the final dimensioning was done by hand. I may be off by an hour or 2. Thanks for the compliments.
User avatar
holsgo
Platinum Member
Posts: 740
Joined: Sat Jul 04, 2009 9:48 pm
Location: Manassas, VA

Post by holsgo »

Here's the project just about completed:
4 coats Poly. Then rubbed out to 1500 followed by automotive rubbing compound then car polish and finally wax.
[ATTACH]13412[/ATTACH]
[ATTACH]13413[/ATTACH]
Black and brown shoe polish left to dry in the dimples. Then waxed carefully. Wax will pull the shoe polish out.
[ATTACH]13414[/ATTACH]
Left some shoe polish in cracks to age the piece a bit.
[ATTACH]13415[/ATTACH]
Where did the shopsmith come in? It's the front dimpled area on the front of the piece along the bottom. I double sided taped the entire piece assembled onto my jig (a flat piece of mdf that has a piece that rides in the miter slot. I then mounted a router bit 3/16 size into the router chuck and used the table height lever and sliding the jig along the table to get a perfect square rout of perfect depth. I couldn't have done it another way unless I routed before I cut the wood.
Attachments
box4-2.JPG
box4-2.JPG (50.69 KiB) Viewed 3477 times
box2-2.JPG
box2-2.JPG (45.56 KiB) Viewed 3479 times
box8-2.JPG
box8-2.JPG (49.54 KiB) Viewed 3483 times
box3-2.JPG
box3-2.JPG (52.74 KiB) Viewed 3485 times
swampgator
Platinum Member
Posts: 1256
Joined: Fri Nov 27, 2009 9:32 pm
Location: Pensacola, FL

Post by swampgator »

Wingman, I remember when you were trying to buy that machine, when you got it and you have started off greatly. Nice tool box. Made one of these for my son and grandson. Handy until you load them with heavy tools. Great job on the use of a spindle for the handle. It looks as if you have some rust on one of the table top tubes. Or was that some stain? :confused:

I also really like the jewelry/keepsake box. The dimple tool reminds me very much of a star drill used to bore holes in concrete. Fantastic use of that tool and the finish is also great. Thanks for sharing those pics.
Steve, the old Florida gator

I just love it when she says I can go make sawdust. ;) :D
jmoore65
Gold Member
Posts: 153
Joined: Tue Jan 01, 2008 4:48 pm
Location: DC Metro Area

Post by jmoore65 »

I really enjoied seeing the dimpling tool and results.
Jim
510 upgraded to 520, bandsaw, Homecraft jointer, universal lathe rest, Craftsman tablesaw w/Delta fence, standalone belt/disc sander, power miter saw, a bunch of smaller stuff
wingman2010
Gold Member
Posts: 32
Joined: Sun May 15, 2011 12:38 am
Location: San Antonio, Texas

Post by wingman2010 »

swampgator wrote:Wingman, I remember when you were trying to buy that machine, when you got it and you have started off greatly. Nice tool box. Made one of these for my son and grandson. Handy until you load them with heavy tools. Great job on the use of a spindle for the handle. It looks as if you have some rust on one of the table top tubes. Or was that some stain? :confused:

I also really like the jewelry/keepsake box. The dimple tool reminds me very much of a star drill used to bore holes in concrete. Fantastic use of that tool and the finish is also great. Thanks for sharing those pics.
Definitely rust. It's surface though and I'm removing a little more each weekend! I'm having good luck with goo gone and steel wool.
1993 Shopsmith Model 510. Very proud to be a Shopsmith owner.
User avatar
wlhayesmfs
Platinum Member
Posts: 667
Joined: Fri Jul 21, 2006 10:50 am
Location: Broken Arrow OK

Post by wlhayesmfs »

Went to the woodcarvers show yesterday and my wife saw a circuit board pen for sell and loved it. I had not turned one of these yet so instead of buying one made went to woodcraft to pick up a kit, also found several other items I could not live with out and turned her a circuit board pen this morning. Also found that woodcraft is carrying sinken cypress and picked some of that up to turn. I saw it carved and turned at the show and the finish was really nice so think I will try a pen tomorrow. Will post it to let you see how it turns out.

[ATTACH]13425[/ATTACH]
Attachments
Circuit Board Pen 1.jpg
Circuit Board Pen 1.jpg (86.77 KiB) Viewed 3417 times
Bill :)
Broken Arrow OK
MKV, 510, MKVll, 50th Anniversary 520 with Jointech saw train, Bandsaw, scroll saw, joiner, 6" Sander,Stand Alone Pin Router and Router Table, Strip Sander, Jigsaw & (4) ER's plus Jigsaw for ER. DC SS RAS
User avatar
Underdog
Gold Member
Posts: 79
Joined: Mon Feb 01, 2010 10:56 am
Location: Portland, OR

Post by Underdog »

Bill... that pen ROCKS!!! As someone who works with computers a LOT, and has seen his fair share of the insides of a PC case, I found the next thing I must have!!! :D
stant
Bronze Member
Posts: 5
Joined: Tue Aug 02, 2011 12:40 pm

Post by stant »

I like the jewelry box especially the dimpling or detail in the top. I'm wanting to make a toy box with detail like that. I've always wondered how that was done and now I know. The question I have is in regards to the circuit board pin. How did you get it to wrap or turn? Did you heat up the circuit board and formed it around a pen shaft?
Stan - cutting and turning
Post Reply