Display Case
Posted: Fri Sep 20, 2024 10:38 am
This one could have gone in the Knives section, I guess, since the display case will be for all the knives I have laying here and there around the living room.
But, it's woodworking.
Miss Tina was walking by the table by the front door where they are all laid out and said, "You need to make a display case for these so no one walks out with one or some kid doesn't get cut."
I think she was more worried about the Former, than the Latter. We trust the few friends we have met here in Oklahoma since we have moved here... but we have Service People and Repair Folks come in and out.
In the last four years, three or four of those have turned out to be scam artists in their business, so ... not Trustworthy.
Sad, isn't it?
I started laying out the design in my head, then sketching a rough on paper for a materials list.
Wood alone, in oak, would be nearly $100 at a box store, and that wasn't anything fancy, just oak. Not trim pieces or carved oak, just oak. I went to my woodpile and picked out some rough stuff. These two raw boards should do it.
I set up the lunchbox planer and hooked up the dust collector and prepared to plane the two pieces to remove the roughness and insure they were the same thickness. Always a good start. By my calculations, the longer of the two would give me enough to make the side frame, and the shorter should provide the face. If not, I have more in the wood pile but I don't want to have to set up the planer again.
About fifteen passes through the planer, seven or eight on each side, and they are looking good. Not worried about the fall at the edges, they will be trimmed to width.
The longer board will need one edge dressed to be used as a guiding edge when cutting, whether I use the table saw or the skill saw, that puppy is rough. Take a close look, that's a live edge. I have it clamped and ready for the hand plane.
A little work with my hand plane and she is ready for the next step. Time on my feet is short, so we are done until tomorrow. It will give me time to figure the dimensions of the cuts, how wide do I want to make the sides of the "Shadowbox" style display case. I am going back and forth on the background. I intended to go with Diamond Tuck, but Miss T is laughing at me.
"Yeah Right, Diamond Tuck."
More later, Watch this space.
I started laying out the design in my head, then sketching a rough on paper for a materials list.
I set up the lunchbox planer and hooked up the dust collector and prepared to plane the two pieces to remove the roughness and insure they were the same thickness. Always a good start. By my calculations, the longer of the two would give me enough to make the side frame, and the shorter should provide the face. If not, I have more in the wood pile but I don't want to have to set up the planer again.
About fifteen passes through the planer, seven or eight on each side, and they are looking good. Not worried about the fall at the edges, they will be trimmed to width.
The longer board will need one edge dressed to be used as a guiding edge when cutting, whether I use the table saw or the skill saw, that puppy is rough. Take a close look, that's a live edge. I have it clamped and ready for the hand plane.
A little work with my hand plane and she is ready for the next step. Time on my feet is short, so we are done until tomorrow. It will give me time to figure the dimensions of the cuts, how wide do I want to make the sides of the "Shadowbox" style display case. I am going back and forth on the background. I intended to go with Diamond Tuck, but Miss T is laughing at me.
More later, Watch this space.