After lots of help from you guys and gals over the last year or so, I
finally broke down and built a piece of furniture that wasn't just a
chunk of wood on legs (I call them tables, but know better).
Anyway, the walnut dresser cum chest is done. A few pics are at:
http://web2.airmail.net/xleanone/index.html/Dresser/
Happy to say it's all joinery, except the screws holding the hinges,
handles and the hard board back. Do wish I'd been able to find a
single 12' X 4" hunk of 8/4 for the drawer fronts so they'd match in
shade and grain, but I couldn't.
It was a bit of work, but fun, and a learning experience. My wife gave
me a sign that hangs in the gara-shop:
"We don't make mistakes, we do variations"
Seems appropriate.
Thanks to all for advice. Regards.
Tom
On Tue, 03 Oct 2006 18:58:24 GMT, Pat Barber
<[email protected]> wrote:
>Now you done created something that will cause you to
>have to create "other" things and you will suddenly become
>a woodworking "god" to your family...
>
>There goes the hobby.
I don't wonder how you know that, Pat. I've read your posts and
you're usually spot-on.
Regards.
Very nice work Tom... I like the look of it. so you collect bayonets and
daggers? nice hobby.
Eddie.
"Tom Banes" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> After lots of help from you guys and gals over the last year or so, I
> finally broke down and built a piece of furniture that wasn't just a
> chunk of wood on legs (I call them tables, but know better).
>
> Anyway, the walnut dresser cum chest is done. A few pics are at:
>
> http://web2.airmail.net/xleanone/index.html/Dresser/
>
> Happy to say it's all joinery, except the screws holding the hinges,
> handles and the hard board back. Do wish I'd been able to find a
> single 12' X 4" hunk of 8/4 for the drawer fronts so they'd match in
> shade and grain, but I couldn't.
>
> It was a bit of work, but fun, and a learning experience. My wife gave
> me a sign that hangs in the gara-shop:
>
> "We don't make mistakes, we do variations"
>
> Seems appropriate.
>
> Thanks to all for advice. Regards.
>
> Tom
On Sat, 30 Sep 2006 22:31:12 +0200, "Eddie" <[email protected]>
wrote:
>Very nice work Tom... I like the look of it. so you collect bayonets and
>daggers? nice hobby.
>Eddie.
Thanks Eddie.
Yes, I do have a small collection of sharp edged tools Some, like the
black sheathed kukuri and the sword cane, belonged to my father,
others, like the Omani kanjar, I've picked up during my travels. The
"daggers" are actually Gerber combat knives, the earliest (and
ugliest) of which I carried in Vietnam in the late sixties. It's a
harmless hobby until someone gets mad.
The real purpose for the chest was to get the knives (all the drawers
are full of them) out of reach of my grandson, who's now at that age
where he can and will, try to touch anything that's shiny.
Regards.
Now you done created something that will cause you to
have to create "other" things and you will suddenly become
a woodworking "god" to your family...
There goes the hobby.
Tom Banes wrote:
> After lots of help from you guys and gals over the last year or so, I
> finally broke down and built a piece of furniture that wasn't just a
> chunk of wood on legs (I call them tables, but know better).