Thursday, August 22, 2013

shelf [part one].

So tonight I decided it was high time to get rolling on this shelf. I'm excited. And I need some organization of my outdoor gear. Bad.

With 23" wide sheets of plywood to cross-cut I broke out my garage sale find Milwaukee circ saw. I have to say... it's definitely worth the $30 or so I paid for it over my old Skil. That thing was notoriously unable to make a perpendicular vertical cut which was lame. But this Milwaukee did a fine job! I tested each cut with a square...


Perfection. Or as close to it as possible with a hand power tool.


I used my trusty $20 guide and the included C-clamps (along with my 48" drywall square) to make some just-about-perfectly-straight and really really square cuts...


And ended up with a pile of lumber ready to be dado-ed!


Not enough time to start that tonight... so I just did my test and got everything ready for the real deal this weekend. This meant I got to test out my awesome jig!


Which basically worked perfectly. The only tough part was the pattern bit is only a hair over 1/4" high... and I'm trying to make a 1/4" deep dado. So it took some finessing to get the depth of the router set just right but then it was a piece of cake to make the dado joint...


Then fitted a second piece of scrap wood to test the joint...


Perfect! And ready to rock and roll... I'm excited to do all the joinery and really use my jig. And then get to organizing my gear!

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

dado jig.

So - umm - I tried organizing my outdoor gear. A while ago. So I got a couple big bins and a couple medium bins and a couple small bins. And I threw everything in them. Ugh. Still took me hours it seemed to pack for a simple overnight. And I go on overnight trips to the mountains... kind of a lot (I'm up to fifteen nights in a tent so far this year... halfway to my one month in a tent goal... ).

But to start I brought everything in from the garage to the basement. And it ended up - uhh - looking something like this -


Sooooo... I decided I should build something proper. Out of plywood (even though plywood is sort of stupid expensive anymore if you actually want anything decent). Ended up costing about $100. And my design turned out something like this -


So starting with the plywood then -


The key to this whole cubby-slash-shelf thing working is the joinery... all the joints are dados (which I've never done before). They can sort of be done on a table saw with a special dado blade but - well - not very easily (or should I say 'safely' since the guard has to be removed) and definitely not for this kind of project where the joints fall in the middle of say a six-foot-long sheet of plywood.

A router it is then...

But in order to dado properly with a router I really needed a jig. So I hopped over to the interwebs and found a couple different ones. I liked one in particular that used a pattern router bit - and thus did not require an extra piece of wood to be used as a router fence (so the jig was simpler to build - and pattern bits really aren't much more expensive than regular router bits).

Off then I went this evening to make the jig... I used a piece of 1x3 oak for the square ends and clear pine (a 1x4 and 1x6) for the cross sections. Then some jig parts I picked up at the local Rockler (where I ended up in a long chat with the old guy about photography... ). By far the toughest part was making absolutely one hundred percent or more like one hundred ten percent that the fixed part of the jig was square -



Then I clamped everything down super-duper-über tight and drilled the four screws (I even took the time to countersink the holes cos the router will need to glide over the jig and not catch on the screw heads) -


Once the fixed section was in place it was time to route out the slots for the screws - once again everything was totally clamped down while I routed out the 1/4" slots -


Then had to drill in the oak for the screws - set in place with some T-nuts (which I countersunk using a 3/4" spade bit) -



Screwed in the bolts and slid the adjustable part of the jig into place -


Then attached the knobs -


And it was done -



The key again is the pattern bit -



(Note how the bit is below a spinning collar - which follows a pattern - hence the name - or in the case of this jig the edges of the jig)

So the way the jig works is I will use a scrap piece of the plywood to set the width of the jig - clamp the knobs down tight - and route a 1/4" deep slot where all the joints will be. And the reason a jig is needed in the first place - instead of just getting a bit the thickness of the plywood - is because plywood is notoriously inconsistent in thickness (yeah - Rockler makes off-width bits but with this jig I'll be able to get a one hundred percent perfectly fit joint).

Yep.

Now to cross-cut all the 23" wide sheets of plywood to the sizes I need and then start dadoing. Lots. And lots. Of dadoing.

Sunday, July 14, 2013

[homemade] ski vises.

So I knew our skis needed a fresh waxing when J and I went skiing on Rainier this past weekend. Trouble is ... I didn't want to plunk down eighty bucks or whatever for a pair of ski vises. And I had a couple of scraps of 4x4 from the porch balusters I built a few years ago.

I figured they'd make a fine pair of ski vises ... so off to crafting I went.

The 4x4 scraps were already a good height (about a foot) but they needed to be able to be secured to the bench top so I whacked off a 1x4 about a foot long and screwed the 4x4s to the end of them (so I could clamp down the 1x4s and secure the 'vises' to the edge of the bench). That was the easy part.

But I needed to have them also hold a pair of skis vertically in order to be able to file the edges. No worries. I figured a 15º angle offset would be perfect - so I dialed the table saw to 75º and went to notching the posts for a 3/4" gap (I made the notches parallel to the sides of the post because the camber of the skis would bend them slightly into the notches and hold them tight - or so was my thinking) -



Once they were notched on the table saw I just had to take a chisel to the slices -


And ... done -


I happened to have some cabinet shelf liner stuff leftover that was pretty tacky that I thought would hold the skis when flipped upside down while waxing (or right side up while adjusting the bindings etc.) -


And ... boom!


But the real beauty were the vertical notches for edging. I cut a few extra scraps of the shelf liner to wedge into them and then tested -


It worked! And wallah - ski vises from scrap 4x4s ha!



Now ... if only it were November and the powder was on its way ... but our skis are freshly waxed (thanks to a $3 yard sale iron - definitely no need for a fancy ski iron either) for - uhh - summer skiing (no no I'm serious - I'm skiing every month this year - and next year ... and next etc. - apparently there are people who can count over a hundred months straight of skiing - now that's legit!).


(one of the ugly cabinets that was hanging up in the garage that we cleaned up and spray painted - then stickered away with the ski theme cos it's now our über-cool ski cabinet).



Monday, April 15, 2013

a sunday in pictures.
















So I have been slowly working on a little side project of taking photos at night around the house with the 50mm lens wide open (it's fun playing with a fast lens again!). And so sort of along those lines I decided I'd take a bunch of pictures today to kind of tell the story of a lazy-ish Sunday (following two days of skiing!) where the weather was perfectly proper. Rain then sun. And thunder! More sun.




So then ...




A quick bike ride to the store for stuff to make grilled cheese (and tulips) ...





Sheets hung out on the line in the backyard to dry ...




Coffee ...




Windows open ...




A quick nap on the couch in the sun ...




Playing the Bechstein still forming an idea into a proper song complete ...




Those tulips in the kitchen window ...




Incense burning ...




Wool ski clothes lying flat to dry ...




Turntable spinning the crackle of vinyl mixed with the kaboom! of thunder through open windows (Spring thunderstorm!)...




The record on rotation ...




More waiting to be played ...




Rain hitting the back window (then sun a few moments later) ...




Reading at the dining room table ...




Light hitting the bathroom door ...




Working at my desk ...




...















Saturday, March 9, 2013

digging in the dirt.









It was sunny today. And kind of warm. So after a long winter that was not really much at all winter except for maybe a week and a half of clear cold days I finally got to dig in the dirt a little. And mow the lawn. It was quite wonderful.






























Wednesday, August 15, 2012

a new direction of sorts defined.






Not sure what has led to this. Probably from reading a few blogs I never normally read but I all of a sudden have this new vision for this house that will runneth over into my life in general. So I'm going to write about it here. Well - not so much vision as … let's call it 'Rules.' Sort of like RULES TO LIVE BY when it comes to finishing this house and how I will approach other areas of my life as well.

Let's see if I can state them simply -

Number One: Keep making stuff.

Number Two: Stop buying new stuff.*

Number Three: Buy local stuff.

(And Number Four - which isn't as big as the others: Get rid of stuff).

(And then Number Five - which is kind of like Number Four: Buy less stuff).

* And fix stuff when it breaks.

Okay okay … maybe that sounds a bit much. So I'll try to explain.

Number One. I've always enjoyed making stuff so this one is pretty easy. And I like to think I get a little bit better with each thing I build. But I'm not just talking furniture here. Or porch railings. Or details on my garage I built from 2x6s. Although those definitely count. Especially the furniture. But I'm talking about a whole lot of other stuff beyond my house and what I put in it. So I should maybe re-define it to be: 'Keep creating stuff.' Like keep making photographs. Keep creating music. Keep writing letters … by hand - with an actual pen and paper you know? Keep making cards instead of buying stupid crappy ones at the store. And heck yeah - definitely keep making my own furniture. Even if none of it is any good. Just keep making stuff.

I even think growing my own stuff would fit here. Like finally planting an actual vegetable garden. And then actually eating the vegetables it produces. Yeah - I think that counts. I could even re-re-define it to being something like: 'Take one or a bunch of raw materials - be them wood, paper, brain cells or seeds - and turn them into something cooler.' Yeah - not the same ring but it works.

So then … Number Two. This one is pretty easy too cos I have always loved going to yard sales. I read an article a while ago in some magazine at K's parents' house about the magic of yard sales. About the good they encompass. About how it gets us out of our drywall boxes to actually walk around our neighborhoods and meet and talk to - well - real, actual people. Our neighbors. With the side benefit of being able to paw through all their crap. It's a total blast hopping on bikes Saturday mornings with some panniers (or now a bike trailer … that I bought at a yard sale of course!) and messenger bags strapped over shoulders and circle around the neighborhood following this sign or that sign seeing what we might find. And none of it is new. Yeah - a lot of it is junk. But I have absolutely found some cool stuff at yard sales. An old Beethoven music book - hardcover - of every one of his thirty-two sonatas - printed in German … for a buck. A cool lamp. A spectacular old-timey fan (that - with full disclosure - K went back and bought it to surprise me). A rad old mixer. And on and on and on it goes. Yeah - yard sales rule.

But I won't be able to find everything at a yard sale of course. So then there are other places. For all my book needs (and I have a growing need for books!) there's Better World Books (they have an absolutely ginormous selection of any book you could possibly imagine existing on the planet - I just found a rare book by Bob Spring of the North Cascades! - they offset their shipping, give books back to schools and countries where literacy is low and are just an all-around awesome company with a super-forward-thinking business model). Or Half Price Books. Or Powells for when I'm down in Portland. There's the local Goodwill right down the street. Thrift stores. Consignment shops. And duh - Craigslist and Ebay for everything from camera stuff (like all the old large-format equipment I bought earlier this year) to computers (I detest the new Apple and their business approach but love their old computers - I may have a few humming around this place) to anything I can probably imagine ever wanting (I hesitate saying 'needing').

And for my house - this is where the new direction comes in … architectural salvage lots in Tacoma and Seattle that are chocked full of everything from plumbing fixtures to doors to windows and on and on. It's crazy. If I want a new faucet - I do not want to run up to the Home Depot and pick one up off a shelf over-packaged in cardboard inside a cardboard box. Heck no. So my new idea is to finish this house by buying as little new stuff as I can. That sounds bad I realize - not very true to that simple statement above (but I know I won't be able to find everything used). So let me re-phrase that - everything that I can find used I will buy used. Better? I might need a bath fitting or a pipe or electrical cable or something I'll have to drop by the local Mclendons to pick up. But seriously - all the fixtures for my bathroom yet-to-be-finished will be used (if I can find them). Used tiles maybe. A light fixture here or there. Hardware. Etcetera etcetera. Hippo Hardware in Portland is an amazing place! This house may end up looking eclectic as all get-out. It'll be perfect.

And lastly - Number Three. The local bit. I saw a little while ago someone sharing on The Facebook a phrase about how - if you buy local - you're not helping out some rich CEO and their ginormous corporation but rather some kid getting tuba lessons or going to that summer camp or clothes for school or a Christmas holiday. K knows the folks who run the bakery in town so I know that's the truth. I live a few blocks from a Saturday farmers market. The other weekend I picked up a bunch of über-cheap flowers to plant (they're planted - now if only I can keep them alive!). Some produce. Oh - and some spectacular coffee! Holy cow that coffee is delicious … There are people selling meat packages (need to check into that). Flowers. Obviously tons of produce. And so much other stuff that I probably would never buy. Heck - back in June I finally signed up for local home milk delivery. It's been fabulous. The milk is awesome, local and now I can say I have a milkman (I'm even getting better at remembering to grab the milk off the porch before work every other Thursday!). But beyond the market there are a ton of small shops scattered around. Coffee shops, bookstores, bakeries, music stores for the odd XLR cable I need when I've realized I've rolled over mine with something right before I'm supposed to record a guy singing … markets, paper and craft stores, antique shops (which are mostly over-priced junk but like yard sales - you can get lucky).

So now my confession … I realize I have not always been good about these three things. Way too meticulous and picky about this remodel. I like eclectic better. So this will definitely be a new-ish mode of thinking. I'm even considering starting a spreadsheet and tallying up what I buy used vs. what I buy new. It would be a good idea to visually see a) how much stuff I buy and b) how much of it is used versus new. And I could make pie charts and tables from the data!

Okay … so there it is. Time to start. I think I'll go outside now and build a compost bin.




_th 08.15.12









( ... and ... an hour later ... )