Epoxy and Wood Coasters
Furnished content. (from Lumberjocks.com)
Set of epoxy and wood coasters I made. The wood came from a project pack that I got on clearance from woodcraft. I cast the epoxy in a silicone mold with the wood clamped in it, then planed wood until it was even with the epoxy. I trimmed the edges up on the table saw before I got out the crosscut sled to cut the coasters. Rounded over the edges on the router table and then sanded up to 4000 grit. A coat of wood honey and they are good to go. If you hold the coasters up to a light, the epoxy is somewhat translucent.
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posted at: 12:00am on 21-Aug-2022 path: /Woodworking | permalink | edit (requires password)
Fish wine balancers
Furnished content. (from Lumberjocks.com)
A trio of what I call wine balancers in the shape of fish. I think the pattern originally came from the woodcraft magazine but I made an MDF template and I've been going from there. I found in making them that I can't really use a flush trim bit to route these things as it tends to not like the sharper lines and often shatters the wood if I use a smaller flush trim bit instead of my large Whiteside compression flush trim bit. The center hole is about 1/4” smaller than what the template called for at 1.25” instead of 1.5” but I realized that long after I drilled the holes in the blanks. All of them are cut out by hand on the bandsaw and then sanded to final shape on the disk sander and spindle sander. I cut the 45 bevel on the bottom by measuring it from the bottom how far it needed to go and then eye balling it on the table saw cross cut sled. Next time I'll cut the bevel first then, cut the rest of the fish out.The edges are hand rounded over except for the center hole with was done with a 1/2” roundover bit in the router table. They are sanded to 320 grit and coated with wood honey.The walnut one is missing parts of the tail fin thanks to getting knocked the concrete floor of the shop and breaking some parts off because of how the grain hit the floor. It still works well though and that one was my test piece. You can see in the 3rd photo the wine bottle being held before I started sanding any of the the fish. It takes a little experimentation to find out the exact point the neck of the bottle needs to be to balance but once it does, its actually pretty stable. The table has a thick pad underneath and pushing the fin base a bit made the fish shift a little but then balanced back out and didn't drop the bottle.
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posted at: 12:00am on 21-Aug-2022 path: /Woodworking | permalink | edit (requires password)
Dog Crate Topper
Furnished content. (from Lumberjocks.com)
Very simple gift for a friend made out of Walnut with clear satin lacquer finish. Done all with hand tools out of rough sawn lumber. Nothing like a #8 hand plane for jointing and flattening.
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posted at: 12:00am on 21-Aug-2022 path: /Woodworking | permalink | edit (requires password)
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