After the endless slog that was the laundry room cabinets, I decided I could really use a simpler little quickie of a project before diving headlong into the next major build. As it happened, we just got a couple new knives, thanks to a promotional thing at the local grocery stores and we were running out of places to store them.
We already had a knife block, one of those ones designed to be universal, and it had worked really well for us for a long time. Unfortunately, the little plastic strands that make up the bulk of the block had all become frayed and bent, making it not only difficult to push the knives into the block, but also reducing the number of knives we could store in it. It was also somewhat top-heavy and prove to tipping over - especially given that our new knives were a little on the heavy side.
The War Department though that it might be nice to make one that went in a drawer, and hopefully reclaim some counter space. So after looking around online, I decided on an overall design and headed into the shop.
Of course, this was also the perfect excuse to use my new toy - our Christmas present to ourselves this year:
Ooooh, baby!
A while back, a friend of ours had given us an old desk that she didn't want anymore. I brought it home and cannibalized it for the wood, which turned to be - I THINK - cherry. After picking over the pieces, I settled on a couple of boards that I think were pull-out writing surfaces. Along with a couple of scrap pieces of cherry left over from my tool box project, I planed them down and cut them to rough size.
Then I made a template out of a thin piece of plywood to make sure I got the right shape, and transcribed it to one of my cherry blanks. After cutting and shaping the piece on the bandsaw and belt sander, I had a template I could use for all the rest. Then I simply traced the outline of the template onto each of the blanks and cut out the rough shape of each one on the bandsaw.
The next step was to use the router to trim each one down the exact same shape. I planned to use dowelling to hold the different parts of the block together, so I drilled a couple of holes in the template where I thought they made the most sense, and then made a little assembly line.
I'd start by attaching the template to a blank using double-sided carpet tape:
Then I'd take them over to the drill press and drill out the dowel holes, using the ones in the template as guides:
Then I'd put in a couple of pegs, just to give them a little more stability, and run them through the flush-trim bit on the router table:
Then I'd take out the dowels, prey them apart, and repeat the whole process with the next blank. It actually worked really, really well - except that my router bit was ridiculously dull, and I wound up getting quite a bit of tear-out and burn marks, especially in the corners and at the top of the curves. I thought there was something wrong with my technique at first, but when I went back to put a little round-over on the edges (with a brand new bit), it was smooth as silk. Fortunately, the belt sander was still set up and I managed to get the worst of the burns and other marks out. Then it was just sanding it all smooth with the random orbital and a little elbow grease.
Somewhere in there, I also managed to make the cuts in the fat ends for the smaller knives.
For finishing, I found some really nice salad bowl wax at Lee Valley, and put on a couple coats of that:
And then it was time for assembly, and that's where the project hit a bit of a snag. See, I had planned to use spacers around the dowels to keep the parts at the right distance from each other, but I could not for the life of me find anything that worked. I could have used rubber washers, but Crappy Tire wanted $3 for two of them and I needed something like 30 of the damn things.
I also wasn't completely sold on the dowels being strong enough to hold the rack together. So I found some more strips of cherry, cut them down to size, and then cut dadoes in the bottom of each piece. That way I could glue the pieces in place, with the right spacing, along with a few screws for the hell of it.
As it turned out, I wound up not being able to put the dowels in after all. Something about some screws being in exactly the wrong place and totally in the way and the damn holes being a little too small anyway.
But hey! It works, and I think it looks pretty snazzy:
Lots of room for expansion, too.
An account of the trials and tribulations involved in renovating a house in Broadmead (a neighbourhood in Victoria, BC.) This blog is a sequel of sorts to ourbasementreno.blogspot.com
Sunday, February 28, 2016
Wednesday, February 10, 2016
State of the 'Vation
State of the 'Vation! Get it? It's like, State of the NATION, but it's VATION, which is short for RENOVATION!
Okay, so it's not, but it totally should be.
Well, here we are, another year, another successfully completed Operation Fat & Happy (mostly the former, but enough of the latter to make up for it), and I thought it was time for a little general update/random assortment of words and almost-words to bring everyone up to date. Especially me, seeing as how the last two weeks or so are a barely-remembered haze of head colds, coffee with eggnog, and lots and lots and lots of really good food - often, but not always, at the same time.
(Note: The preceding paragraph was written just after New Years, and this has been sitting around in draft form since then. I apologize for the delay. Still fat, though.)
Our current project is probably my least-favorite project we've ever done. No, seriously: I hate everything about it. Everything. But it didn't start out that way...
So, we did a little laundry room renovation this past summer, and the room itself turned out great. It started out pretty ratty and outdated, obviously (and full of crap):
We took out all the crappy old trim and cleaned the walls off REALLY well:
The flooring is great stuff - way better than the crap we installed in the sunroom. No stupid adhesive tabs for one thing; it actually locks together like engineered hardwood. Super easy to install, really heavy duty, and easy to clean. Looks pretty snazzy, too.
Once all that was done - and pretty easily, I might add - the real problems started. See, the War Department really wanted some built-in storage to hold the vacuum cleaner (currently stored in a relatively empty corner in whatever room it happened to have last been used) along with a few other bits and pieces. So, she came up with a design/general layout, and left it up to me to figure out the actual mechanics and implementation.
"No problem," I thought. "I got a garage full of tools and I've always wanted to make some built-in units!"
I'm an idiot, but you already knew that, and I'm getting ahead of myself anyway.
The overall design looked something like this (too lazy to figure out how to draw it up in SketchUp, even though it would probably be a good exercise):
That's three separate cabinets with doors (including a big one for the vacuum cleaner), a cubby on the bottom left without for the cat boxes, and a large open space on one side for the little chest freezer. The only common mesaurement was that they would all be 24" deep. The cabinets would go from floor to ceiling, and be attached directly into the studs in the walls.
I planned to make three separate units: one for the top right cabinet, one for the top left, and another that comprised the vacuum cubby and the open space for the cat boxes.
Here's a list of just some of the things that went wrong (in very rough chronological order):
Okay, so it's not, but it totally should be.
Well, here we are, another year, another successfully completed Operation Fat & Happy (mostly the former, but enough of the latter to make up for it), and I thought it was time for a little general update/random assortment of words and almost-words to bring everyone up to date. Especially me, seeing as how the last two weeks or so are a barely-remembered haze of head colds, coffee with eggnog, and lots and lots and lots of really good food - often, but not always, at the same time.
(Note: The preceding paragraph was written just after New Years, and this has been sitting around in draft form since then. I apologize for the delay. Still fat, though.)
Our current project is probably my least-favorite project we've ever done. No, seriously: I hate everything about it. Everything. But it didn't start out that way...
So, we did a little laundry room renovation this past summer, and the room itself turned out great. It started out pretty ratty and outdated, obviously (and full of crap):
We took out all the crappy old trim and cleaned the walls off REALLY well:
Bonus! This Week In Mayonnaise!
I have absolutely no idea what that was about. It was an old drink coaster, stuck to the wall with mayonnaise, covering up a hole in the wall that was filled in with... mayonnaise. I... yeah. Just... no.
Then we painted the whole room a beautiful, warm grey color and put down some pretty stellar vinyl plank flooring, right over the linoleum.
We even cleaned up and repainted the security bars on the window. Not that I think we NEED security bars on the window, but they were already there, and repainting them was easier than trying to fill the enormous holes in the window sashes left by the mounting hardware.
The flooring is great stuff - way better than the crap we installed in the sunroom. No stupid adhesive tabs for one thing; it actually locks together like engineered hardwood. Super easy to install, really heavy duty, and easy to clean. Looks pretty snazzy, too.
Once all that was done - and pretty easily, I might add - the real problems started. See, the War Department really wanted some built-in storage to hold the vacuum cleaner (currently stored in a relatively empty corner in whatever room it happened to have last been used) along with a few other bits and pieces. So, she came up with a design/general layout, and left it up to me to figure out the actual mechanics and implementation.
"No problem," I thought. "I got a garage full of tools and I've always wanted to make some built-in units!"
I'm an idiot, but you already knew that, and I'm getting ahead of myself anyway.
The overall design looked something like this (too lazy to figure out how to draw it up in SketchUp, even though it would probably be a good exercise):
That's three separate cabinets with doors (including a big one for the vacuum cleaner), a cubby on the bottom left without for the cat boxes, and a large open space on one side for the little chest freezer. The only common mesaurement was that they would all be 24" deep. The cabinets would go from floor to ceiling, and be attached directly into the studs in the walls.
I planned to make three separate units: one for the top right cabinet, one for the top left, and another that comprised the vacuum cubby and the open space for the cat boxes.
Here's a list of just some of the things that went wrong (in very rough chronological order):
- After cutting, painting, and assembling the cabinets in the garage, I brought them in to the laundry room to install them and THEN realized that the walls of the laundry room weren't actually square, and my oh-so-carefully built cabinets would have to be heavily shimmed before they could make contact with the walls.
- When I measured, I had measured the distance at the FRONT of the cabinets - the room narrowed into the corners, meaning that I had to recut one of the cabinets (one I fortunately hadn't assembled yet) before it would fit.
- There was exactly ONE useful stud in each of the three walls.
- The cabinets were so heavy and unwieldy that I bashed the hell out of the walls and ceiling trying to jimmy them into place.
- I had glued and nailed the face trim to the front of the first cabinet before realizing that the face trim had to span both cabinet edges - I had to take it off and do a lot of scraping to get the faces flat again.
- I finally had a chance to use my fancy new (to me - I bought it used from the same guy who sold me the saw) Veritas Shelf Pin Drilling Jig to make adjustable shelf pins. The first cabinet went fine, but in my excitement and foolish confidence, I accidentally drilled the holes for the second cabinet in the top and bottom of the unit, rather than the sides. Which meant patching approximately 48 holes and repainting the entire cabinet. Not gonna lie: that really hurt.
- I had to redesign the face frame mid-build because I failed to account for a surface large enough to accept and support decent hinges. Oh, and I had to buy different hinges because the ones I was planning to use looked horrible.
- I had drilled a hole in the side of the litter box cubby hole because the plug was on the opposite side of the center piece from the freezer (of course). Stupid me drilled it too small and I had to cut out a larger one with a hole saw.
- I ordered some poplar from a store to make the doors out of (I had heard it was easy to work with and took paint really well). I went all the way out to the store in Langford the following weekend to pick it up and the guys in the yard in Vancouver had forgotten to actually put it on the truck - and then misplaced it. It didn't show up at the store for another two weeks.
- I had to take the freshly installed, painted, and caulked trim off the door between the laundry room and family room so I could get the top right cabinet in.
- Whilst reinstalling and repainting the trim, Amy noticed that the paint I was using was really shiny, and didn't match the existing paint. That's because I had inadvertently bought "medium base" instead of, you know, paint. I had to repaint the door trim on both doors in the laundry room - AND all of the cabinet trim, cabinet interiors, AND the cabinet doors, just as I thought they were ready to install.
- When I finally finished painting the doors for the second time and went to install them, I realized that the curve in the wall to which I had carefully matched my face trim meant that the door on the top left cubby was overlappping on the top and gapped on the bottom - even with the hinges at maximum opposite adjustments. I had to remove and cut down the doors - and then repaint them to remove the marks left by the table saw.
- At which point Amy and I agreed that the finish on the doors was terrible (mostly due to the foam roller I had been using) and I had to repaint them all for a third time - by hand - to cover it up.
- Oh, and one last little indignity (and one Amy doesn't actually know about yet) I spent a VERY enjoyable evening in the shop making a sweet little jig for installing the handles. It worked like an absolute charm and the door handles are all lined perfectly (which is important because of all the parallel lines involved in the design). They're just a quarter inch too low because I measured the wrong damn thing. But because I double-checked before I drilled, I realized that the jig was wrong before I drilled the first hole. I went ahead and drilled them all anyway because god damn it I had just about had enough.
There's more (of course), but I'm depressed now just remembering all of it and I want to stop writing this.
If I had to do it all over again, I probably would, but oh my god I would do almost EVERYTHING differently. Starting with the design, damn it. Who the hell thought 24" deep cabinets was a good idea? (Besides me, obviously...)
But, they ARE done - mostly empty still , but done:
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