In the October 2003 issue of Fine Woodworking, there is a photo of a
table built by Tom Bodett of Motel 6 commercial fame. Tom says that
the legs were shaped using the proportions found in the Fibonacci
sequence which helped create a feminine foundation to the Handsome
Arts and Crafts lines and details.
Sounds like ol' Tom spent some time this Summer reading The DaVinci
Code.
Dick Durbin
spambait@milmac.com (Doug Miller) wrote in message news:<FfK0b.9999$Ih1.3697930@newssrv26.news.prodigy.com>...
> In article <bd94b61250f77fa7f6ad551a5ff6f66c@news.teranews.com>, "Absinthe" <bradley_small@XNOSPAMXhotmail.com> wrote:
> >Perhaps this goes off topic, but didn't he do something NPR flavored before
> >he started leaving the light on? For some reason something like "End of the
> >world radio show" or something of that ilk comes to mind...?
> >
> Yep, "End of the Road" from Homer, Alaska. Great show.
He used to talk about working construction in Alaska in the middle of
winter and how easy it was to split rafter with a nail when it gets
that cold.
In article <bd94b61250f77fa7f6ad551a5ff6f66c@news.teranews.com>, "Absinthe" <bradley_small@XNOSPAMXhotmail.com> wrote:
>Perhaps this goes off topic, but didn't he do something NPR flavored before
>he started leaving the light on? For some reason something like "End of the
>world radio show" or something of that ilk comes to mind...?
>
Yep, "End of the Road" from Homer, Alaska. Great show.
--
Regards,
Doug Miller (alphageek-at-milmac-dot-com)