The rain is really coming down now, I am surprised we still have power. It blacked out for less than ten seconds not long ago which made me decide not to go back to the shop and glue up the door I just built. This type of weather limits my projects to shop projects only. That's a good thing unless there aren't any projects lined up ready to start.
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| Indoor paint stripping project. |
On the drawing board are three doors waiting for wood. It is not easy to come by quality old growth redwood these days. Two doors are a pair of French doors with glass panels that will be removed from the existing doors that are being replaced. The third is an entry door similar to the Hawkins Bar entry doors with two wood panels and three lights.
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| Rough Doug Fir Door Joinery |
In the shop I have been building a door with salvaged old growth Doug fir two by eights. (The smell of this wood has a cinnamon aroma, it reminds me of the island I built for the Arc with salvaged flooring and copper back in the late 90's.) Everything was going real smooth until I assembled it after fitting all the joinery and discovered the width was an inch and an eighth too narrow. Luckily I was building this door to fit salvaged panes of tempered glass and there were 34 inch wide and 28 inch wide pieces. I was building to fit a 34 inch wide piece which would put the door at about 44 inches wide. My patron decided to use the 28 inch wide glass instead so I only had to trim the rails and recut the tenons on one side. Now it is ready for glue up and the door will end up about 38 inches wide.
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| MVCC Windows |
Another project on the To Do List is a window restoration for the Mattole Valley Community Center. There is a lot to do in order to bring these back to their potential but to start with I have been approved to start with the most urgent of the problems. Things like replacing sash cords that are about to break, broken glass, and reglazing sashes that are leaking the worst.
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| Wood stove restoration. |
I had success installing a stove pipe in the Gothic farmhouse, the stove draws well and the roof doesn't leak. Moving the wood stove around turned out to be quite simple. Once the stove was on a piece of plywood galvanized pipes were placed under the plywood and the stove was easily rolled from the shop, into a truck and to the house. We moved a huge hutch using the same method.




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