06-25-2017, 09:22 AM
When I started into woodworking, I generally didn't like oak wood. Mainly I associated it with house-trims of 30 years ago, plain-sawn, stained chocolate brown. But since then I've started to really like it, and even read a whole book about it.
This is a project with wood I bought from a seller in "The Region", the northwest corner of Indiana near Chicago. And the recipient of this box will be a guy who grew up in that same town that the sawyer sold from. This is quartersawn Black Oak, and it pretty much took me to school lately on getting it surfaced. It's still got some tearout that I've been scraping but it's not bad at all. The top slide-in panel is some cypress from Hawaii, and that too was a bear, needing a high-angle plane.
It will be a surprise for my buddy, hopefully suitable for some of his hobby gear.
I was just getting this together when Roy Underhill aired his sliding-top box episode yesterday. Mine isn't mitered though. I had only so much wood, and resawing + bookmatching left me dealing with some warps and trapezoids (repeatedly), so I finally just rabbet-joined my corners. It was one way to establish a straight joint when everything else isn't straight.
<img src="http://i32.photobucket.com/albums/d38/C66RUPPEL/Nor_Region_Wood_zpsxdpwhm7c.jpg" border="0" alt=" photo Nor_Region_Wood_zpsxdpwhm7c.jpg"/>
Happy woodworking!
Chris
This is a project with wood I bought from a seller in "The Region", the northwest corner of Indiana near Chicago. And the recipient of this box will be a guy who grew up in that same town that the sawyer sold from. This is quartersawn Black Oak, and it pretty much took me to school lately on getting it surfaced. It's still got some tearout that I've been scraping but it's not bad at all. The top slide-in panel is some cypress from Hawaii, and that too was a bear, needing a high-angle plane.
It will be a surprise for my buddy, hopefully suitable for some of his hobby gear.
I was just getting this together when Roy Underhill aired his sliding-top box episode yesterday. Mine isn't mitered though. I had only so much wood, and resawing + bookmatching left me dealing with some warps and trapezoids (repeatedly), so I finally just rabbet-joined my corners. It was one way to establish a straight joint when everything else isn't straight.
<img src="http://i32.photobucket.com/albums/d38/C66RUPPEL/Nor_Region_Wood_zpsxdpwhm7c.jpg" border="0" alt=" photo Nor_Region_Wood_zpsxdpwhm7c.jpg"/>
Happy woodworking!
Chris
Chris