"Swingman" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> ... is finally over:
>
> http://www.e-woodshop.net/Projects12.htm#hopechest
>
Very nice. Looks like a happy young lady too.
Swingman wrote:
> "B A R R Y" wrote in message
>
> > I hate it when that happens... Again, the whole thing looks very
> > nice, obviously an instant heirloom.
>
> Thanks ... however, "instant" is a relative term. That big, overgrown
> jewelry box took longer, from start to finish, than it does for me to make
> the cabinets for an entire kitchen.
>
> --
> www.e-woodshop.net
> Last update: 1/06/07
Yeah, but her kids won't be fighting over Mom's kitchen cabinets in 80
years.
Wonderful work. Hopefully I'll be able to gift something that nice to
someone one day.
-Nathan
On Sun, 7 Jan 2007 09:39:53 -0600, "Swingman" <[email protected]> wrote:
>... sanded to 220 before it was assembled, then 3 coats of BullsEye Clear
>Shellac sprayed on in about as many minutes, out of a spray can no less ...
>that is ALL that was done to that tray insofar as "finish" ... sorta makes
>you sick, don't it?
I go through lots of that stuff, it's very handy to have on hand. I
also use it to check artificially colored wood with a clear coat. In
three minutes you have an idea of what something will look like with
no clean up.
Imagine showing up at the wood dealer with an apron plane in one
pocket and spray shellac in the other? <G>
>
>Cut from a single 6" x 72" x 1/2" cherry board I've had around the shop for
>a while (a reject from another project because I didn't have the time then
>to sort out a bit of bow and twist), it looked like "tray wood" to me and I
>didn't pay too much attention to it until it was shellacked ... then that
>figure popped out of nowhere.
I hate it when that happens... Again, the whole thing looks very
nice, obviously an instant heirloom.
Swingman wrote:
> "B A R R Y" wrote in message
>
>> I hate it when that happens... Again, the whole thing looks very
>> nice, obviously an instant heirloom.
>
> Thanks ... however, "instant" is a relative term. That big, overgrown
> jewelry box took longer, from start to finish, than it does for me to make
> the cabinets for an entire kitchen.
Right!
The "instant" part comes at the presentation of the gift!
"Swingman" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> ... is finally over:
>
> http://www.e-woodshop.net/Projects12.htm#hopechest
>
Ya did good swingman. You must of achieved uncle status with this young
lady with this effort. She seems quite happy with her new chest.
This chest looks substantial, particularly when you include the cedar
lining. How much does this thing weigh? Was it hard to move?
"jtpr" wrote in message
> WOW! That is the balls!. Very nice work.
Thank you!
> The documentation is pretty
> slick too. Where do you get the time???
Work, being mostly wood/building related these past few years, is usually
done close to the shop, if not in it, and what isn't is heavily cell phone
oriented ... and the "documentation" is sort of a pleasant-to-me, very early
morning, compulsion that goes along with it. ;)
--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 1/06/07
"B A R R Y" wrote in message
> The cherry trays almost look curly. Is that a photo illusion or do
> those trays have that much figure?
Oh man, now that you mention it, it was REAL tough/time consuming finishing
that tray...
... sanded to 220 before it was assembled, then 3 coats of BullsEye Clear
Shellac sprayed on in about as many minutes, out of a spray can no less ...
that is ALL that was done to that tray insofar as "finish" ... sorta makes
you sick, don't it?
Cut from a single 6" x 72" x 1/2" cherry board I've had around the shop for
a while (a reject from another project because I didn't have the time then
to sort out a bit of bow and twist), it looked like "tray wood" to me and I
didn't pay too much attention to it until it was shellacked ... then that
figure popped out of nowhere.
Sometimes we forget/are humbled by what the simple application of shellac
can do to a nice piece of wood.
--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 1/06/07
On Sat, 6 Jan 2007 20:40:08 -0600, "Swingman" <[email protected]> wrote:
>... is finally over:
>
>http://www.e-woodshop.net/Projects12.htm#hopechest
Well, she certainly should be smiling. Very nicely done sir.
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
If you're gonna be dumb, you better be tough
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
On Sat, 6 Jan 2007 20:40:08 -0600, "Swingman" <[email protected]> wrote:
>... is finally over:
>
>http://www.e-woodshop.net/Projects12.htm#hopechest
Looks like a total win-win!
The cherry trays almost look curly. Is that a photo illusion or do
those trays have that much figure?
"N Hurst" wrote in message
>
> Swingman wrote:
> > "B A R R Y" wrote in message
> >
> > > I hate it when that happens... Again, the whole thing looks very
> > > nice, obviously an instant heirloom.
> >
> > Thanks ... however, "instant" is a relative term. That big, overgrown
> > jewelry box took longer, from start to finish, than it does for me to
make
> > the cabinets for an entire kitchen.
> Yeah, but her kids won't be fighting over Mom's kitchen cabinets in 80
> years.
LOL ... but they would have the oppotunity if they buy one of the house with
my kitchen cabinets! :)
> Wonderful work. Hopefully I'll be able to gift something that nice to
> someone one day.
Thanks for the kind words.
--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 1/06/07
"B A R R Y" wrote in message
> I hate it when that happens... Again, the whole thing looks very
> nice, obviously an instant heirloom.
Thanks ... however, "instant" is a relative term. That big, overgrown
jewelry box took longer, from start to finish, than it does for me to make
the cabinets for an entire kitchen.
--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 1/06/07
"Lee Michaels" wrote in message
> This chest looks substantial, particularly when you include the cedar
> lining. How much does this thing weigh? Was it hard to move?
Not too bad to move around without the drawers and the tray ... I'd say
about 60 + lbs total (I estimated the top at + 10lb when deciding upon the
size and number of counterbalanced lid supports) ... I could lift it off the
bench until the top and drawers went on, but after that it became a bit
awkward to grab.
It does have a very substantial, solid feel to it that you immediately
notice when opening the lid/drawers ... unlike the ubiquitous $300 cedar
chests you see around, you have to want to move it for it to budge.
A very slight young lady and I carried it up a flight of stairs with no
trouble ... but then again, this particular young lady, a family friend from
Venezuela, who weighs not much more than 100 lbs, if that, is a world class
soccer player, is in college on a tennis scholarship, and can out eat a
table of 300 lb NFL lineman ... I've never seen anything like it. I would
definitely want her on my side in a fight.
--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 1/06/07