Monday, October 17, 2016

Wedding keepsake boxes

A couple weddings came up and I wanted gifts for them. Thought a handmade wooden keepsake box would be fun to make. Designed it in a 3D program, Sketchup. Inspired by an old timey leather travel box with some rivets. Made with some good figured maple wood. Real hardwoods and easy to work with. Accented with Walnut, another good hardwood. Featuring all wooden hinge and locking latch.



Even though the joinery won’t be seen, I still chose to use finger joints (aka box joints). It’s super strong. It’s too bad, because they look nice.


Lots of clamps to hold the walls together while the wood glue sets.

All trim and accents are made from walnut.


For the lid, I chose a ‘jail’ type. Just for laughs. haha Guess this was too easy a metaphor.


Holes drilled for the wooden dowels.

All accent trim cut. Making 2 boxes at the same time sure does save time.

Cutting/separating the lid from the box on the table saw.

more glue ups.

These blocks of walnut will eventually be cut into smaller pieces of corner trim

It’s a subtle detail, but all the corner details have a slight angle. Each are custom cut to the corners to match mating sides. A lot of work, but worth it.


Each and every piece of trim accent was custom cut with a hand saw. To ensure a seamless fitting. Measure. Cut. Glue. Clamp. Repeat. ~50x. For each box.

Hinges made from wood. At the start, it seems like a really hard thing to do. But, once you break it down, it’s pretty simple. Starts out with cutting out ‘fingers’. The same type as the finger joints.

I was able to get 4 sets from a small chunk of walnut.

Rounded the ‘fingers’ on my belt sander. Drilled through with a long 1/8” drill bit.

Used a 1/8” brass bar as a temp pin.

This was mostly decorative.

Ready to mount

With a brad point drill bit in the hole, I hit it lightly with a hammer. this gave me a centre punch to drill into the maple... 


For the locking latch on the front of the box, it’s the same technique as the hinges. only difference is that i cut off some thickness for a thinner profile. Used a table saw for this.

Again, I used a brass bar to hold the hinge together while I sanded the fingers to a nice round shape.

(back side)... coming along....

(front side)

more details on the front latch. 

For a “riveted” look, i chose to just use a 1/8” wooden dowel in drilled holes. Simple and cool looking.


Made a whole bunch of the dowels. Hand cut. and glued in. Here i decided to try 1 box that’s flush cut (with a flush cut hand saw) and one that I let the ‘rivets’ protrude slightly. Spaced it out with a washer.

I cut a small piece of dowel, threw it into my cordless chuck. Found a rock and just ground the tip until i had a small concave end. And just used the wooden dowel to burnish all the little wooden rivets. To give it a nice rounded edge. The process gave it a nice polish too! BONUS! haha
This looks hardcore.

Here are some simple feet for the box. beveled the sides on the belt sander.






For the finish, I decided to try 2 different finishes. One box, I used Circa 1850 Antique Paste Varnish and the second box, I used Tung ’N Teak oil. Both applies easily.



I need some hardware to keep the lid from rotating too far back. It will break the wooden hinge. This and the brass pins are the only things that weren’t wood on this project.

The Finish:

Sunday, July 31, 2016

Foam Tsum Tsum Castle

Persephanie saw a wooden toy castle at Michael’s that thought it would be a great way to store all her Tsum Tsum toys. And it would double as a playset.


But, we’re not going to spend it on an overpriced toy. We do what we always do, turn it into a weekend project...

Starts out with foam core boards from the dollarstore. And I was too lazy to cut out the castle wall details by hand. The signature “teeth” on top of Medieval castles (aka crenellations). So, I made quick work of them on my table saw with a dado stack. :D

 Measure twice, cut once.

Windows

Hotgluing all the panels together. Cut out the front door too.



Each Tsum Tsum will have their own room

Adding a carrying handle


Of course, any respectable castle has a drawbridge.

And a crest. 



Saturday, February 13, 2016

Wooden Ring

This was something I found on the internet. Thought it was a great idea. Decided to try it. Small and simple project.

Starts with a sheet of veneer. This was actually too thick. I had to sand it down to 1/32” thickness

Soaked the strip of wood in hot boiling water for a good 20 mins

Using a socket wrench, roughly the size of my finger... I quickly wrapped the wet and hot strip around it. Then tying it with a rubber band to let it dry overnight.

(forgot a pic for this step)... I put packaging tape around the socket wrench to prevent the glue-up. I wrapped the wood strip back onto the socket wrench as tightly as I could. Ensuring there are no gaps between the layers. I coated/soaked the wood with cyanoacrylate glue (aka super glue or crazy glue). Then let it dry overnight again.

All dry. Then the started to sand all surfaces with 320 grit

For a bit of an accent, I carved out a tiny heart. Making sure I didn’t go through all the layers. Using a fresh X-Acto blade and a file.

Going to fill the hole with some brass. It’s close to gold. hehe

With a file, I sanded the brass strip down to some fine powder. Finer the better.

Just piled the brass powder over the hole. And with the end of the file, I packed the powder into the hole as tight as possible.

Couple of drops of the CA glue into the pile of brass. Not worried about coverage. Just making sure it’s all soaked in. Making sure the powder is bonded to the wood. After a few hours, I sanded the ring again. The heart appears.

Final sanding all around. Inside and rounded off all the edges too. So, it’s a more comfortable fit. Then with a paper towel, coat the entire ring with another layer of CA glue for a nice sealant. The glue actually makes a better sealant than a typical wood varnish here. More smooth.