Well, going by some of the so-called "art" in some of my wood
books, it's art anyway. It sure looks better than most of the stuff
that's supposed to be "art".
Actually, it's a further adaptation of the octaon cutting
jig/bandsaw sled I'd made a week or so ago. If it was put in a gallery
it'd probably be listed as an abstract wood piece. The people in the
real world would say it was a piece of 1/4: plywood, about 9"X9", with a
few randoml glued pieces of short and narrow peces of 1/4" plywood glued
on. In its own way, it is sort of art, in that it's totally functional,
and serves a useful purpose.
It originally started with a three pieces glued on so as to hold a
1 7/8" square in place so one corner could be lopped off with the
bandsaw, then the piece turned so another corner, and so on, until it
wound up as an octagon. Worked nicely.
But how to cut the squaes was an unanswered question. After
numerous thoughts, decided to adapt the original jig/bandsaw sled.
Started by gluing a strip across the back, so I could square the end of
a piece of scrap plywood - all I need is one corner at a precise 90
dgree angle, which this will give. Then on the front (would need to
rotate the jig to present this side to the blade), glued two pieces in
place, to hold a piece in place, then slice one side, then another, so
wind up with a square. This will let me make a square out of any
suitable sized scrap plywood, as long as it has one corner with 90
degree angles, then I can store them until I have a need. Some will be
made into octagons, for use as chess piece bases, some as spacers, or
whatever else I can think of. Oh yeah, octagon checkers too.
I'll drill a hole in one corner of it, then drive a nail into one
of the rafters to hold it when I don't need it. Maybe the best part is
that now I won'd even need to think to make my squares, then octagons,
just lay the wood in place, and cut. Oh yeah, for each cutting
posisiton I put a small block of layered pieces as a holdonto, so none
of my fingers will stray into the blade - I try to do something like
that on all my jigs/sleds. Gods above, woodworking at it's finest.
JOAT
You'll never get anywhere if you believe what you "hear". What do you
"know"?.
- Granny Weatherwax
Wed, Nov 28, 2007, 11:02am [email protected] (J=A0T) when I did
sayeth:
<snip>
Actually, it's a further adaptation of the octaon cutting jig/bandsaw
sled I'd made a week or so ago. <snip>
Went out a bit ago and tried it out. Used a bit of scrap OSB. And
the blade immediately jumped off the wheels. It had jumped off
yesterday, but got it back on in about 30 seconds with no problem,
including the time to open the door. Today I almost needed 3 hands and
a trained monkey to get it back on. Got the OSB cut, then got it
squared, then started cutting the corners off. Blade jumped off the
wheels on the last cut, but the octagon looked good. So decided to try
some plywood. Got down to the second corner cut and the blade jumped
off again. This time left it and went back in the house.
The octagon looked good. But when I measured the flats, found out
when I cut the corners off, the cut corners were just a shade less than
the others. But the square was dead on. Which means the octagon jig
part is just a shade off. No prob, I just need to take a hair off one
side and it will be right on. Or, I could just leave it as is, 'cause
you can't just look and tell it's a shade off. But I'll check it again
after I get the blade back on, with plywood instead of OSB. Plenty
accurate, for a slap together jig. I'm pleased.
JOAT
You'll never get anywhere if you believe what you "hear". What do you
"know"?.
- Granny Weatherwax
Jeff wrote:
> On Nov 28, 11:02 am, [email protected] (J T) wrote:
>> Well, going by some of the so-called "art" in some of my wood
>> books, it's art anyway. It sure looks better than most of the stuff
>> that's supposed to be "art".
>>
>
> Why do you feel the need to put scare quotes around "art"?
Why do you feel the need to call quotes, "scare quotes"? The use of
quotes is to imply that the word being used is being used in a hypothetical
or sarcastic fashion, i.e, that the use of the word "art" is only in a
satirical way.
Have the same issue with some signs at work: they are parking signs that
read, 'Parking for [company name] vehicles "only"'. I think that whoever
put the signs together thought the use of quotes implied bolding or
emphasis. I've always been tempted to park in those spots, and then when
confronted, point out the fact that since the word only is in quotes, it
means that this is just a hypothetical desire and that it is not an
imperative. OTOH, I do like my job and it's not really worth having to
deal with the rent-a-cops who wouldn't have a clue anyway.
--
If you're going to be dumb, you better be tough
On Nov 28, 11:02 am, [email protected] (J T) wrote:
> Well, going by some of the so-called "art" in some of my wood
> books, it's art anyway. It sure looks better than most of the stuff
> that's supposed to be "art".
>
Why do you feel the need to put scare quotes around "art"?
Thu, Nov 29, 2007, 6:02am (EST-3) [email protected] (Jeff) did posteth:
On Nov 28, 11:02 am, [email protected] (J T) wrote:
=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0Well, going by some of the so-called "art"
in some of my wood books, it's art anyway. It sure looks better than
most of the stuff that's supposed to be "art".
Why do you feel the need to put scare quotes around "art"?
Well obviously it was to try to "scare" you. Apparently it didn't
work.
Scare quotes? And you're how old?
JOAT
Even Popeye didn't eat his spinach until he had to.
On Nov 29, 11:54 am, "Swingman" <[email protected]> wrote:
> "J T" wrote in message
>
> Thu, Nov 29, 2007, 6:02am (EST-3) [email protected] (Jeff) did posteth:
> On Nov 28, 11:02 am, [email protected] (J T) wrote:
> Well, going by some of the so-called "art"
> in some of my wood books, it's art anyway. It sure looks better than
> most of the stuff that's supposed to be "art".
>
> >> Why do you feel the need to put scare quotes around "art"?
> > Well obviously it was to try to "scare" you. Apparently it didn't
> > work.
>
> > Scare quotes? And you're how old?
>
> LOL ... next time just give him a "finger quote". :)
>
Those would be "air quotes" ...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scare_quotes
Fri, Nov 30, 2007, 12:56pm (EST-3) [email protected] (Jeff) doth
posteth:
Those would be "air quotes" ...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scare_quotes
Air quotes, eh? Would that be two fingers on each hand, or one
finger on each hand? How about half an air quote?
JOAT
Even Popeye didn't eat his spinach until he had to.
"J T" wrote in message
Thu, Nov 29, 2007, 6:02am (EST-3) [email protected] (Jeff) did posteth:
On Nov 28, 11:02 am, [email protected] (J T) wrote:
Well, going by some of the so-called "art"
in some of my wood books, it's art anyway. It sure looks better than
most of the stuff that's supposed to be "art".
>> Why do you feel the need to put scare quotes around "art"?
> Well obviously it was to try to "scare" you. Apparently it didn't
> work.
> Scare quotes? And you're how old?
LOL ... next time just give him a "finger quote". :)
--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 11/16/07
KarlC@ (the obvious)