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My best woodworking project yet

Posted: Sat Aug 12, 2023 11:46 pm
by BuckeyeDennis
Somehow, the tree gods and the photography gods all blessed this project. (I have a hunch that the Bourbon gods may have pulled a few heavenly strings.)

Bourbon flight tray.JPG
Bourbon flight tray.JPG (355.02 KiB) Viewed 14331 times

Re: My best woodworking project yet

Posted: Sun Aug 13, 2023 7:43 am
by algale
Wow, wow, wow!!!!! Tell me about the wood and the finish! Absolutely stunnng!!

Re: My best woodworking project yet

Posted: Sun Aug 13, 2023 9:20 am
by BuckeyeDennis
Thanks Al!

The wood is crotch-flame walnut, an end piece from a rough-sawn board that was in a pile of barn-find lumber I bought a while back from a friend of a friend. It was by far the most bowed and warped board I’ve ever seen. I’ll post some “before” pictures when I have a bit more time.

The finish is nothing fancy. I applied eight or ten coats of Minwax wipe-on poly, sanding between coats. It took forever for the finish to build, because end grain was sticking out every which way in that figured wood, and it soaked up the varnish like a sponge. No doubt that’s where all those gold highlights come from. When the finish finally did build, I couldn’t get an unblemished final coat with the wipe-on varnish, so I topcoated it with Minwax semi-gloss poly from a rattle can.

Re: My best woodworking project yet

Posted: Sun Aug 13, 2023 10:18 am
by JPG
Gorgeous!! Curious where the 'inspiration' for the decision as to what to make from the end piece came from.

Re: My best woodworking project yet

Posted: Sun Aug 13, 2023 2:23 pm
by BuckeyeDennis
JPG wrote: Sun Aug 13, 2023 10:18 am Gorgeous!! Curious where the 'inspiration' for the decision as to what to make from the end piece came from.
Thanks, Red! My brother and I both like bourbon, and about once a year when we get together, we’ll have a bourbon-tasting contest. We’ll choose four bottles of good bourbon, and we first get to taste each one. Then we’ll do a blind pour of four samples for each other, flight-style. We each rank them in order of our favorites, and try to match the flavors to the specific bourbons. Whoever correctly ID’s the most bourbons wins the contest.

Edit: To be clear, there can be NO losers in such a contest. ;)

So the inspiration was to make a flight tray as a gift for my brother, and kick the game up a notch. But how to mark which sample is which on the flight tray was quite a head-scratcher. My wife came up with the winning idea. If you look closely at the photo, you can see a cream-colored paper coaster beneath each glass. The purpose of the coasters isn’t to protect the polyurethane varnish — I used that stuff specifically because alcohol won’t damage it. They’re actually there to record the names of the bourbons. Whoever is doing the blind pouring writes them on the coasters, and then places them writing-side down beneath the corresponding whisky glasses.

Re: My best woodworking project yet

Posted: Sun Aug 13, 2023 4:57 pm
by algale
BuckeyeDennis wrote: Sun Aug 13, 2023 9:20 am I’ll post some “before” pictures when I have a bit more time.
Please do!!

Re: My best woodworking project yet

Posted: Sun Aug 13, 2023 7:48 pm
by twistsol
That is absolutely fabulous!. The finish shows amazing depth. I'm a Scotch guy myself, but who could pass on anything presented so beautifully.

Re: My best woodworking project yet

Posted: Sun Aug 13, 2023 8:12 pm
by john
The previous posters said it all!

A beautiful piece with a beautiful finish.


Congratulations.

John

Re: My best woodworking project yet

Posted: Mon Aug 14, 2023 11:36 am
by edma194
This is a case where the simplicity of the piece enhances it's beauty. The bourbon helps also, but I'm waiting to see additional pictures. Very well done, highly impressive work. You have an excellent eye Dennis.

Re: My best woodworking project yet

Posted: Mon Aug 14, 2023 12:21 pm
by nuhobby
Wow! Yes, that's super!!!

I still remember in 2008, one day I took the afternoon off to go buy a few boards of walnut from a guy in the next town. It was probably 7-8 straight grain boards, and one *whopper* plank of crotch grain . I'm curious now what I did with that board...