A couple years ago, I bought an old door with plans to turn it into a bench. I can now say that the door has become a bench and the thing is finished. It is finished, but not done. I stained it and put polyurethane on it, but I still need to upholster the seat. The pictures do not look nearly as good as the actual bench.
Sunday, February 12, 2012
Friday, January 20, 2012
From Oliver Cowdery
I was just reading about the restoration of the Aaronic priesthood, and came across Oliver Cowdery's description of John the Baptist's visit. Part of what he wrote really struck me, especially when thinking of current world conditions.
"Man may deceive his fellow man; deception may follow deception, and the children of the wicked one may have power to seduce the foolish and untaught, till naught but fiction feeds the many, and the fruit of falsehood carries in its current the giddy to the grave, but one touch with the finger of his love, yes, one ray of glory from the upper world, or one word from the mouth of the Savior, from the bosom of eternity, strikes it all into insignificance, and blots it forever from the mind!"
"Man may deceive his fellow man; deception may follow deception, and the children of the wicked one may have power to seduce the foolish and untaught, till naught but fiction feeds the many, and the fruit of falsehood carries in its current the giddy to the grave, but one touch with the finger of his love, yes, one ray of glory from the upper world, or one word from the mouth of the Savior, from the bosom of eternity, strikes it all into insignificance, and blots it forever from the mind!"
Saturday, January 14, 2012
About that Ironwood...


This is how I used the smaller piece of the ironwood that I showed earlier. It is just finished up, and has one coat of linseed oil so far.
Sunday, January 8, 2012
Desert Ironwood
The most exciting gift I got for Christmas is some Desert Ironwood. My cousin located some on private land, and with the blessing of the property owner, we harvested some off a big, gnarly, uprooted old trunk of tree. Harvested sounds so professional. In reality, we busted chunks off with an axe and a trailer hitch. Hey, it is what we had on hand. Since we were both there on vacation, the tool scrounging continued as we broke it down into luggage sized pieces. I opted for a hacksaw, not wishing to destroy the nicer saws that we had access to. We did break one blade, but it was overall not too bad. Sectioning it at home, I have the benefit of a good vise on a stable workbench, so cutting is much easier. I still used a coarse hacksaw blade, because I prefer being able to throw away dull blades to sharpening them. With wood this hard, blades dull quickly. These pictures show outside and inside, with cut surfaces cleaned up with a rasp, and wetted to show the grain better.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012
Just look at the handles
It is a teensy bit embarrassing to see how much attention I have been giving to knives lately. I guess I have a tendency to obsess over one thing at a time. Here are another couple of knives- one made from a kit and the other from scraps of wood and metal.
This is the kit knife. The handle is made of Dymondwood- a laminated, resin impregnated wood veneer product. I do not recall the species of wood it is (supposed to be). A great material for a knife handle, because it is stable and moisture resistant, and it doesn't look bad. I put some butcher block oil on it to make it shine, even though finishing it is not necessary.
This little guy started out as a really cheap backsaw from Home Depot. I did not have very high hopes for this, I mostly just wanted to try making a knife from scratch. I cut the metal with a cold chisel and shaped the blade with a bench grinder and sandpaper. The handle is a scrap of black walnut, and the brass pins are not pins at all, but brass machine screws. I made it and tried it out in the kitchen, and it works like a champ. As a reward for faithful service, I finally finished it with (you guessed it) butcher block oil.
This is the kit knife. The handle is made of Dymondwood- a laminated, resin impregnated wood veneer product. I do not recall the species of wood it is (supposed to be). A great material for a knife handle, because it is stable and moisture resistant, and it doesn't look bad. I put some butcher block oil on it to make it shine, even though finishing it is not necessary.
This little guy started out as a really cheap backsaw from Home Depot. I did not have very high hopes for this, I mostly just wanted to try making a knife from scratch. I cut the metal with a cold chisel and shaped the blade with a bench grinder and sandpaper. The handle is a scrap of black walnut, and the brass pins are not pins at all, but brass machine screws. I made it and tried it out in the kitchen, and it works like a champ. As a reward for faithful service, I finally finished it with (you guessed it) butcher block oil.
Monday, January 2, 2012
Mostly concerning the wood
My problem hasn't been that I haven't had any projects going, it is that they weren't strictly about wood. This photo is of a knife that I rehandled with hickory. The wood is from a sledgehammer handle. It is beautifully tough and not bad to look at, either. I finished it with butcher block oil until it shines.
Saturday, February 5, 2011
I want a refund
Hey Laughter, I want my money back! A mere two years after it was made, the spoon gets a chip. I knew I should have bought Chinese.
Friday, November 12, 2010
Sunday, September 5, 2010
The reason I make spoons.
This summer has been busy for us. We discovered that if you make fireweed jelly and raspberry jam, you should use the same spoon for both. You can then have a beautiful color like this:
It is a well-loved spoon. The jam is good, too.
It is a well-loved spoon. The jam is good, too.
Saturday, August 14, 2010
Saturday, August 7, 2010
Things I have made, part 10
So, about a week ago I really wanted to make something. But the thing I wanted to make needed a band saw, and I broke my band saw blade a while ago. Because I couldn't go to the store to get a band saw blade, I was very bummed. Then I realized that I could sew something! So I got out a rectangle-shaped scrap and made a pillow and a pillow case. The pillow is inside the pillow case shown above. The photos show the front and back.
Friday, July 30, 2010
No wood, just words this time
But what great words they are. From Judge Learned Hand, one of our most respected American jurists. (And what a great name, too, huh? His brother was also a judge, and his name was Augustus.) These words are from a 4th of July address entitled The Spirit of Liberty:
I often wonder whether we do not rest our hopes too much upon constitutions, upon laws and upon courts. These are false hopes; believe me, these are false hopes. Liberty lies in the hearts of men and women; when it dies there, no constitution, no law, no court can even do much to help it. While it lies there it needs no constitution, no law, no court to save it.
Amen, Brother L. Amen.
I often wonder whether we do not rest our hopes too much upon constitutions, upon laws and upon courts. These are false hopes; believe me, these are false hopes. Liberty lies in the hearts of men and women; when it dies there, no constitution, no law, no court can even do much to help it. While it lies there it needs no constitution, no law, no court to save it.
Amen, Brother L. Amen.
Thursday, July 22, 2010
Tuesday, July 20, 2010
Now every chair is a work chair!
I have a comfy chair by the fireplace. Not only that, it is leather and totally manly. The only problem is that it was only good for sitting in and reading, or dozing off. I needed versatility, or else sitting there would be unmitigated pleasure. Thank goodness I decided to make this lap desk! The top is 5/8 inch plywood and used to be a cabinet door, and the cushion is a pillowcase filled with foam beads and stapled in place. The paint job is not what I hoped for, as the fresh red paint caused the ancient existing paint to bubble up and crack, but it is functional. Now instead of just enjoying my sweet chair by the fireplace, I can get some work done!
Labels:
furniture
Sunday, July 18, 2010
One reason why English is the Best Language in the World
Not long ago, a brother of mine had the temerity to suggest that Spanish is better than English. (In his defense, he was learning Spanish at the time and was caught up in an understandable love affair with a new language). As examples to show the absurdity of that little heresy, I cited Shakespeare and the King James Version of the Bible. Here is another prime example of why English is the Best Language in the World.
The example is the word Atonement. Now, every language that I know of has a word for atonement. In Spanish it is expiacion – expiation, a Latin word that English has also borrowed.
There are several words in English that convey part of the meaning of the Atonement, with expiation and reconciliation being the most descriptive. To expiate is to compensate or to pay for something. To reconcile is to reestablish a close relationship between – literally, if you follow the Latin etymology, to bring people back to sit together again. We recognize both of these as important parts of the Atonement. But it takes at least two words to express that.

When William Tyndale was translating the Bible in the 1500’s, he felt that there was no sufficient word to express the concept of Atonement as it was found in Hebrew. So he invented a word – at-one-ment. When it is broken down, its meaning is quite clear. This word served to communicate the concepts of reconciliation and expiation. And what a wonderful word it is – two very simple English words with a latinate ending. (Tyndale also coined the words “Passover” and “scapegoat,” as well as phrases such as “let there be light,” “my brother’s keeper,” and “it came to pass,” and “gave up the ghost.”) You won’t find a more simple, elegant, and effective way of communicating those concepts in any other language that I know of.
Summary:
1) William Tyndale = extraordinary wordsmith and reformer
2) English = the Best Language in the World
The example is the word Atonement. Now, every language that I know of has a word for atonement. In Spanish it is expiacion – expiation, a Latin word that English has also borrowed.
There are several words in English that convey part of the meaning of the Atonement, with expiation and reconciliation being the most descriptive. To expiate is to compensate or to pay for something. To reconcile is to reestablish a close relationship between – literally, if you follow the Latin etymology, to bring people back to sit together again. We recognize both of these as important parts of the Atonement. But it takes at least two words to express that.

When William Tyndale was translating the Bible in the 1500’s, he felt that there was no sufficient word to express the concept of Atonement as it was found in Hebrew. So he invented a word – at-one-ment. When it is broken down, its meaning is quite clear. This word served to communicate the concepts of reconciliation and expiation. And what a wonderful word it is – two very simple English words with a latinate ending. (Tyndale also coined the words “Passover” and “scapegoat,” as well as phrases such as “let there be light,” “my brother’s keeper,” and “it came to pass,” and “gave up the ghost.”) You won’t find a more simple, elegant, and effective way of communicating those concepts in any other language that I know of.
Summary:
1) William Tyndale = extraordinary wordsmith and reformer
2) English = the Best Language in the World
Wednesday, July 14, 2010
The Word and wood
This is something I made as an illustration for a Sunday School class. What is it? Here is a hint: Mormon 9:12. Still not sure? Try D&C 20:18-21.
Tuesday, July 13, 2010
What can you eat with those?
Labels:
spirals,
wooden kitchen utensils,
wooden kitchenware
Monday, July 12, 2010
Ugly things that I have made, part 1
This is a primitive fork I carved as a teenager. I don't know why I saved it. It was made from some cheap pine I found laying around the garage, most likely. My wife thinks it is cool. She is way too charitable about these things.
Things I have made, part 7
I made this necklace in high school. It originally had two beads, until Laughter suggested two more beads to make it look less phallic. Too right. It is made out of citrus wood. We had plenty of that. I finished it with wax.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)