glenn1529
Likes Dirt
Not a make but a resto, came up nice.
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I agree. That is a nice piece. Did you rebate the back and slide it over a cleat on the wall?@Jpez Corner desk is incredible. You win.
Aren't concrete tops fun ha ha. I did a school science lab once and had to do stainless steel frames with 200mm thick concrete tops. It was an eye openerIkea cabinets with my doors and bits, also did the concrete benchtops
oh, and the flooring too.
That PU glue is insane stuff - had a custom 8-setting dining table made using it and we've moved house 4 times and it's still rock solid.Mitre, domino (floating tennon) and polyurethane glue (purbond). Unbelievably strong, even an eye opener for me when I started doing them this way.
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Thats such a tidy piece of work. Fugly thoughThis wasn't my cup of tea. Made this for a uni student for there portfolio. Not sure how that works but it must be allowed.
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The perfect work bench, can get the perfect height every time, saves the back.That PU glue is insane stuff - had a custom 8-setting dining table made using it and we've moved house 4 times and it's still rock solid.
What's that hospital bed in the background - setting up a covid ward at home?
That Deffinately counts. I'm made one once. Found an old piece of willows on dad's farm, tas oak handle that I sliced in half with rubber in between and planted a piece of oak on the back then shaped it. I'm pretty shit at making bats my brother broke it trying to hit a snake with it.I make cricket bats, does that count as woodwork?
Scotty you have some skills, love the timber inlays.
Was fugly but customer gets what customer wants.Thats such a tidy piece of work. Fugly though
Steel frame holds the weight of the top, Christ I spent some time.Aren't concrete tops fun ha ha. I did a school science lab once and had to do stainless steel frames with 200mm thick concrete tops. It was an eye opener
Maybe a design student...This wasn't my cup of tea. Made this for a uni student for there portfolio. Not sure how that works but it must be allowed.
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So you cut the mortises into the mitre faces? How many dominos per join did you use?Mitre, domino (floating tennon) and polyurethane glue (purbond). Unbelievably strong, even an eye opener for me when I started doing them this way.
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No, it’s only pocketed directly under the drawer. The rest is open underneath so had access to screw through the back rails into the studs.I agree. That is a nice piece. Did you rebate the back and slide it over a cleat on the wall?