Inside here is where it all happens.
Welcome to the show!I hope you enjoy looking at my
presentation as much as I enjoyed making it!
(This slide is under construction. There will be a picture of the outside of my shop here filling this slide)
Click your mouse to proceed to the next slide
Used 2x12 pressure treated woodThis thing weighs about 200 pounds! It is real solid and it feels like you're sitting on a
concrete block!
Tracing Board
Legs fold into frame
2x4's
I used this frame on a lot of the projects in this slide show.
There is a glass in here!
I left these in the weather to see how the cardboard feed bins would hold up. Even thoughthey were primed and painted, they didn't last. I disassembled them and now they await a more durable core; possibly PVC pipe. They will look almost identical as they appear here when I get them finished. The vertical slots are plastic covered feed level windows.
Wire Spool Feeders
The blue letters I cut out with the table slanted on the scroll saw. The cut out letters were then used on the sign in the next slide.
This one I did on my pantograph.
(All of the nicks are from it getting shuffled from one place to another in my shop)
Another pantograph sign in a shadow font. The black is
routed out and painted after the silver was sprayed on.
I originally made this for my Mother-in-Law for her dog, but she gave US the dog!
This is a cut-through variation of the shadow font.8-1/2”
(It is cut out where the black is which is a black backer)
Name Plate Stand
This is called “The Bird Feeder
Guy”From “Birdhouses
YouCan Build in a Day”
from Popular Woodworking Books
that my two daughters got me for
Father's Day last year. I really love that
book; they made a GREAT choice!
I made three of these. One for my Mother-in-Law, one to sell if I canand one to keep because I think
he's really cool!
40-1/2”
The next few slides are of my chess set done on the scroll saw. The pieces and board still need to get the clear finish. The pieces are from the same “The Art of the Scroll Saw” by Patrick Spielman mentioned earlier.
This and the next slide is a“Sun, Moon, Star” also from “The Art of the Scroll Saw” by Patrick Spielman. There are three levels made by tilting the table at different degrees. The next slide shows the levels a little better.
A spiral bowl to fold for transport.
8-3/4”
This pattern was Taken from anotherBook by Spielman,“The New Scroll Saw Handbook