While looking through the projects in the book Advanced Projects in Woodwork ©1912 by Ira S. Griffith I decided to make this project:
So, being a computer nerd more than a woodworker, I made a model of the project in Trimble Sketchup to understand the project and be sure all the parts fit together correctly. Here’s an image of the model:
Once I had the model completed I started making construction drawings in Trimble Layout; it’s included with my copy of Sketchup:
Problem is, the construction drawings freaked me out a little bit. Blind dado joints used in conjunction with through, keyed tenons! Wow! I needed a way to make precision cuts without a CNC machine. I need a jig! Trouble is, it also requires a lot of precision to make jigs. So, summoning my computer nerdery, I headed to Ponoko and downloaded their Adobe Illustrator templates.
In Sketchup I exported the pieces I needed jigs for into .eps files so I could use them in Illustrator and upload them to Ponoko to have laser cut jigs made:
So, I used Ponoko to manufacture my jigs and I sourced the Quarter Sawn White Oak from Clark’s Hardwood in The Heights (Houston). Now, all I have to do is actually manufacture the piece. If this works, I should be able to reproduce the piece consistently from now forward.
If someone sees the piece and wants me to make one for them, I’ll be able to produce them again and again.
I’m getting really frustrated with the TV show Revolution. I understand it’s fiction but it doesn’t even have logic on its side. Everything is from the feminine point of view. Good guys never use guns or force, bad guys do. Good guys win because they are good and sensitive.
The protagonist is repeatedly captured, beaten—she loses more often than she wins and needs to be rescued in every episode. It just doesn’t work. The successes aren’t even believable.
The only thing interesting in the story that keeps me watching is the mysterious necklaces that absorb or block electrical power. I will stop watching if that part of the store faulters or gets weak. We’ll see.
At least it’s on Netflix and I don’t have to pay extra to see it.