#7
Since our coffeepot turned into a mere "steam generator" yesterday, and I haven't got that resolved yet, this morning I got local Starbucks stuff to take to my wife.  So I got out the serving tray I had made during the Great Recession, when I was building a lot of stuff and re-using every scrap of wood I came across.

This was built when I was reducing power-tool usage and taking up handtools for the first time.  The dovetails are pretty sloppy, but they filled up nicely with dark epoxy!  The tray-bed was based on a very old scrap plywood slab which did warp again stubbornly later, so I trued up the base on my wife's "granite test slab" as shown, using a block plane.   The hand-grips were based on drilled holes rather than a router pattern.   I did rely on a router for the inlays.  I had a 4-up matched set of veneers which I roughly glued onto the plywood.  Rather than try to 'butt' all the veneers precisely, I did the rough-install, then routed out precise 1/4" channels for the decorative strips.

Happy woodworking!
Chris

<img src="http://i32.photobucket.com/albums/d38/C66RUPPEL/Burlesque%20Tray_zpsiqvbnlju.jpg" border="0" alt=" photo Burlesque Tray_zpsiqvbnlju.jpg"/>
Chris
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#8
Very nice!
I like the drilled handholds.
Ag
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#9
Cool! (Maybe, smokin'!) 
Big Grin 

Does the filler imply epoxy glue, too? Every time I read about using original sawdust and glue for filler, I think: let's just fix it using channels and accent materials.
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#10
Very nice! I like the inlay, it's something on my bucket list!
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#11
Nice job I like it.



Steve
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Broken Coffeepot / Burlesque Tray


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