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Kelly's Mouse Skeleton

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  Kelly over at Kelly's Thoughts and Ramblings asked to see the previously mentioned mouse skeleton paperweight that I helped my oldest daughter create. My youngest daughter, the creative one, needed some gift ideas for Christmas and so a couple years ago I bought her an assortment of silicone molds and some deep pour epoxy thinking she might make some creative things out of them and she did for awhile. But she got tired of that form of art and moved onto other things. Sometime after, my eldest (medically inclined) daughter found this mouse skeleton and was fascinated with it. It crossed my mind to preserve it using the deep pour epoxy and so together we created this paperweight. I poured a thin layer of epoxy into the bottom of the mold and let it partially set up. My eldest daughter then cleaned up the skeleton a bit to remove any stray bits of flesh that were still there. I don't recall there being much of that left. She then placed the cleaned skeleton on the partially set...

Nothing Spent But Time

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In short order, I was able to make some holders for all the various bits and in the end, I didn't weed out a single one. I figured since I have the room in an organized manner, I'll keep them for just in case. Ninety percent of all routing I do use the handful of bits in the lower right tray and the other 10% are out of the lower left tray. The yellow ones on both sides are rarely used anymore as I out grew them years ago  but the price was right at the time. With the trays in, I scrounged around through my scrap bin and found several small cut offs of oak that must have been from the altar project and I had forgotten about them. I thought they would make passable doors so I spent a morning doing the joinery and gluing them up into passable doors. I also looked through my cabinets and found some hardware from our old kitchen which I will repurpose the hinges and handles for this case. I think I still have some cutoffs of plexiglass from when I made my own windows for the greenh...

Bits and More Bits

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  My last post left you at the above picture of a lot of router bits and a pile of scrap wood. The mornings were a bit brisk this past week forcing me to put on a jacket and wait until late morning to get any gluing done but there is still time to do something productive out in the garage so I started in. Most of the scraps were cut from undesirable sections of the lumber, most containing large defects. Back in the day, these would have been thrown into a burn pile and torched but in modern times, things like epoxy render even these boards salvagable. So I taped up the back sides of the defects, mixed up a batch of deep pour epoxy, tinted it black and poured it into the defects. The epoxy was left over from a project my oldest had done years ago after finding a skeletonized mouse in in the garage. We suspended the skeleton into a silicone cube mold and poured epoxy around it to turn it into an interesting paper weight which she still keeps on her desk. Anyway, I had leftover epoxy ...

Finished

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  Above is my reconfigured wall with my bandsaw and drill press swapping places with my hand tool cabinet. This allows me to move my drill press out of the way and have easy access to the attic should I need to do so with no contortion necessary. At some point in the future, I would like to replace that folding workbench with perhaps a flip down wooden one and clean up the mess of tools underneath it so I can store my rolling chair there but that won't be this year. With my rolling tools out of the way, you can see my replacement for the peg board which was a simple sheet of plywood. All the tools could be organized in a much denser pattern and all the tool holders which I fastened from scraps of wood are screwed to the plywood so they will no longer fall out. I hung up tools mostly related to home construction or repairs that I rarely use and don't care if they get dirty or exposed to the elements. By moving all my batteries to hanging up near the charger, I freed up a drawer ...

Compromise

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  When I last left off talking about this project, I noticed that it was blocking a good chunk of my attic access above it. Due to the perspective of the camera, it doesn't look like it but the cabinet depth is 28 inches and the attic opening is maybe around 36 inches and it maybe 18 inches above the cabinet. The geometry adds up to a really tight squeeze despite how it looks in this picture. I did test out the strength of the cabinet and it did hold my body weight meaning it could be used as a step in accessing the attic but it just wasn't convenient.  To move it, the ideal solution, would require shuffling all my tools around. Not shown but underneath the cabinet in the above picture is a small table that is a catch all for things. It is quite handy since it is right next to the door entering into our house, but it also means that it is usually cluttered with lots of things since it is so close to the door entering our house. One of those proverbial double edges swords. So t...