One of the greatest things about being a woodworker is the respect and
reverence you receive from your family, friends, and neighbors,
especially when they need something. You can imagine how proud I felt,
when my neighbors asked for my help in constructing a booth for the
Church Fair. They said things like "you're very handy", "you're so
talented" and "saw envy". Blinded by such flattery, I pumped out my
chest and said "Yes, I will build it".
Unfortunately, now I actually have to build it and the clock is
ticking...
DAGS and found nothing on booths or stands (church, fair, festival, or
carnival related). This is a couple of basic boxes but I was wondering
if anyone had been roped in to building one (which I'm sure has
happened). What I'm really after are ideas on how to make this thing
easy to knock down and set up.
This specific booth is of the "football toss through a hole" variety,
so anyone's opinion in an especially similar circumstance, would be
quite welcome.
Chuck
"Woodchuck34" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> One of the greatest things about being a woodworker is the respect and
> reverence you receive from your family, friends, and neighbors,
> especially when they need something. You can imagine how proud I felt,
> when my neighbors asked for my help in constructing a booth for the
> Church Fair. They said things like "you're very handy", "you're so
> talented" and "saw envy". Blinded by such flattery, I pumped out my
> chest and said "Yes, I will build it".
Sucker!!!!! (Ask me how I know...)
>
> Unfortunately, now I actually have to build it and the clock is
> ticking...
>
Get yourself a bunch of 2x4's and some carriage bolts, washers and wing
nuts. Build the uprights like you would the corner in a house - two 2x4's
with scraps of 2x4 between them. The scrap between creates a space that a
perpendicular 2x4 will just slide into. Place the scrap so that the 2x4
that slide in sits on top of the scrap between the doubled up 2x4's. Run a
carriage bolt through the intersection and throw the washer and wing nut on
it. Don't go crazy trying to brace the thing seven ways to Sunday until you
put it all together and see how rigid the assembly is. Even then, use
minimum bracing. Remember - this is not a house, it's a game booth and it
will see little use. Set up and knock down are as important as making
something that will withstand the next 8.5 earthquake.
-Mike-
"Woodchuck34" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> One of the greatest things about being a woodworker is the respect and
> reverence you receive from your family, friends, and neighbors,
> especially when they need something. You can imagine how proud I felt,
> when my neighbors asked for my help in constructing a booth for the
> Church Fair. They said things like "you're very handy", "you're so
> talented" and "saw envy". Blinded by such flattery, I pumped out my
> chest and said "Yes, I will build it".
>
> Unfortunately, now I actually have to build it and the clock is
> ticking...
>
> DAGS and found nothing on booths or stands (church, fair, festival, or
> carnival related). This is a couple of basic boxes but I was wondering
> if anyone had been roped in to building one (which I'm sure has
> happened). What I'm really after are ideas on how to make this thing
> easy to knock down and set up.
>
> This specific booth is of the "football toss through a hole" variety,
> so anyone's opinion in an especially similar circumstance, would be
> quite welcome.
>
It's a front made with a counter for taking tickets and issuing footballs.
Stands on its own, with a signboard on 2x posts.
Back is a pair of uprights braced and/or weighted against tumbling,
supporting the blanket with the hole, and the sloped blanket used to end the
flight of the ball..
Now, if outside, you can spike them in place through predrilled holes and
hang a tarp across.
"Rick Cook" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:tz3Yd.5444>
> Prefab everything and put the corners together with loose-pin hinges.
> Do some experimenting to figure out the hole placement.
> Make the counter where the customers' stand extremely sturdy (3/4"
> supported with 2X4 braces is not overkill.)
> For the rest of it, cloth stretched on frames is good.
My favorite for things that must be stored
http://www.rockler.com/ecom7/product_details.cfm?offerings_id=343&filter=wedge%20connectors
Sturdy and cheap.
Woodchuck34 wrote:
> One of the greatest things about being a woodworker is the respect and
> reverence you receive from your family, friends, and neighbors,
> especially when they need something. You can imagine how proud I felt,
> when my neighbors asked for my help in constructing a booth for the
> Church Fair. They said things like "you're very handy", "you're so
> talented" and "saw envy". Blinded by such flattery, I pumped out my
> chest and said "Yes, I will build it".
>
> Unfortunately, now I actually have to build it and the clock is
> ticking...
>
> DAGS and found nothing on booths or stands (church, fair, festival, or
> carnival related). This is a couple of basic boxes but I was wondering
> if anyone had been roped in to building one (which I'm sure has
> happened). What I'm really after are ideas on how to make this thing
> easy to knock down and set up.
>
> This specific booth is of the "football toss through a hole" variety,
> so anyone's opinion in an especially similar circumstance, would be
> quite welcome.
>
> Chuck
>
Prefab everything and put the corners together with loose-pin hinges.
Do some experimenting to figure out the hole placement.
Make the counter where the customers' stand extremely sturdy (3/4"
supported with 2X4 braces is not overkill.)
For the rest of it, cloth stretched on frames is good.
--RC