I like to dabble in woodworking. Made these tables for a friend and his wife before Thanksgiving. Ambrosia maple, walnut, and wenge.
Your definition of dabble is different then mine.
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I like to dabble in woodworking. Made these tables for a friend and his wife before Thanksgiving. Ambrosia maple, walnut, and wenge.
Lol! That was the first table i ever built.Your definition of dabble is different then mine.
That is a fantastic machine. If this is your first SS, make sure to memorize the list of things you SHOULDN'T cut. I went through 3 cartridges on my saw stop job site saw in two years. Kept forgetting not to cut PT lumber on it. Eventually I wrote on the table in sharpie No PT!
Beautiful piece.I like to dabble in woodworking. Made these tables for a friend and his wife before Thanksgiving. Ambrosia maple, walnut, and wenge.
I hope you have a drum sander.Butterfly
I try to use walnut for the dark whenever I can. Great wood to work with.Beautiful piece.
I absolutely love the look of wenge but can't use it any more. Dust off the saw KILLS my lungs not to mention that's got to be the most angry splintery wood in existence.
I quoted someone $450 a square foot to make the butterfly tiles for a floor like that and they almost had a heart attack. But it is absolutely too much work unless your really setup for that.@Staghorn Loving the optical illusions. Now I want my floor to look like that...
Agreed. I'm lucky enough to have access to cut and mill trees to lumber. Walnut in Southern California is still hanging around $15 per bord foot. I've got a few hundred feet in 2" slabs dry stacked.I try to use walnut for the dark whenever I can. Great wood to work with.
I'm sure with a few qualified brains around, and a few hours you could make the appropriate jigs in order to make a floor like that feasible. I would still charge insane time on it though because I wouldn't want to do it.I quoted someone $450 a square foot to make the butterfly tiles for a floor like that and they almost had a heart attack. But it is absolutely too much work unless your really setup for that.
That is good to know about PT lumber. Not that I am planning on cutting any time soon.That is a fantastic machine. If this is your first SS, make sure to memorize the list of things you SHOULDN'T cut. I went through 3 cartridges on my saw stop job site saw in two years. Kept forgetting not to cut PT lumber on it. Eventually I wrote on the table in sharpie No PT!