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Popular Content
Showing content with the highest reputation on 04/16/2023 in all areas
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Dragon ( From the Game of Thrones)
Alexander Fadeev and 9 others reacted to Insane Dust Maker for a topic
Finished this beautiful pattern by Russ Beard, the frame is home made using Malaysian Meranti, applied three coats of Danish Oil and two coats Matt Clear Varnish and fitted with Non Reflective Plexiglass. Very happy with the finish and so is my granddaughter who will be hanging on her wall this afternoon.10 points -
Leopard on the Rocks
MTCowpoke22 and 6 others reacted to Kris Martinson for a topic
7 points -
7 points
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Color Scroll Saw Challenge
Richardg99 and 6 others reacted to Hawk for a topic
7 points -
6 points
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Color Scroll Saw Challenge
Richardg99 and 5 others reacted to meflick for a topic
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6 points
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Leopard in the tree.
MTCowpoke22 and 4 others reacted to Insane Dust Maker for a topic
Finally finished this beautiful Russ Beard Pattern, the frame is home made and I used the Shou Sugi Ban or Yakisugi effect which is a hundred year old Japanese technique that brings out the pattern of the wood. Applied three coats of Danish Oil and two coats Matt Clear Varnish. Staying in South Africa I have had the pleasure of photographing and sitting watch these animals now I’m cutting them. I will be using this technique on all my my fire wildlife cuttings5 points -
Been studying books and watching YouTube a lot lately and I think I'll try something I'll refer to as segmentarsia. Some shaping of pieces...more like just easing the edges on some pieces. And, using different thicknesses without any elevating pads. I can see putting the Foredom to work, too. Just glue the pieces at different elevations. Probably stick with a single species. Soft maple or poplar would likely work. And, use a lot of different stain blends. And dabs of paint. Might even use a bit of drywall mud. Purists may (likely will) scoff but, it should be quite fun. Who knows, it may even result in a nice piece.5 points
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Tractor
Alexander Fadeev and 3 others reacted to Dak0ta52 for a topic
This is a pattern I made and cut on 1/4-inch Maple ply. The face of the plywood delaminated in a couple areas so I decided to paint the piece. The paint is water color. I finished with a Minwax natural stain and 4-coats of Polyacrylic with light sanding with 600 grit sandpaper between coats. I cut the frame from picture frame stock I had on hand. The piece is 13X14. The pattern is in the Village library.4 points -
Word in a word sign
heppnerguy and 3 others reacted to flarud for a topic
Don graciously made this pattern for me, thanks Don. I used to work with a guy over 25 years ago that just turned 80 years old. I haven't seen him or his family for at least 10 years. I actually taught his oldest daughter how to drive. I was given an invite to his surprise birthday party that she was giving him. Don made this pattern and it's a good thing that I made it the next day,, I was off by a week on the date of the party. I didn't have time to do anything fancy with it. I was planning on using BB Ply but found a piece of Cedar. I had thought that it would be a little nicer than the ply, but it didn't have much grain. 1/4" Cedar, used a FD UR1 and a few coats of lacquer.4 points -
4 points
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Let them scoff. If you enjoy it, and it fits you, go with it!! I will sometimes do that exact technique because I like woodworking in general. Chris4 points
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Sorta new approach
OCtoolguy and 3 others reacted to Oldmansbike for a topic
that’s kind of what I do when I make these signs. I cut all of it out of a flat board and glue everything back in at different heights. I also paint everything before I glue it together. If the sign is too big for my saw I cut everything out of different thickness of wood and paint it and glue it together.4 points -
I hold small parts by drilling a small hole that will not be seen after assembly and inserting a dowel, toothpick, or skewer to make a handle. If I have trouble getting the handle tight enough, I will add a bit of glue and cut it off flush when I am done. For heavier items, I hold the handle with long-nosed locking pliers. Wheels on a stick. Plastic spring clamps work for some things. My pointed Dowel collection. Truck body on a stick. This one is glued in and cut flush after painting. Fenders on a stick. Halloween on a stick.3 points
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3 points
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This is a horse stall sign, made for a customer a few years `ago now. Basically, shop scrap, painted with craft store paints. All designs were by T & E design. Craft store pegs for hanging horse tack. The rope sign hanger was from a weird one I found at $-tree. It was fun especially since I was told -"Your own way"--she did like it very much.3 points
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Color Scroll Saw Challenge
Richardg99 and 2 others reacted to flarud for a topic
3 points -
StearnWheeler
MTCowpoke22 and one other reacted to heppnerguy for a topic
I was looking at patterns on ETSY and ran across this ship. I think these paddle wheelers are so cool and always enjoy it when I see one cruising a river. I immediately knew I needed to get this pattern and cut it. So I bought this pattern for just over $4 and set about seeing how I was going to cut it and how. I have to say, I did do a little bit of changes on the pattern as I cut it because I did not like everything about it but I wanted to keep it as close to the original as I could out of respect for the pattern maker. I really did not understand what the strange shapes on the windows were and decided not to cut everyone of them but did most of the them. Because I had so many comments about the frame I used on the recent moose pattern I cut, I decided to try and make the frame match the object within it. I decided to groove the frame on my router and insert a rope in the groove. My thinking on this was the connection of an anchor and anchor rope. The next problem I had was where the rope ends met at the bottom of the frame so I decided to cut me an anchor to help cover the rope connection. I was going to make my anchor outline of a different color for accent but really was not satisfied with the look so I left them the same color. I cut this with a #3 MGT Pegas blade on a 3/8 BB Ply. I put a shellac finish on the frame and just waxed the surface of the rest of the project. I have to say that I am not completely satisfied with the end results and if I ever make another one of these I think I would not put the rope in the frame and I would cut all the windows in their natural shape and forget whatever is going on in them, in the pattern. Dick heppnerguy2 points -
2 points
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Sorta new approach
OCtoolguy and one other reacted to don watson for a topic
'Whatever floats your boat' as the saying goes. Anything goes in your work. I think of it as just Segmentation, using different woods and different stains it depends on what you want and so much better when it all works out ok.2 points -
Well, Dick. After studying it and reflecting about them widows, I've come to the conclusion that they're just fine. To change them would be a real "pane" in the glass..so to speak.2 points
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Pug done
Phantom Scroller and one other reacted to JessL for a topic
2 points -
Garage's Garage's
MTCowpoke22 and one other reacted to lawson56 for a topic
Continuning with my Miniture kick that I am on I found these old buildings I had made years back when I had my HO scale railroad,forgot I had them. So I decided to cut the doors out and make some Garages for Hot Wheels I found some old signage online cut a pasted them on the sides, The Logo is hand painted. Hot Wheels not Nascar. I will be going to the Flea Market in the A.M. Keeping my fingers crossed.2 points -
Painting suggestions?
heppnerguy and one other reacted to jollyred for a topic
Put a screw eye in one of the sides which will not be visible when assembled. Use this and a bent wire hook to hold the piece up while painting. Won't have to touch it once it is hung up, and all painted sides can be done at once. Tom2 points -
2 points
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Color Scroll Saw Challenge
heppnerguy and one other reacted to Hudson River Rick for a topic
I just made this for an unbeliveable lady who attends our weekly BINGO games. Our BINGO games are a fundraiser for the local Franciscan Friary and this amazing lady attends every week, because in spite of her trials, she belives that she should support the Friars. I will present this to her tomorrow and I hope it will make her day just a little bit happier.2 points -
Forum Update - Feedback wanted
rafairchild2 reacted to Travis for a topic
Hi All. I'm updating and organizing SSV and I'm looking for some feedback. I want to go through the forums and clean it up a bit. I would love to hear what you have to say. Thank you for your time. Without you, SSV is nothing but a bunch of code sitting on a big dumb server. New Patterns & Requests - I'm thinking of combining New Pattern Announcements and Pattern Requests into a single forum. I still prefer folks to upload patterns to the Pattern Library and link it. But I don't see a need for two separate forums since they're basically serving the same function. Scroller's Q&A - I might change the format of this forum. It's supposed to act similarly to Reddit or a support board where members upvote the best answer when folks have a question. But I don't think anybody really uses the upvote function. I guess I need feedback on two questions I have. Should I keep it as a separate forum for a quick Q&A for those new to the hobby? Or should I fold it into the General Scroll Saw forum, which often gets used to answer questions? Business Side - I'm trying to decide whether to keep this section as a part of the main forum, or move it to the Groups area of SSV. On one hand, there is good information for folks who sell their wares. But on the other hand, it may not be interesting to general members. If I move it to the Groups section, it will only be available to Silver and Gold SSV Patrons who are interested in the subject matter. It would be a good way to encourage new Patrons and keep the website paying for itself. But I also don't want to take away something that was free from folks who find it interesting and valuable. Other Woodworks - I'm also considering moving this to the Groups area of SSV, since it is off-topic. Currently, in the groups section, we have a section for woodturners, crafters, and laser/cnc. So this would fit in with the Groups section nicely. But it is a fun place to show off your other woodworking projects. Hot Deals & Announcements - I'm planning on changing the title to "Hot Deals, Buy, Sell, & Trade". If you can think of a better title, I'm open to suggestions. Coffee House - I'm not changing anything! I need a place to drink my coffee and read my jokes.1 point -
My First Wooden Katana
MTCowpoke22 reacted to WoodenEngineering for a topic
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1 point
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I have a little harbor freight $20 spray gun kit and a little compressor. Very handy as you can just use cheap watered down craft acrylic paints. Dries in a very quick time, looks good and you can handle it without getting paint all over yourself in minutes. I do like 6 coats in a couple hours no problem. Looks good too. Also can do it in the house because its just craft paint. Just a thought if you have a compressor already.1 point
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1 point
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Awesome and thanks for the pattern. Marg1 point
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I have also used Trex. Facia boards are available at some Lowe's stores up to 11" wide. It is sure hard on blades but there is no need for finish. I also painted a piece black and used it for the backer.1 point
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When it rains it pours and Sam Elliot
Tbow388 reacted to heppnerguy for a topic
I too am glad you are on the mend but I sure feel sad about the infection coming on just as you thought you were over the hurts and pains. As far as you question, my reply is, because of the the lack of space around the pattern adding a frame would only end up covering some of the subject. If it were mine, what I would do is make the backer board extend out perhaps an inch all the way around, paint the backer board black and I believe that would make the finished item not seem too large for the wood and give it an added finished appearance. It is a really well cut pattern and definitely is something to be proud of. It is really up to the person cutting the piece as to what they like best, as it is YOUR PROJECT. By the way, there really is nothing at all wrong with how it is as long as it works for you Dick heppnerguy1 point -
1 point
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StearnWheeler
heppnerguy reacted to MarieC for a topic
Dick, that is an amazing piece of art. I love the color you added as well. Even your flag is awesome! I really like your anchor. Very nicely done!1 point -
Color Scroll Saw Challenge
Kris Martinson reacted to Gonzo for a topic
I agree with Scrappile and Fab4, very cool work by all of you.1 point -
StearnWheeler
heppnerguy reacted to barb.j.enders for a topic
Dick, You have done an amazing job. The rope around the frame is a great addition. If you do plan to recut and add the rope, my only suggestion would be to put the join in the corner with the anchor there. I would also place that on the right hand corner by the bow of the boat. That is generally where a boat anchors from.1 point -
Painting suggestions?
danny reacted to heppnerguy for a topic
One of my problems also. Every once in awhile I seem to come up with a painted item I like but other than that, not so much. Hoep to see some great replies here as there are many who manage to do such a great job painting things. Dick heppnerguy1 point -
Receiver Hitch Cover
heppnerguy reacted to Charlie E for a topic
Thank you! I’ve passed it on to my daughter and grandson. They amaze me with their ideas.1 point -
Me and my lady, Robin
Phantom Scroller reacted to FrankEV for a topic
We just returned this past Sunday from an eight day/seven night cruise to Nassau, Ocean Cay, Balize and Costa Maya. We were very lucky, although quite windy every day, we had Sunny Skys and no rain for the entire week. There was a formal evening on Wednesday where we got to dress up and it was a good opportunity to have a nice picture taken of us in our dress up attire. Of course, we had to buy a package of five Photos, one of which was a large 10” x 14” print which I used for this project. Steve Good recently sent an email with a Scroll Saw pattern of a frame for a 5” x 7” photograph that caught my attention. It took me quite a bit of time to convert his pattern to fit an 11” x 14” Frame. I also had to modify the oval to suit the print. Did a lot of cutting of the paper prints of the pattern to make sure things lined up correctly. The biggest modification to the pattern was reducing the width of the edges down to 3/16” so they are hidden under the frame. I did most of the cutting with Pegas #0 Spiral while the long straight edge cuts and the oval was done using a Pegas #1 MGT R Blade. The Oval is cut in what was the 1/8” thick hard board back panel of the commercial frame I used and primed and painted rattle can gloss White. The fancy corner filigree panel is cut from 5/32” thick solid core Maple, primed and painted rattle can Flat Black and attached to the White panel with just a bunch of dots of CA Glue. The picture is mounted to a 1/4” thick BB Ply backer, that was sealed with clear lacquer, with just some photo mounting tape in the 4 corners. The three layers are fitted in the frame under Glass and mounted to the frame with 1/8” frame mounting clips since the total thickness of the panels and glass is greater than the depth of the rabbet in the frame. I also installed a wire hanger on this piece as it is really about the photograph and not the scroll work. This framed photo will hang in our home if I can rearrange hanging pieces to free up some wall space. Comments and critiques of the Scroll Work welcome. OK, if you must you can make fun of us in the photo also! Don’t forget I’m going to be 81 next month.1 point -
I like the way we (colective) use the Q&A. I don't think it needs the upvote part. There arre always a ton of varied answers to a specific question. Most of which are usually valid...just from different prespectives. The individual asking the Question gets to use the information that best suits his/her needs. It is a great way to learn about a specific concern one might have. The General Scroll Saw Forum is a better location to provide; nswers/suggestions/guidence/technical information/etc. to a general topic before a questions is even asked. A place where "general" information if offered to the whole comunity rather than just an individual. So, In my opinion, both are needed but the upvote could well be eliminated.1 point
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Color Scroll Saw Challenge
Scrappile reacted to john nelson for a topic
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Color Scroll Saw Challenge
Richardg99 reacted to rdatelle for a topic
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1 point
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Made this for my grandson, who is on the Havana Ducks basketball team this year. All cut on the scroll saw, with 3/4" poplar for the body and 6mm BB for the wings. Finished with craft acrylics, but still needs the final clear coat. I have a lot more to make, and I don't work very hard at them, so it takes a while. Tom Havana duck movie.mp41 point
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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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ADDING COLOR TO SCROLLING
angela2 reacted to john nelson for a topic
I hope I am doing this right......I am computer challenged. For the past few years I have been developing a method of adding details and color to scroll-saw projects. The method is not new as Fisher-Price Toy Company used this method to add detail and color to their toys in the 40"s and 50"s before plastic. I would like to find 5 or 6 scrollers (of any level) that would interested in trying this method and tell us your opinion. I would like to know, what you think, if you liked the process and the results or not, if you would do other projects using this method and if you had any suggestions or ideas how to improve it. If you are interested, I would be happy to send the first 5 or 6 scrollers free, full size patterns, required art work and instructions to complete one add color to scrolling project. Just choose one of the project below and send me your mailing address. You are not under any obligation what so ever. If you do try it, please let us all know what you think. Thank you. JAN. my email is: noslenaj35@gmail.com1 point