Woodworking Tools, Materials and Projects
For The Do It Yourself Crowd
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5 32 Thin Teak boards lumber craft scroll wood saw
5 32 Thin Teak boards lumber craft scroll wood saw
Buy It Now: $3.44
Sale Ends: 3d 5h 19m
EXOTIC WOOD AFRICAN PADAUK KNIFE SCALES BLANKS GRIPS
EXOTIC WOOD AFRICAN PADAUK KNIFE SCALES BLANKS GRIPS
Price: $1.99 (0 Bids)
Sale Ends: 3d 5h 45m
PAIR EXOTIC TROPICAL SOLID TEAK KNIFE SCALES - GRIPS 11
PAIR EXOTIC TROPICAL SOLID TEAK KNIFE SCALES - GRIPS 11
Buy It Now: $3.49
Sale Ends: 25d 7h 9m
PAIR PADAUK KNIFE SCALES AND OR PISTOL GUN GRIPS -X
PAIR PADAUK KNIFE SCALES AND OR PISTOL GUN GRIPS  -X
Buy It Now: $3.99
Sale Ends: 23d 20h 54m
PAIR PADAUK KNIFE SCALES AND OR PISTOL GUN GRIPS -Y
PAIR PADAUK KNIFE SCALES AND OR PISTOL GUN GRIPS  -Y
Buy It Now: $3.99
Sale Ends: 23d 20h 58m
PAIR QUILTED SAPELE KNIFE SCALES PISTOL GUN GRIPS -1
PAIR QUILTED SAPELE KNIFE SCALES   PISTOL GUN GRIPS -1
Buy It Now: $6.99
Sale Ends: 8d 20h 30m
Teak wood knife scales, exotic, rare, stabilized
Teak wood knife scales,  exotic,  rare,  stabilized
Buy It Now: $4.99
Sale Ends: 5d 1h 48m
#660 Knife Handle Scales - Heavily Figured Madrone Burl
#660 Knife Handle Scales - Heavily Figured Madrone Burl
Buy It Now: $12.00
Sale Ends: 12d 3h 39m
marine lumber teak and Spanish Cedar 16 piece lot ,
marine lumber teak and Spanish Cedar 16  piece lot  ,
Price: $15.00 (1 Bids)
Sale Ends: 2d 1h 39m
#663 Big Knife Handle Scales - Beautiful Madrone Burl
#663 Big Knife Handle Scales - Beautiful Madrone Burl
Buy It Now: $16.00
Sale Ends: 8d 3h 35m
w9517 -- Figured Sapele Boards Craftwood-Stabilized
w9517 --     Figured Sapele Boards Craftwood-Stabilized
Price: $9.95 (0 Bids)
Sale Ends: 5h 59m
EXOTIC WOOD LUMBER : AFRICAN TEAK PLANED 15 16"
EXOTIC WOOD LUMBER :  AFRICAN TEAK PLANED 15 16"
Price: $5.00 (0 Bids)
Sale Ends: 2d 23h 57m
EXOTIC WOOD LUMBER : 8 4 SAPELE
EXOTIC WOOD LUMBER :   8 4 SAPELE
Price: $3.13 (2 Bids)
Sale Ends: 4h 57m
EXOTIC WOOD LUMBER : 10 4 SAPELE
EXOTIC WOOD LUMBER : 10 4 SAPELE
Price: $4.44 (1 Bids)
Sale Ends: 1d 4h 57m
STABILIZED KNIFE SCALES LAMINATED ZEBRA WENGE PADAUK AA
STABILIZED KNIFE SCALES LAMINATED ZEBRA WENGE PADAUK AA
Buy It Now: $19.49
Sale Ends: 3d 15h 7m
Exotic PADUAK WOOD 1st Quality Padauk Woodturning NICE!
Exotic PADUAK WOOD 1st Quality Padauk Woodturning NICE!
Price: $9.99 (0 Bids)
Sale Ends: 4d 8h 3m
EXOTIC WOOD LUMBER : 16 4 SAPELE
EXOTIC WOOD LUMBER :  16 4 SAPELE
Price: $1.25 (2 Bids)
Sale Ends: 23h 57m
EXOTIC WOOD LUMBER : 12 4 SAPELE
EXOTIC WOOD LUMBER : 12 4 SAPELE
Price: $5.44 (1 Bids)
Sale Ends: 1d 23h 57m
QUILTED RC SAPELE Veneer 4.97sf #110K 7.5x11" 6pc
QUILTED RC SAPELE Veneer 4.97sf #110K 7.5x11" 6pc
Buy It Now: $17.90
Sale Ends: 25d 21h 24m
LOT-10 30 10-PCS EXOTIC WOOD "TEAK" LUMBER 12 X 2 X 1
LOT-10 30  10-PCS EXOTIC  WOOD "TEAK" LUMBER 12 X 2 X 1
Price: $12.99 (0 Bids)
Sale Ends: 5h 23m

LumberJocks.com

Woodworking Projects at LumberJocks.com


Great Dane Feeder
by Straightpiped
2 hours ago

This is my first project. It is half done but some other things came up so I wanted to post up the partially completed product. My wife and I have two great danes, we got the second one back in April. The older dog has always had an elevated food/water bowl cabinet that her mom’s friend made for her about 4 years ago, it was made out of MDF with a white laminate. To keep the story short it was crap. So now that we have two Danes we wanted something that could feed them both that looked nicer. This is just the bottom half. I am going to make a top for it that with reach roughly 6.5’ tall. It will look alot like a china cabinet. It is made completely out of pine. Center bowl holds about 1.5 gallons.

Tyson

BTW- I learned alot on this project, both things to do and not do.



How we make a chest in Norway & My first Scollsaw work
by Halling51
4 hours ago

This is how we make a chest in Norway.
“Chest site:”http://rukkedalen.com/kiste.html

The scollsaw work is not so easy to see. But this was my first detailed work with my new scrollsaw Excalibur.



Serving Tray
by PetVet
5 hours ago

I wanted to try my hand at marquetry and this is my first attempt. I am not pleased with the outcome, and would appreciate some constructive criticism to help me along.

1. The fans on the corners don’t seem to be the right size? Too big or too small?
2. The center cries out for something, maybe an oval fan or a shell?
3. The book matched veneer’s seams show, especially the end grain. I overlapped these and cut them together, but still the seams show. Should I have tried to cut them on an angle like in double bevel marquetry?
4. The inlay looks lost sitting next to the frame, I think next time I will put veneer outside of this. Any other suggestions?

I coped the mahogany frame on the table saw. This worked fairly well, although it sure takes a while. The veneer is mounted on 1/4” plywood. I used birch veneer on the bottom and birds eye maple on the top. I will not use birds eye maple again, as the eyes are a bear to cut through. Live and learn. I finished it with the salad bowl finish followed by mineral oil/bee’s wax.

Here is my temporary solution to improve it’s looks:



Cedar toybox
by bocephus
9 hours ago

I bought this cedar to make my daughter a blanket chest, but never made the time to start the project. After the birth of her twin daughters, I made a toybox/blanket chest, killing two birds with one stone. The challenge was cutting and gluing panels to avoid knots where I had to cut dovetails. It turned out so good I am considering making a second chest so each of the girls has their own.



Cutting board with gadget
by Justus
10 hours ago

The concept for this cutting board is derived from the live-long quest for a simple separation of goodies and waste. By using two plastic containers you can simply shovel the waste into the right one and the goodies into the left one (or vice versa, your choice). The containers simply go into the dishwasher. The craftmanship here leaves room for improvement: You could use end grain boards, invent some more elaborate methods of removing the containers rather than my simple lifting the entire board (I use the inside rim of the top board as handle). The second picture shows just that while the third is an inverted view. The cutting board is gkued from three commercially glued panels, top is beech, the two bottom ones are some local softwood (fir/spruce). The trick was to find containers whose height matches the combined height of two panels.

I am thrilled to see whether my idea is taken up by the community.



Web clamp providing some torque by friction
by Justus
11 hours ago

Ever been bothered by wielding annyingly long pipe or bar clamps? Do you also always seem to have the wrong size of clamps? How cool would it be to have a web clamp that actually clamps like a pipe clamp?

The main problem is, that the arms of the pipe clamp do have to sustain some torque, i.e. the pipe should not bend. The straps of a web clamp bend with no effort at all.

The thought did not leave me and after some less succesful prototypes I came up with this version:

The trick is in the shape of the batten where the strap is running around – think of the triangular sections as if they were wheels where the strap in wound on. At university we learned, that the friction put onto a wheel by a rope depends on the tension of the rope and the angle of loop – twice around would be 720° – as an example. By making the strap taking a longer way at the bottom and putting the lock such that the moving strap is pointing upwards, pulling the web together creates the torque necessary to keep the arms on the object to be clamped.

If you need low to medium clamping pressure on very large or otherwise cumbersome objects, this may be your tool.

Glad to have proven my point I rewarded myself with a pair of Bessey parallel clamps.