NEW ETSY WEBSITE COMING SOON!! Now under construction!

March 30, 2012

Tiger Maple Table Saw Crosscut Sled

My newly finished table saw crosscut sled. 


I used some of the scrap maple that wouldn't work for Nick's crib project to make this long awaited tool. My previous one was just thrown together in a few minutes, with zero form in mind, and wasn't incredibly functional either. Just way too small. 


The maple fence is set to a perfect 90 degrees to the table saw blade, so to cut off the end of a board, you just line up your cut mark with the saw kerf, and voila! Perfectly square cut.

March 21, 2012

Sawyer's Maple Changing Table

Sawyer hanging out on his new changing table. The pad probably makes it a lot more tolerable for the little guy, but it covers up all that beautiful maple!


What a little poser! Nick (Sawyer's dad) came up with the design. Looks pretty cool with the industrial style legs and vintage locker baskets. 


Nick did a special antiquer's treatment on the legs- starting out with galvanized pipe turned them into a vintage old-looking accent. To get the screw heads to match the patina, I used a grinder and wire wheel, followed up with wood stain and a blowtorch.


To get the maple to "pop" like this, it takes a little more elbow grease than normal finishing. LOTS of sanding. All that work pays off though- with a look that you can't help but run your hands over. 
Not too shabby, huh?


Just finished. Two coats of tinted de-waxed shellac, two coats of Pro-fin, hand rubbed out with steel wool and Briwax, with a high-speed polish. And lots of sanding in between.


 Funny little bugger!

March 2, 2012

New sign and mom's compost bin

My new shingle. Some pretty intense router work. Blue pine finished with acrylic paint and 3 coats exterior-grade Varathane Diamond Wood finish. 


 The middle sign is reclaimed CVG fir, while the bottom is some live edged 
walnut box stock I'd been saving for years.Both bottom signs the lettering is 
routered out, while the top sign is all relief work.


Mom's Christmas present, a composting tumbler barrel.


The cedar bars on the outside I'm holding on to act as both a handhold for turning the barrel, as well as give an attachment point to auger type cedar fins on the inside. The fins break up the composting material and keep it from just sliding along the bottom.


Here's the barrel in its new home. The wood plugs in the pipe are to keep bees from nesting in there in the summer.