Until now, I’ve never seen anything with epoxy that I found visually impressive. And you went all the way to stunning!
jadero
Just a Southern Saskatchewan retiree looking for a place to keep up with stuff.
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Looks like it still has rubber tires, so probably just fine.
jadero@lemmy.cato Woodworking@lemmy.ca•Festool domino: My biggest pet peeve with Youtube videos3·2 years agoAnd if you tape it into the corner of your combination square:
- the rule part of the square keeps the reference faces aligned vertically
- the nail can’t tip toward one board, causing vertical misalignment
- consistent centering (or off-centering, if that’s what you want)
- I find it’s easier to position the rule on my layout markings than to position a handheld nail. There is a slight offset, of course, but if that’s a consideration, do your layout to compensate.
- I find it’s quicker, too.
If you are doing floating tenons, just mark the ends. If your tenons need to be vertical with respect to your reference face, use a long nail or screw, mark the tops, adjust the height, mark the bottoms.
If you can tolerate more offset or are willing to always layout to compensate, drive a woodscrew vertically in a long narrow block with only 2 square faces. Adjust the screw depth as appropriate. The block gives you something to hang onto without taping anything.
And now I bet you’re envisioning the construction of your own dedicated jigs made from scraps and wood or drywall screws.
Thanks for the book recommendation!
It’s fairly expensive, but it turns out that there are several copies of both first and second edition available through my local library.
They’re called “dessert forks” in the same way that some people call the small spoons “dessert spoons”.