I've been working on a glass display box for a Nautilus model I have.
I'm self-taught and prone to procrastination and second-guessing,
which explains why it took me several months to do this pretty simple
project. But, you can see photos of the semi-finished project at:
http://briansiano.livejournal.com/643709.html
Previous blog entries about this project are, in order:
http://briansiano.livejournal.com/564794.html
http://briansiano.livejournal.com/594931.html
http://briansiano.livejournal.com/596626.html
http://briansiano.livejournal.com/597986.html
(Somewhere in here, I switched to Oak, but took no photos.)
http://briansiano.livejournal.com/643709.html
On Mar 5, 12:22 pm, BrianSiano <[email protected]> wrote:
> I've been working on a glass display box for a Nautilus model I have.
> I'm self-taught and prone to procrastination and second-guessing,
> which explains why it took me several months to do this pretty simple
> project. But, you can see photos of the semi-finished project at:
>
> http://briansiano.livejournal.com/643709.html
>
> Previous blog entries about this project are, in order:
>
> http://briansiano.livejournal.com/564794.htmlhttp://briansiano.livejournal.com/594931.htmlhttp://briansiano.livejournal.com/596626.htmlhttp://briansiano.livejournal.com/597986.html
> (Somewhere in here, I switched to Oak, but took no photos.)http://briansiano.livejournal.com/643709.html
Nice! And I've always empathized with Captain Nemo. Tom
On Mar 5, 2:22=A0pm, BrianSiano <[email protected]> wrote:
> I've been working on a glass display box for a Nautilus model I have.
> I'm self-taught and prone to procrastination and second-guessing,
> which explains why it took me several months to do this pretty simple
> project. But, you can see photos of the semi-finished project at:
>
> http://briansiano.livejournal.com/643709.html
>
> Previous blog entries about this project are, in order:
>
> http://briansiano.livejournal.com/564794.htmlhttp://briansiano.livejourna=
l.com/594931.htmlhttp://briansiano.livejournal.com/596626.htmlhttp://brians=
iano.livejournal.com/597986.html
> (Somewhere in here, I switched to Oak, but took no photos.)http://briansi=
ano.livejournal.com/643709.html
It looks nice!
A friend of mine once told me something that I've taken to heart when
it comes to projects: The best time to start a project is right after
you finish it.
So far it's held true in every single thing that comes out of my
workshop.
For the base, which probably won't straighten out like you're hoping,
you can always just take some of the scrap oak and make some feet for
your case. Even 1" feet with some nice curves will help. Also, it
might help when you move it to another location. You can work to make
sure your boards are flat to 1/1000", but it won't do you any good if
the thing you're setting them on are wavy and warped. :-)
-Nathan
"BrianSiano" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:031ed5a4-44e4-4ef1-92bd-45eff795d568@v38g2000yqb.googlegroups.com...
> I've been working on a glass display box for a Nautilus model I have.
> I'm self-taught and prone to procrastination and second-guessing,
> which explains why it took me several months to do this pretty simple
> project. But, you can see photos of the semi-finished project at:
>
> http://briansiano.livejournal.com/643709.html
>
> Previous blog entries about this project are, in order:
>
> http://briansiano.livejournal.com/564794.html
> http://briansiano.livejournal.com/594931.html
> http://briansiano.livejournal.com/596626.html
> http://briansiano.livejournal.com/597986.html
> (Somewhere in here, I switched to Oak, but took no photos.)
> http://briansiano.livejournal.com/643709.html
Brian,
Impressive work. You should be proud. :-)
You said you will find another way to make the 45 degree joints.
I've never built a case like that, but I think that a shooting board and
hand plane would make short work of it. You can adjust a miter with shims,
even a paper's thickness.