05-04-2020, 04:08 PM
This is Dallas. She is a 15 1/2 year old mixed breed that is mostly Collie and German Shepherd. She is a wonderful dog and was part of the package deal I got with my lovely lady friend, Jen.
[attachment=26755]
At the end of last year, Dallas got a terrible cancer-related prognosis and was not expected to still be with us at this point. However, she is still kicking strong. She walks an average of 2 miles a day - she recently did 4! I asked Jen if she would be accepting of an urn if I was to build one. So, I went in my shop 2 weekends ago and just looked at the wood I had on hand and started building with no plan. The maple for the top came from the same slab of maple I used for the tops for three jewelry boxes I had already gifted to Jen and her two daughters. Think of it as the next two pages of book-matching.
This shows the cherry board that I used for the box and the maple piece I re-sawed for the top panel.
[attachment=26756]
I did something I never tried before to give base some character. I made the decorative cutouts on my router table as a first step. I basically had 11" and 5" slabs of cherry that I ran perpendicularly (relative to the fence) through a cove bit positioned about an inch from my fence. I made 4 passes progressively raising the bit. I then switched to a straight bit and progressively nibbled away between the coves. It worked pretty good other than the cove bit burning the cherry. I then ripped the slabs and mitered the corners to form the base.
This shows the box before I started finishing it. I put 2 coats of tung oil on everything. Then, several coats of matte poly on the top panel over 3 days (sanding each morning)
[attachment=26757]
This is the front of the finished box
[attachment=26758]
This shows the bottom. Note the base screws to the rest of the box.
[attachment=26759]
[attachment=26760]
[attachment=26761]
This shows image shows how the grain travels around the box. I took special care when laying out the cuts on the cherry board that the far left and far right edge would meet in a pleasing way. The joint between the back and the left is the one that came from pieces not next to one another.
[attachment=26762]
The sister boxes that were completed in Dec 2018
[attachment=26763]
Unlike the first three boxes, I hope that number four stays empty for a long time!
[attachment=26755]
At the end of last year, Dallas got a terrible cancer-related prognosis and was not expected to still be with us at this point. However, she is still kicking strong. She walks an average of 2 miles a day - she recently did 4! I asked Jen if she would be accepting of an urn if I was to build one. So, I went in my shop 2 weekends ago and just looked at the wood I had on hand and started building with no plan. The maple for the top came from the same slab of maple I used for the tops for three jewelry boxes I had already gifted to Jen and her two daughters. Think of it as the next two pages of book-matching.
This shows the cherry board that I used for the box and the maple piece I re-sawed for the top panel.
[attachment=26756]
I did something I never tried before to give base some character. I made the decorative cutouts on my router table as a first step. I basically had 11" and 5" slabs of cherry that I ran perpendicularly (relative to the fence) through a cove bit positioned about an inch from my fence. I made 4 passes progressively raising the bit. I then switched to a straight bit and progressively nibbled away between the coves. It worked pretty good other than the cove bit burning the cherry. I then ripped the slabs and mitered the corners to form the base.
This shows the box before I started finishing it. I put 2 coats of tung oil on everything. Then, several coats of matte poly on the top panel over 3 days (sanding each morning)
[attachment=26757]
This is the front of the finished box
[attachment=26758]
This shows the bottom. Note the base screws to the rest of the box.
[attachment=26759]
[attachment=26760]
[attachment=26761]
This shows image shows how the grain travels around the box. I took special care when laying out the cuts on the cherry board that the far left and far right edge would meet in a pleasing way. The joint between the back and the left is the one that came from pieces not next to one another.
[attachment=26762]
The sister boxes that were completed in Dec 2018
[attachment=26763]
Unlike the first three boxes, I hope that number four stays empty for a long time!