Shop Projects (and Spring Like Weather)

I took some time between (non-workshop) projects to finish up some improvements for the shop. The first was to complete a rack for my chisels. I had glued up the side panels a month ago, but decided to focus on the bench build. So my chisels sat in the bench tool tray the entire time. Not the end of the world, but it wasn’t very organized. I had to be careful to not knock them around or catch myself on one of the sharp edges.

I pulled inspiration from the April 2011 Popular Woodworking Magazine.

Chisel Rack completed and hung on the wall.

My next project will be building a chicken coop (hönshus) for the Norlandia preschool in Hovmantorp. It won’t be furniture, but it will help pay for the workshop. I needed sawhorses for the project (and they are useful to have around). I did a search around the web and decided to build a set of folding sawhorses that will easily fit in the car. I finished assembling the second sawhorse this morning before heading home to meet Izzy after school.

Completed shop made sawhorses.

I have a few lessons learned from the build. The biggest is to double check the crosscut sled on the tablesaw. It wasn’t perfectly square which explaned my trouble getting the pieces to line up perfectly. That is next on my list to fix in the shop. I threw together the crosscut sled to try it out on the tablesaw, but need to be more careful aligning it. There is a huge pendulum crosscut saw in the shop (a Waco EBMD Crosscut Saw from 1961 with I believe a 18-inch blade on it). I tried to true that one up, but I wasn’t able to get it perfect, but I think in hindsight it is better than the one on the tablesaw. Oh well, a project for next week.

I’m hoping to pick up the lumber for the chicken coop on Friday and do most of the build over the weekend. It will be a lot easier to build when the school is closed and I don’t have to run home to meet Izzy after school. The weather forecast looks favorable. Hopefully I can get a trailer for the lumber with my US driver’s license. If not, I’ll have to see when they can deliver the wood and do the build next week.

We are starting to get some spring-like weather here between the stretches of Sweden-winter-like weather (i.e. cold, overcast and wet). Today was one of them. There is a 2-mile loop from my workshop that takes me around a mile-long lighted running/walking/biking path (Löpanäs elljusspår) through the Rottne countryside and down by lake Innaren. It gets Hoagie and I out for a little over a half-hour and breaks up the day. It hasn’t been too busy during lunch-time which allows me to let Hoagie run a little bit.

Hoagie enjoying the walk around the Löpanäs elljusspår on a beautiful March afternoon.

First project finished and out the door!

My first non-workshop-related project has been completed and and delivered. I finished the last few rows of the Danish cord bench yesterday and Susanna and I dropped it off at her sister’s house. It isn’t perfect, but I’m happy how it turned out (for a first attempt at weaving).

The completed Danish Cord Bench, ready to be delivered.

Getting the weave even and correct is a challenge. I think the trick is to go slow (which I did, but could have done a little better keeping the warp and weave straight as I went along) and make sure the tension on each strand is the same (which I don’t think I did very well). It was a fun project to complete, even if it took a while to get done.

I started the project thinking I was going to do all the work by hand, but quickly decided that wasn’t the path I wanted. I quickly turned to the existing table saw to rip the boards and decided I wanted a planer to thickness the boards. Getting the planer I wanted in stock took a few weeks. I did the first mortise by hand, then decided to get the CNC running and use that. Setting up the CNC and getting it all working accurately took a few days. I thought I could do the weaving in a single day, but it was my first time trying to weave cord, so it took a while longer than I had planned. I had to keep going back to the class video and watch the next step.

Danish cord bench weave. You can see where I didn’t get the cord to lay evenly flat on the rail.

My big lesson learned from the project is that I need to build a better finishing table/cabinet. I inherited a dining room table with the shop space that I used, but it isn’t perfectly flat. I did the bench glue-up using the table as a flat surface, but then found a little wobble in the table when I put it on a flat surface. I also realized the tablesaw needed a new blade, but I already wrote about that adventure. I may also upgrade the CNC spindle to a small router. That would make things like mortises a lot faster.

So what is next? I think I have a little less than half of the cord left, probably not enough for another bench, but maybe a few bar/workshop stool tops. I’ll put that in my project queue. I’ll take today and tomorrow to try to build a chisel rack and organize the shop a bit. I already have a list that should keep me busy enough for the next few months:

  1. Build a loft bed for Izzy. This will be bolted together, so should be a pretty quick project. But I always say that before I jump into a project, so who knows how hard it will really be. I plan on measuring and designing the bed today or tomorrow and picking up lumber for the project next week.
  2. Build a TV stand/entertainment center (Tv-bänk in Swedish). Our current one is terrible. I want to try veneering, so this will be a bit more complicated to finish. But I’ll make it from plywood, so that should help speed things along.
  3. Coffee table. Ours is functional, but we could use a nicer one.

I have a few non-furniture projects to work on as well:

  1. A chicken coop for the preschool Susanna works at. They are hiring me to do small projects around several of the schools, so this will be done as a pretty high priority once I get the go ahead on the project. Need to pay for the workshop!
  2. A decorative (and movable) fence for our patio so we can hang out there with Hoagie.
  3. Build a new outhouse by the lake cabin.

And then there are workshop projects:

  1. Storage rack for my chisels (they are all just sitting in the tool tray on my workbench for now)
  2. New finishing table/cabinet
  3. Finish the drawers under the laser engraver
  4. Bar stool/bench
The completed bench

Putting on the Warp

I’m in the homestretch with my bench build. I put finish on the legs over the weekend and started weaving the top this morning. This is my first time weaving, so it is a bit slow going, and I think the warp is the easy part of the weave. The next step (the weft) is the real challenge to make the top look good.

I had about half of the warp put on when I had to leave the shop to head home and meet Izzy after school. Hopefully I’ll have it finished by the weekend.

Installing the Danish cord warp.
Progress on the bench build!