Showing posts with label For the Kitchen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label For the Kitchen. Show all posts

31 Jan 2009

"et Voilà" Trivet













Click on the picture below to save the free pattern to your computer!



20 Nov 2008

Fretwork Scroll Sawn Shelf for My Better Half (2) ('2' is for the shelf of course...)

Hi,
More shelves for empty walls...





















• Plywood
• One thick coat of marble powder thickened acrylic paint, applied with a hard paintbrush to give it a rough texture.
• Finally mahogany-tinted synthetic varnish.
• Glue and nails.










Click to save the shelf's fretwork free pattern to your computer!

17 Oct 2008

Fretwork Scroll Sawn Shelf for My Better Half

Hi,
Used Plywood for the fretwork corners, and an old TV set HDF panel for the top.
Glue and nails for mounting.
The Fretwork Pattern is available at : http://www.fretworks.com.au/catalogues.htm

2 Oct 2008

Olive Leaf and Fruit Bottle Pattern

Here's the pattern for a simple scrolling project.
I used an old Table Tennis Bat.
You can see the Final Work here.

30 Sept 2008

Left Handed Cooking Spoon for my Left Handed Brother

A man spoke with the Lord about heaven and hell.

The Lord said to the man, "Come, I will show you hell."

They entered a room where a group of people sat around a huge pot of stew. Everyone was famished, desperate and starving. Each held a spoon that reached the pot, but each spoon had a handle so much longer than their own arm that it could not be used to get the stew into their own mouths. The suffering was terrible.

"Come, now I will show you heaven," the Lord said after a while.

They entered another room, identical to the first -- the pot of stew, the group of people, the same long-handled spoons. But there everyone was happy and well-nourished. "I don't understand," said the man. "Why are they happy here when they were miserable in the other room and everything was the same?"

The Lord smiled, "Ah, it is simple," he said.

"Here they have learned to feed each other."

Scroll Saw and Grinder Work on Beech Wood.
I think he'll like it.

14 Aug 2008

Why one should never underestimate the value of an old table tennis racket...

This represents a bottle. I used an Olive leafs and fruit pattern.
The title says it all. I found the old table tennis racket in my brother's garden.
The dark background is made out of plywood.























This project was offered as a gift to DWA in Portsmouth - UK
Thanks for K.A. from Tadjenanet - DZ for providing the racket!