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Woodworking

A handmade home for woodworkers and admirers of woodworkers. Our community icon is submitted by @[email protected] whose father was inspired to start woodworking by Norm and the New Yankee Workshop.

Members
7,158
Posts
427
Active Today
24
Created
2 yr. ago
  • Woodworking @lemmy.ca
    fujiwood @lemmy.world

    40 Joints, 70 Hours: A Desk Built to Endure - Andy Rawls

  • Woodworking @lemmy.ca
    brownmustardminion @lemmy.ml

    Tablesaw featherboards?

    I'm making my own white oak door jambs. So far I did one set. I milled some rough cut oak, made two passes through the table saw to roughly remove a rabbet for the integrated door stop.

    Then I ran it through the table saw again with a dado stack to get the rabbet to the final dimensions. The problem is, it's difficult to apply even pressure as the wood passes over the dado stack. I already have a featherboard pushing against the fence, but I'm thinking I could use another pushing against the saw top.

    I know I can put one on my fence, but that would apply pressure to the part of the board closest to the fence only. Do they make any contraptions that can apply even pressure downwards, but over a larger surface area? Like multiple featherboards extended out over the work piece.

  • Woodworking @lemmy.ca
    Tippon @lemmy.dbzer0.com

    Best way to flatten a piece?

    Can anyone tell me how can I flatten a Minecraft heart please? I've put this together:

    https://www.instructables.com/MineCraft-Heart-wood/

    but I've noticed that it bows slightly. I've managed to get the ends to raise slightly when I've screwed it together. The top needs to be smoothed too, as there are some small differences between the pieces. Both sides are only off by a millimetre or two, but it's enough to be noticeable.

    My thinking is to clamp it down at the centre, which seems to be mostly flat on both sides, then sand the top until it's level, then flip it over and clamp the edges to smooth the bottom.

    Are there any likely problems with doing it this way, or is there a better way of doing it? Thanks in advance :)

  • Woodworking @lemmy.ca
    mko @slrpnk.net

    Got something done again:)

    Finished the wooden top structure for the enclosure for the soon to come land turtle.

    It will get a kind of net to it (its purpose is to keep cats and birds of prey from messing with the turtle)

    Made of white oak, with plenty of joinery and braces to keep it strong and stable.

    Still a finishing here or there but I think I’ll leave it more or less rough sawn an untreated.

  • Woodworking @lemmy.ca
    Tippon @lemmy.dbzer0.com

    Oh bother!

    I made a quick and dirty zero clearance plate to cut some small pieces, but realised that I needed to cut a larger piece of MDF while I was working. Ok, I thought, the saw is already set up, it won't take a minute.

    Then promptly cut the zero clearance board in half...

  • Woodworking @lemmy.ca
    CanadianCorhen @lemmy.ca

    Bedside Table

    I had a plan in my head for a custom end table for quite a while, something made of local wood, a book shelf, and integrated wireless charger. This is the result.

    Wood is arbutus wood, treated with tung oil just need to add a drawer. Plans are entirely unique, made in Civil3d. I took the raw wood, rough cut it, planed it, sanded and polished. It's as close to scratch as you can get.

  • Woodworking @lemmy.ca
    fujiwood @lemmy.world

    Walnut Box with Walnut and Maple Lid

    I used walnut for the box and handcut dovetails for the joinery. I had triangular offcuts that I glued together to make the lid.

    I made this a few years ago so I can't remember if I used handtools or a table saw to dimension the wood.

    The finish is pure Tung Oil.

    Thanks for reading!

  • Woodworking @lemmy.ca
    Captain Aggravated @sh.itjust.works

    When you see it, you'll swear too.

    god. dammit I have to table saw this butcher block apart.

  • Woodworking @lemmy.ca
    HewlettHackard @lemmy.ca

    Banksia wood?

    Has anyone ever experimented with Banksia wood for woodworking? The picture used by one random seller online looks pretty interesting. I’m not in Australia, so I don’t really have the wood available and don’t want to spend $$$$ shipping something that might be awful.

  • Woodworking @lemmy.ca
    Captain Aggravated @sh.itjust.works

    I asked Google Gemini to create a dimensional drawing of a night stand with one drawer.

    What it came up with is too good not to share:

  • Woodworking @lemmy.ca
    fujiwood @lemmy.world

    "How Do You Price Your Work?" Q&A with Andy Rawls

  • Woodworking @lemmy.ca
    Captain Aggravated @sh.itjust.works

    The Best Food-Safe Finish May Be None At All - Fine Woodworking Article

    Conventional wisdom regarding finishing cutting boards and other food prep surfaces is to coat them heavily with mineral oil and/or a food safe paste wax to "seal" and/or "condition" them. Seri Robinson asserts otherwise, her research has shown that any finish applied to wood decreases its natural anti-microbial properties.

  • Woodworking @lemmy.ca
    Opinionhaver @feddit.uk

    Best way to attach PVC pipe onto plywood on my custom toolbox project?

    I'm still not quite happy with my current toolbox, so I’ve decided to design my own. I intend to follow the “first order retrievability” principle, meaning every tool should be accessible with one hand, without having to move anything else out of the way. I’ve made fixed tool holders from PVC pipe before - it’s a familiar, readily available material for me.

    I haven’t settled on the final design yet - this sketch is just to get the idea across. My main issue is figuring out how to secure the pipes to the plywood frame. I can screw the first row into the sides and central divider, but the next row would either need to be attached to the surrounding pipes or mounted from the bottom. I’ve used screws thru the base before, and while it works, it tends to deform the pipe. I’m wondering if there’s an alternative I’m overlooking - ideally something that can also be disassembled later, since the design will probably go through several iterations.

    I’m also open to any tips or ideas on what els

  • Woodworking @lemmy.ca
    Troy @lemmy.ca

    Can you smell the sawdust? Simple ad hoc shipping crate construction using 2x2 and 3/8" plywood and pre-existing pallets

  • Woodworking @lemmy.ca
    pantherina @feddit.org

    A traditional german frame saw (Gestellsäge)

    Here are the parts it is built from

    Took a few minutes to build, and in the end it is very stiff, light and long!

  • Woodworking @lemmy.ca
    flynnguy @programming.dev

    Tips for preventing bowing on lid

    I'm making a box to store a pizza. The box itself is pretty straight forward, cherry wood, box joints and basically a groove in the bottom with a piece of plywood (cherry plywood) to act as the bottom. I'm pretty happy with how the bottom went together but for the top I'm having an issue....

    So for the top I have a 3/8ths piece of roughly 10x10 with basically a dado around the edge so it insets slightly into the box. The problem I'm having is that when a pizza goes in, it bows a bit. I'm guessing it's the steam from the pizza but so far I've been able to put something heavy on it and it comes out but I want to prevent it in the future.

    I'm thinking a couple strips on the underside (basically across to U that forms) might help (with some glue and a couple of screws). I've also "sealed" it with a food grade oil but I'm looking for thoughts if this will or won't help and any possible alternatives.

  • Woodworking @lemmy.ca
    mrgoosmoos @lemmy.ca

    The number of clamps required to glue up a simple box

    Could have sworn I had more 6" & 24" trigger clamps for stuff like this

  • Woodworking @lemmy.ca
    inquanto @lemmy.world

    Tips for a panel glue up where the middle wont close up?

    I'm trying to do my very first table top out of hardwood but it proving to be quite the learning curve. I acquired a small benchtop jointer and a lunchbox type thickness planer and I've more or less successfully made my boards. What I'm struggling with now is getting a nice glue up without gaps. My first try turned out so so, and i was afraid i didn't use enough glue so I re ripped the joints with my tracksaw. I think my boards are evenly thick but they seem a bit hourglass shaped if that makes sense. They'reb about 170cm long and they join up on the ends, but there's about a 1mm gap towards the middle on some joints and its too much to squeeze all the gaps together on the panel. I first tried jointing on the benchtop jointer but got horrible results with the small bed. (Could also be lack of skill as this is all new to me). I then went with a tracksaw and parallel guides instead,which is better but still giving me a bit of a gap. So I guess im asking how more experienced woodworkers w

  • Woodworking @lemmy.ca
    pageflight @lemmy.world

    Proving box cabinet with room for bowls or two baking sheets, and temp/humidity tracking

    Plywood for the main box (3/4" sides, 1/4" back, rabbet and dado joints). Cut the door 1" too narrow so I added a handle from cedar scrap. Shelves and sheet pan brackets are reclaimed bed slats, planed. Window hole is routed with plexiglass insert, my first time doing any significant router work.

    First bake came out well:

    The brackets for the baking sheet have a cutout to accommodate two bowls. My goal was either two bowls or two baking sheets.

    An obvious improvement would be to install an under-counter outlet so the cord is less prominent

  • Woodworking @lemmy.ca
    Otter Raft @lemmy.ca

    Wood Turning a Salty Species of Tree | inVASEive species