Welcome to Woodworks Made Easy

Practice any art, however well or badly, not to get money and fame, but to find out what's inside you.
--- Kurt Vonnegut

Pictures are meant to be self explanatory, and for visual clarity you may
click on each photo to enlarge. For older projects see Blog Archive. I don't specialize on a particular genre so there is quite a variety of projects for a number of different interests.

Even if you are not a woodworker but you like some or all of the projects, have your local crafts person make them for you from the ideas and photos you see here. For a particular project just click the specific title on the Blog Archive list (right side column below).

For anyone willing to learn or begin to do woodworking for the first time, please read first from the Blog Archive, "How and Where to Begin a Woodworking Hobby.

And it is not for men only. Read my note on "Women in Woodworking" from Blog Archive, April 2010.


click on each photo to enlarge


Friday, June 28, 2024

Storage & Dispenser for Household Batteries

Household batteries - ubiquitous items of modern life. They're unseen inside our flashlights, TV remote, even can openers, and children's toys, of course, etc. until the moment we just run out of fresh ones and  we'd panic, or we get frustrated. The spare ones are in  cabinet drawers in the kitchen or desk, or so we thought; and we can't find any. We buy them in bulk, this is how we get them from the store (below). 


For those of us who want a little organization, there are a number of commercially available storage cases that are affordable. 

Or, we can make one.  I mean, I made one. However, it turned out to have involved a lot more time than I initially allotted. Put simply, it wasn't a simple project,  for its small size I might add. 

The process is shown in a series of photos below; self explanatory for my woodworker-readers and enthusiasts out there. I challenged myself with two main goals:
1. The storage must be visible at all times but it must have a small footprint  on a desk, credenza  or kitchen counter 
2. Refilling it should be easy and simple and, more importantly, dispensing the batteries must be easier still. I'm sure the reader can see and figure out how from the photos.





 

As much as possible I used hand tools when I could, even though power tools would have been quicker.  But there is no equivalent to the swishing sound of wood being shaved and shaped with a sharp hand tool with no dusts churning about.










1/4 inch clear poly-carbonate or Plexiglas makes a seemingly invisible barrier but an effective display.


Except for when attaching it to the base, no hardware was used but wood and CA glue














Saturday, June 1, 2024

Another Essay on Scrap Wood

For do-it-yourself (DIY) enthusiasts in ordinary households, there is very little we can do with plastics, empty bottles, copper and iron scraps other than to throw them into the recycle bins.  And  we should recycle them indeed. There is one exception from all of the materials we believe should be recycled that is getting little public support or attention.  Wood has no place in the recycle bin. And yes, getting rid of scrap wood is to throw them away as trash.  Even more tragic is very little is done with salvaged wood from homes destroyed in disaster areas from tornado or hurricane.  A lot of it is hauled away to landfill where they rot or are burned.

I have a special affinity to scrap wood because they served me well when I was learning to do woodworking as a hobby. Initially they were my test pieces in learning to use the first tools I acquired. Along with that practice I often bought used tools too. I have taken a long journey with the hobby I have come to love.  When my earlier projects needed to be set aside to be replaced as my skills progressed to a little higher level, I would dismantle the old ones into scrap material which I would later reuse or re-purpose into better looking projects.

However, I do not go seeking for scrap wood because I believe in finding them serendipitously. There is something about finding them by chance that adds to the allure. Like the pallet in front of the store when I saw it waiting to be hauled away.  I asked the store manager as I was leaving if I can have it.  He helped me load it into the back of my truck. 

Below are part of a few drawers I found at the curve in our neighborhood, waiting to be hauled away.  I knew the quality of the wood when I saw it. I dismantled the drawers into flat pieces.  I've used some for other projects already.



I glued two pieces with a central piece of a different species of wood. When the glue dried I cut the piece in half, like so on the next photo.


I created a cross diagonal contrast by flipping one side and glued the pieces again.


Many years ago a friend gave me some cutoffs of pieces of walnut and oak from a renovation project done at his kitchen. As cutoffs are short pieces I did a couple of small lazy Susan pieces (ball bearing hardware underneath) shown below which served as inspiration for this project,


I proved once again that a circle is really a polygon with infinite number of sides by cutting it on the table saw.  I did not have to make an infinite number of cuts to turn a square into a circle but indeed a circle I made.

 I made another circle for the base and shaped the edges on the router table

Cut a circle at the center.




I think giving a new life to what would have been thrown away scrap pieces was like saving the soul of the wood, to be over melodramatic about it. But it was worth a few hours at the woodshop.