Saturday, 21 January 2012

My love of Danish oil


Danish oil is my preferred finish to all my work. This is because the transformation it brings to a piece.

The images below shows what amazing features that danish oil can bring out in the oak. This waney edged coffee table top had many features to show off even before the oil was applied to it, but coupled with the oil the results were outstanding.





With the oil rubbed in with a microfibre cloth, just one coat (there will be 5 in total) transformed the piece with patterns, colours and lines that were unseen until the oil was applied. The golden colour which the oil has also gives off a warm feeling from the furniture once it is completed.




 
The results of Danish oil still amaze me. I love it and it is a bonus that it is also so easy to use.

Thursday, 19 January 2012

New custom coffee table.

I have been asked to make a coffee table for a colleauge. He picked out and supplied an oak beam to use for legs and rails and a lovely waney oak board with a large knot in it which will be an amazing feature to this table.



The oak beam provided to me needed to be cut up to use for the legs and the rails. I used a table saw to machine to beam down into 4 chunks at 75mm x 75mm. I planed two faces flat and square with each other and used these edges with the table saw to cut the other sides of the timber square. I then check everything using a tri square and everything was spot on. The legs were 68mm x 68mm finished size before cutting the design into them. I used the remainder of the oak beam to cut out the rails.



I worked with my colleauge to design the table to his liking. He was certain on the design of the leg as it was his own. Plain rails was what he wanted so no detail on those. I set out marking the mortice and tenons which is the fixing method I am using for the rails to the tops of the legs.




After a lot of mallet and chisel work the mortices were chopped out and the tenons fit nice, tightly and all square. I placed the table top on the constructed legs and rails to give an idea of what the coffee table will look like when it is finished. The height was perfect and my colleauge is over the moon with it. I have some sanding left to do, glue the rails and legs together, 4 x buttons to make to fix the top to the rails and a generous 5 coats of danish oil which will bring out the beautiful lines and markings of this piece. There are many, many medullary rays in this table. Finished images are soon to follow!






 




Tuesday, 17 January 2012

Oak beam bed frame finished!



 Following up from a post on the 29th December 2011 I am pleased to say that my oak beam bed frame is now completed! I have a few pictures to share of the build and a brief run through of what to picture are.






The 3 pictures you see above are what the oak was like before I began working on it. 150x150 beams and a 35mm thick waney edged board I found and used for a head board. In the last image one of the oak beams releaved some amazing medullary rays (silver grain) once it was sanded down.





The timber rails joining the foot frame of the bed to the head board frame were Ash in stead of Oak. I went for a change when I saw this was available to me and the grain patterns were unreal! I was glad I used this once I saw it. The foot end of the bed was sat on top of 300mm legs which were fixed using mortice and tenons. These were fitted tightly in place and an oak peg was used to hold the joint together.

The last image is to show the design of the bed and to test fit the joints which are mortice and tenons.






The head board joining was hand cut using a tounge and groove fixing method. Once the pegs were driven into the frame joints it pulled the frame tight together sandwiching the head board tightly in between the upright posts to make up the head board frame as seen in the second image of these three.

The last image is the bed frame joint work completed and fitted together. No pegs have been driven in yet so the frame can be taken apart to easy moving. The jobs left to do was to groove out the Ash rails to take for the mattress and pine bed slats. I used pine for a bit of give and flex for under the mattress.

I used 12 slats in total. Each one was 25mm x 100mm spanning the width of the bed frame. This easily supports the mattress with no sagging what so ever.

I gave the whole bed frame a danish oil finish to protect it and to bring out the beauty of the oak and ash.

Sleeping in the bed after getting it home was fantastic. It is as I wanted it to be. A solid, sturdy bed that looks different to anything else. The large beams dwarf everything else in the bedroom and makes a real presence in the room. No movement, no creaking from loose joints and no sleeping in a bog standard bed. Perfect!

From the 6 year dried oak beams to the finished bed frame was all hand made. All joints were worked out and cut by hand. The mortices were cut using a drill and chisels then everything knocked together using a rubber mallet. A belt sander and a drill were the only power tools I used for this whole build. Creating and making something by hand is extreamly rewarding. So happy with this!

Thursday, 5 January 2012

Blogging app for my phone.

I have just found and downloaded a blog app on the android market to see if I can post while working on my projects. Hopefully so I can post to everyone so they can see what I have to do at certain stages of my builds. I hope I can use this app to post regularly!

Thursday, 29 December 2011

Oak beam bed frame

Me and my partner have recently purchased a new matteress and were looking at bed frames but the cost of a nice, decent bed frame nearly made me fall over. I knew I could make myself one that would be bigger, better and constructed to a much higher standard all for cheaper than a half decent frame to buy in the shops. All it would take was the cost of the timber and my time.

I designed an extravagant frame using 150x150 oak building framing timbers and I managed to get timbers, air dried for 6 years at the sizes I needed kindly given to me. I also got some 150x75 Ash which I decided to use for the rails instead of oak. So I have not paid out anything for this bed frame.

Setting out on sanding all the edges down revealed some amazing character including cat paw knots and masses of medullary rays. Working out for all the joints was a task in itself due to the timbers being curved slightly as well as twisted.

I am cutting the mortices and the tenons by hand along with all the timber lengths. The only machinery used will be a belt sander and a drill.

I am at around the 40% complete stage at this moment in time.

This is my main project so updates will be regular and images will follow shortly.

Wednesday, 30 November 2011

Media unit.

I have been slowly but surely making myself a media unit to house all my DVDs and games. While at the same time have areas made to a specific size to fit in DVD players, consoles and a freeview TV box.I have to many DVDs that are just stacking up at the moment and all due to lack of places to put them, hence the reason to make this!

I designed this with maximum room to store everything I needed in a smaller space taking piece. While being nice and different at the same time. The main thing I wanted to try with this was to include oak in its 3 forms. Green, Air dried and Kiln dried. This is to show off the beauty and unique properties this wood offers in all stages of the drying process. I want the green oak to dry quickly resulting in splits and cracks right up against kiln dried oak that wont have these issues. I hope every piece of green oak I use moves and splits. I want this to happen!

A very exciting piece I am creating for myself here. Hopefully I can get it finished and started on my mums Christmas present.

Busy busy!

Monday, 28 November 2011

Starting to bring things up together.

Over the last few months I have been trying to create my own basic logo and branding, so I can start building a visual name for my business to get the ball rolling.

As at this moment in time I am in full time employment which doesn't leave me much time in the day to work on my projects as well as use the internet to get traffic to my pages. I try cram as much into the day as I can. I am in the process of making and finishing four projects and I try to work on two of them each day. Maybe concentrating on one at a time will help get them finished and in my etsy shop.

Finishing more pieces will fill my shop that I can start getting potential customers to visit and see my work! Promoting my full shop rather than individual products will be easier I hope.

I think this blog needs a facelift as well and more people coming to it as I don't promote this as much as I should.

So the ball is starting to roll ... slowly. But this is just the start!