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04/28/2022 - 04/28/2022
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Popular Content
Showing content with the highest reputation on 04/28/2022 in all areas
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Name Puzzle
meflick and 8 others reacted to barb.j.enders for a topic
Got a request for a new name puzzle from my team mate on Thursday. Need to deliver this Thursday. All done! Thanks to Don for his help with the pattern. With his tutelage, I may actually be able to do my own pattern next time. Cut from BB Ply with a #5 MG reverse blade. Font is Berlin. Colour provided by Unicorn Spit. Final finish is Tung Oil.9 points -
7 points
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The Book of Inkscape
barb.j.enders and 5 others reacted to Joe W. for a topic
My public library has "The Book of Inkscape" , 2nd edition, 2022. A mere 500+ pages of the definitive guide to the graphics editor. For those want to learn a little (lot) more about Inkscape and/or can't sleep at night check out your local library.6 points -
6 points
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I was looking for something different and found this Pheonix Rising image that I was able to convert to a Scroll Saw Pattern. I had to modified it significantly to make it scrollable and I did add some of my own embellishment’s. The cut panel is 5/32” x 12” x 15” Hand Painted Solid Core Maple affixed to a 1/4” x 12” x 15” Hand Painted BB Ply backer. I finished the assembled panel with multiple coats of Deft Clear Gloss Lacquer. The Frame is my typical 1 3/4” wide Poplar finished with Black Lacquer. My unbiased (Yeah, I know) Lady thinks it is great…I, on the other hand being my own worst critic, am not too happy with the overall finish work. Mostly the painting. OK, Comments and Critique appreciated.6 points
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4 points
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Our first Clock sale - and a shout out to...
Iguanadon and 2 others reacted to new2woodwrk for a topic
We had our first clock sale 2 weeks ago (it took a few days to get the process down). A big thank you and shout out to @kmmcrafts for all the information relating to the drill bit size and clock insert as well as providing access to the insert! Also a shout out to every one who offered suggestions on mounting items. I went with a dowel for the clock tower and polyurethane glue for the dragon (this glue is now my go to for difficult glue ups!) Made from blond Poplar, measures 9 1/2" base x 6" height with a 2" clock tower insert with spray acrylic coating. I left enough room on the insert tower for engraving should the customer want in the future. Thanks as always in advance for reading3 points -
Walk by Faith
TripleJScroller and 2 others reacted to GrampaJim for a topic
3 points -
Recognize these eyes? I’ll give you a hint. They’re not mine. I used a watercolor painting image from Google that was nearly scrollable as is for a pattern “For beautiful eyes, look for the good in others; for beautiful lips, speak only words of kindness; and for poise, walk with the knowledge that you are never alone.” Audrey Hepburn3 points
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2 points
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2 points
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DeWalt Planer Chip / Dust Collection?
kmmcrafts and one other reacted to new2woodwrk for a topic
2 points -
The Book of Inkscape
Gonzo and one other reacted to Norm Fengstad for a topic
Yeah, this electronic age can give me a headache2 points -
2 points
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I hate not having a reference book at hand when trying to learn something new. Loath the online instructions. I'd much rather flick through to a certain page and have it open near me. I rather like Barb's idea My favourite (and by far the best IMHO) are the Dummies and an Idiots Guide text books. May be that says something about me2 points
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The Book of Inkscape
OCtoolguy and one other reacted to barb.j.enders for a topic
Like Kev, I am a visual learner. Slow at that but whatever! I have also tried the free software for Cricket & Silhouette, which are supposed to be easier than Inkscape. Can't figure those out either. I have tried learning by setting up my Chromebook with the video beside my laptop with Inkscape. Quite a set up to behold!!!2 points -
CA Glue and Accelerator----Can someone educate me?
BadBob and one other reacted to Roberta Moreton for a topic
I only use CA occasionally. I buy the tiny multipacks from Harbor Freight. Use it and toss it. Easy and works well for me.2 points -
looking for pattern
OCtoolguy and one other reacted to barb.j.enders for a topic
I think I have the patterns. Not sure where I got them so not sure if they are "legal" I will search my thumb drive later today.2 points -
looking for pattern
OCtoolguy and one other reacted to Roberta Moreton for a topic
I wonder if somehow we could ask someone like Diana Thompson to design this. She makes really cool compound cut patterns. I have made a few including a bear sitting on a stool.2 points -
DeWalt Planer Chip / Dust Collection?
John B and one other reacted to Roberta Moreton for a topic
I am now thinking of trying to just let the planer blow the chips into a bucket and unhook the shop vac. Less noise!2 points -
I'm definitely not going to to criticise the painting Frank. It look a million bucks compared to my efforts. Single colours I'm OK at. The only suggestion I can offer is to perhaps spend a little more time sanding the frame prior to finishing it. The only problem with gloss is it tends to show imperfections and there are minor machine marks visible. You are welcome to tell me to take a hike2 points
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A true beauty and a heroine to boot. Far outshone Marilyn Munro and other "Blond Bombshells"2 points
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Before I got a dust collector I hooked a shop vac hose to it and hooked the other end to a dust deputy and bucket. The planer has enough power to blow the dust and shavings into it.2 points
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What's happening?!!!
John B and one other reacted to Clayton717 for a topic
I'm still here. I check in every now and then. Just don't post much. Busy in the shop and with life.2 points -
My Scroll Saw Blade Holder.
meflick and one other reacted to Insane Dust Maker for a topic
2 points -
Alex Fox
barb.j.enders and one other reacted to meflick for a topic
He posted a new pattern (Celtic Cross) to the Scrollsaw Woodworking & Crafts magazine’s forum about 5 hours ago. Didn’t say anything other then post it, so it seems for now he is okay and still crafting some. https://forum.scrollsawer.com/forum/scroll-saw/bowls-boxes-compound-and-other-3-d-projects/878680-celtic-cross-collection#post878682 edited to add: I see he posted the same new pattern here in the Village’s “Bragging Rights” section about the same time looks like.2 points -
Thunder Lizard
frankorona and one other reacted to Nickel Falls for a topic
2 points -
I was inspired by seeing a wooden cowboy hat done on a lathe. YouTube videos are always inspiring. Since a hat is similar to a bowl. I had to start this wearable cowboy hat project. I found Cherokee Woods supplies thin stock ⅛" thick. In several types of wood. This first one is maple. Yep, I have more to make, canary wood, and black walnut is planned. Making The Pattern To get the shape of my head I bought a curve tool for drafting big curves. This tool is 30 inches. The blue curve tool is shown in the brim section. I wrapped the curve tool around my head pressing hard. Then scanned it into the computer. I traced the scanned and made it a path. Inkscape has a linked offset and I created 7 linked offsets of 0.125 inches. One larger than my head. For a liner space. 0.125 inches was calculated from an angle of 9 degrees on a 0.75-inch thick board. Made the pattern, attached to hard maple ¾" board, and drilled blade access holes. Step 1 My first issue started by a drill bit broke inside the board. I made a note on the pattern. My fix was to leave it and drill another hole. It turns out I did not need the smallest rings. Then cut the first 2 large rings out. Step 2 2 rings stacked, now for glue up thin stock for the brim. Now in preparation for the brim, I had to glue up (3) sheets 6 in x 24 in . My plan is to have seams going front to back. Step 3 2 more rings are cut and stacked. I decided to show how good / bad that I stay on the lines. So I put the rings back where they came out of and get a zoomed in picture. 4 outer rings are cut, pattern shows lines. Step 4 6 rings look pretty high for the crown. I decided to stop there. Cuts were done with #1 Pegasus MGT. Since bowls use both top and bottom I wanted no bottom blade tear outs. Each ring is about 23 inches around. I got about ⅔ around before changing blades. Once I pushed the dulled blade all around but my" follow the line'' was getting not very good. I went slow, each ring took about an hour. 6 rings , 6 hours but not all at 1 sitting. Step 5 Gluing rings was in steps. 2 smallest rings first. I used the center wood to clamp the rings down. The center is not going to be used. I waited about 30 min before adding another ring. This made it easier to verify the alignment of sides. I wanted to show how the edges line up from my gluing and show cut quality or the lack of following the lines. This next picture is straight down the ruler. You can see variations against the ruler edge. Also see some ripple of the curves just to the left of the ruler. Step 6 Here it is all stacked. This shows bad drilling issues. Drill bits did not stay at 9 degrees. Drill bits drifted and bent a bit as it went through the wood. See next picture. The top center piece is still there from clamping. Looks like 7 rings here. The next picture shows the wall thickness and how far off the bit was. This is the exit hole. Lessons learned here is get a stiff cobalt drill bit. Also do not have drill holes in the same area. Step 7 Sanding time. I have a palm sander "finish" sander I was using to sand down the ripples and edge mismatches. After an hour I decided that the finish sander was not good enough. I went and got an orbital sander. Within another 25 min the outside was sanded. With all grits 100 down to 320. I decided to make a YouTube short video for the sanding result: This video also shows inside sanding results. Not shown in video, I used a hand drum sander and my hand powered drill to sand the inside crown. The sanding drum is the type you can cut sand paper and slip it inside a grove and lock it in. Final sanding grit is 320. Total sanding time: Outside 1hr : 25 min, Inside 3 hrs. Step 8 With the ring stack trace (center area) the outside of the largest ring for inside if brim. Carefully measure 4.5 inches all the way around . This gives dashed lines. Taking the same curve tool that I used for my head, I carefully drew a solid line on the wood for the outer brim. Here (next picture) is the big board in the scroll saw. See the tiny blade? Table angle is still 9 degrees. This will go over the top ring stack and match the sides of the bottom ring. The throat of my saw is 26 inch Hawk. It is starting to look like a hat. Maybe a cowboy hat? Pretty. I don't like selfies, but I had to do a fit check. Yep I look goofy. Total project time around 12 hrs. Do cowboy hats have flat brims? I had to do some research…. Yes 2 of these guys have flat brims. These guys look good. Step 9 Since I looked goofy I needed some bending of wood. Most cowboy hats have some kind of angle of sides. Ok here goes some experiments. Take bar clamps across short side of table. This allows excess bars to be used for support. I decided on with 2inch PVC pipes for a good radius curve for the wood. Sit the hat upside down on these PVC tubes. Use wet paper towels to control water so the water does not go on glue seams of the brim. Wet the wood on the outside edge of paper towels and soak the paper towel. Really soak the wood. I took this pic 5 minutes after soaking. Top view pic first then bottom views. I have light weight clamps on the right and left edges if the brim. These are the weights to pull the wood around the PVC pipes. You can barely see the white pipes in the below picture. The angle of the clamps show that the wood is bending . This is within 5 minutes of wetting the wood. ⅛ inch wood bends faster than I expected. About 2hr later I checked on them the wood is bend around the white PVC tube. Drying time. Slowly allow the bent wood to dry. I covered the wet wood with paper towels. To keep some moisture. After a few hours I checked on dryness and paper towels were a bit too dry. So I lightly sprayed them. Them covered everything with plastic. After a whole night there was still some, not much, moisture on paper towels. So I covered it back up all day. As it dried it opened up the angle quite a bit. But the wood felt a bit cool still but looked dry. Using a thermometer gun I noted the wet wood was 4 degrees cooler than dry wood. Here is a top view. It is still drying. I added a clamp on both sides for more weight. The angle of the curve is the angle I think I want. No cracks or splits are viewable. Step 10 Make a crown top. I just could NOT leave the top flat. So I decided to make the center top inside and level with the edge. This shows the ring thickness and how it is made. Also most hats have sewing seams on top, not the edge. Most "telescope" cowboy hats have a lowered part around the top and then it comes back up in the center. The picture above shows a piece that was cut , then sanded to fit into the tip crown. It's outside edge also has a 9 degree angle to match the crown angle. Since this was made with maple wood I thought a maple leaf would be a good centerpiece. This maple leaf is a separate piece and just glued on top. Now this was cut at an angle of 45 degrees to show kinda embossing or a relief feel. I did try to use a relief cut from ⅛ thick thin stock. It would only stick up a little. So I decide to just add a piece. This 45 degree angle cut leaf was very interesting. Very difficult to get sharp pointed leaves. But even harder to get sharp corners near the leaf. You can't approach the sharp corner the opposite way. You need to keep the same clockwise direction through the whole piece. I actually was going counterclockwise. My magnifying glass is slightly on the right side of the blade. Having the table tilt low on the left, it was hard to see the cut edge. Next time I will tilt the table low to the right. This maple leaf outline is from a Vermont website. But Canadians do wear cowboy hats. Yippee Calgary stampede rodeo. But the leaf is just because it is made with maple wood. Final Assembly Now it looks like a cowboy hat. So I wanted to inject some glue between the crown and brim connection. So I used a #18ga needle and Titebond 3. Next is a hard outer finish, ArmorSeal. Final Project1 point
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1 point
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Pheonix Rising
FrankEV reacted to new2woodwrk for a topic
The Phoenix puzzle is one of our best selling items. Our colors are very close to yours, except we add a little blue to outer wings... and the kids love these! Excellent work on that piece - no critique other than great job!1 point -
VW's and Caravans
John B reacted to Denny Knappen for a topic
That is sure way cute, John. Your work is always exceptional.1 point -
Pheonix Rising
FrankEV reacted to Denny Knappen for a topic
Very nice, Frank, and I too will not criticize the colors. Looks fantastic.1 point -
Pheonix Rising
FrankEV reacted to barb.j.enders for a topic
As always, very nice. Just a thought on the painting - maybe some brown/green on the top of the wings for shading. The flames are great.1 point -
1 point
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Hmm, I guess this day and age who would have ever thought there'd be a "book" on inkscape, LOL.. I'd love to read that but at the same time It'd take me a year to do so.. 1 being I'm a bit of a slow reader.. 2 just the time it'd take to read that much. 3. I'm more of a visual learner anyway.. and plenty of YouTube videos.. I may look for a used book though, just to have and hope I could get some of it read. Inkscape is a powerful program and many of the features doesn't pertain to what we do as pattern makers.. I find that my drawing program that came with my CNC much easier to understand and use.. Lot's less buttons and features and many of them are self explanatory.. Though that software isn't cheap at all.. but it's not loaded with generic features that wouldn't pertain to making patterns etc..1 point
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I did too Dan The scene from "Sons of Katie Elder" with Dean Martin auctioning his glass eye immediately sprung to mind1 point
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Name Puzzle
barb.j.enders reacted to pet-design for a topic
Very fine, beautiful colors and the font ist great!1 point -
VW's and Caravans
John B reacted to pet-design for a topic
Beautiful! Where are the patterns from? Thank you!1 point -
Hi Charlie: Darn it!!! - I knew this one Remember her in the movie "Wait Until Dark" Another winner to add to your list Fab41 point
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Yes, it’s Audrey. Gorgeous lady. Hope to finish tomorrow.1 point
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1 point
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Thanks, I think I found one that'll work well. My confusion is it seems like DW would know that it would need a elbow, LOL1 point
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Very nice, Frank. I've ordered me some colors so I can try my hand at adding a flair to my projects.1 point
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Cube Tissue Box Cover w/ Hummingbird design
frankorona reacted to FrankEV for a topic
Last Thursday (4/21/22) Bernd (munzieb) posted his very nicely done Tissue box Cover that his wife had asked him to make. I mentioned that I have cardboard cube type tissue boxes all over our house and I would like to make a box cover for them. However, I also mentioned I would have to make them with a Hummingbird design as my Lady loves Hummingbirds. This led to discussion and searches for Tissue Box Covers with Hummingbird designs. Steeve Good, The Wooden Teddy Bear and Sue May all have patterns for Tissue Box Covers with HB designs, but I just was not happy with any of them. Also, I’m not a fan of Steve’s joinery, and Sue Mays pattern is just butt joints, a not so nice look. Then, there is another part of the design for these box covers I’m not fond of… the open fretwork. I don’t really want to see the cardboard tissue box at all. Using ¼” thick material and adding an interior backer starts to make the cover bigger and heavier than needed. Also, making the covers out of solid wood can get very expensive. Soooooo, I thought why not create my own version, in this case, of a Cube Box Cover with a more attractive HB design, AND, why not think about adding color as well. My design uses a double layer of standard 5/32” thick solid core ply to effectively create a five-sided, Cube type Tissue Box Cover with ¼” thick walls. Just like doing my Art panels, each side is comprised of a cut panel and a backer, as is the top. Of course, the top needs to have the tissue access hole in both the cut panel and the backer. Each panel, again like my Art panels, is Hand Painted prior to affixing the cut panel to the backer. Simply using contrasting color panels would also work if painting the backer is not your thing. The typical Maple/Walnut, or Walnut/Maple, combination would look very nice also. Now a little about my actual HB design. I freely admit to having found a nice abstract image on-line that included the HB and Flower. I had to modify the Image considerably to make it scrollable and do a little resizing to make it fit the 5” wide cover side panels, but now it is not just a Tissue Box Cover, but a Piece of Art as well. To make this HB Cube Tissue Box Cover, you will need to think small. The side panels are easily stack cut. A #2/0 MGT R is best suited to cut the HB, and a #2/0 Spiral works best to cut the flowers (I use Pegas blades). I tried a FD #3/0 spiral and even though the smaller size was better, cutting was much too slow in the stack of four panels. Also, it should be noted that, unlike the simple pattern such as Steve uses, this Tissue Box Cover will take a lot more time to cut (as it very delicate), paint, assemble and finish. But, in my opinion, worth the effort. My design uses mitered joints so there are no visible plywood edges unless you look closely at the tissue access hole. Never to be seen while a tissue is popped up during use. However, I do need to talk about my construction execution on this first attempt. Even though the pattern is delicate, it is scrollable. When assembled, the cover does fit the standard cube tissue box nicely. My mitered joints do work and would have looked better if I was a little bit more careful. I used a 45degree chamfering router bit to bevel the edges but my set up was not as accurate as it could have been. As a result, I did not get the real sharp edges that is needed. After the box was glued-up there were slight gaps along each joint. I decided to hide the gaps by rounding over the corners but made the mistake of using my bench belt sander and took too much off exposing the solid core material. I’m happy with the overall look, and my Lady loves how it came out, but the corners could have looked much better. My final finish is multiple coats of Deft Clear Gloss Lacquer. Sorry for the long read. For those who might like a challenge, I will post the Pattern in the New Pattern Announcements for your use and enjoyment. And you all know the drill, Comments and critiques are always appreciated.1 point -
Once again your use of color in the projects is wonderful. -it really makes your projects special. I have been meaning to scroll some of these-the ones I have made I just put a rather plain pattern on the front. I got good corner results by setting my table saw at 45 degrees and leaving a tiny edge-not cutting all the way through as it were. I also used some hardwoods I had so I didn't have to worry about edges as much.1 point
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oh Very Wicked (VW) flower powered campers. Looks like a fun project.1 point
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1 point
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1 point
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Advices
barb.j.enders reacted to kmmcrafts for a topic
I agree with you Ray however I don't encourage people to do that.. simply put.. I've seen hundreds of post topics about the saw not working right and or the blades are way too long / short for the saw now.. apparently a lot of people have used that knob at the back of the saw a few too many times without resetting it back to it's parallel position.. so I rarely talk about that method.. as it apparently messes up a lot of folks new to the hobby that use these saws. Randy ( Hotshot ) put a video up on YouTube about how he uses his finger to "deflect the blade" as he clamps it into the saw which gives the saw some slack, then once he flips his tension lever it's at the correct tension needed for the small blades. Edit to add: If I remember correctly he is the one that bought the new Pegas 30" saw that has the on / off switch back by the motor?1 point -
CA Glue and Accelerator----Can someone educate me?
Roberta Moreton reacted to BadBob for a topic
After trying many brands, my solution was to buy the Harbor Freight 10 pack. Reasoning that I would open the tube, use the glue, and then toss it. For some reason, I didn't throw it out, and it hasn't dried up on me. It comes in thin and thick versions. Current pricing is $2.99 for ten tubes.1 point