What are you building with your milled wood? merged

Arborist Forum

Help Support Arborist Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
rarefish383

rarefish383

Addicted to ArboristSite
. AS Supporting Member.
Joined
Nov 2, 2009
Messages
9,646
Location
MD
Finally got the pics of my friends mantles in their timber framed home. I was having a bit of trouble seeing in my minds eye, how two mantles so narrow would work. So, here's the pic of the mantles as I milled and surfaced them, and two pics of the finished project. On my phone you couldn't really see the wood. So, this is the first time I've seen them on a bigger screen.
lIXr2Xh.jpg

JwwM72p.jpg

dHI87FN.jpg


One reason the top piece looks so dark is it's head on into the bark. They wanted to leave the bark on, and used an epoxy finish. Hope it lasts a long time.
 
Marine5068

Marine5068

Addicted to ArboristSite
. AS Supporting Member.
Joined
Nov 20, 2009
Messages
2,308
Location
Madoc, Ontario, Canada
Finally got the pics of my friends mantles in their timber framed home. I was having a bit of trouble seeing in my minds eye, how two mantles so narrow would work. So, here's the pic of the mantles as I milled and surfaced them, and two pics of the finished project. On my phone you couldn't really see the wood. So, this is the first time I've seen them on a bigger screen.
lIXr2Xh.jpg

JwwM72p.jpg

dHI87FN.jpg


One reason the top piece looks so dark is it's head on into the bark. They wanted to leave the bark on, and used an epoxy finish. Hope it lasts a long time.
Nice. Looks like Red Oak?
 

BobL

No longer addicted to AS
. AS Supporting Member.
Joined
Feb 25, 2007
Messages
8,003
Location
Perth, Australia
The local young fella who runs a micro street-side cafe bought some slabs I milled couple of years ago and made 2 tables and two stand up benches as his only cafe tables. Recently he and his business partner also bought a small roastery and came to see me to buy more slabs. This is one they made into what is called a cupping table - the term cupping refers to "coffee cupping" a minimal interference method of brewing the roasted coffee not long after it comes out of the roaster. Usually the roasters plus the hangers on all get to try the cupping. They did both the wood and metal work.
Toby's-tablep.jpg
 
Marine5068

Marine5068

Addicted to ArboristSite
. AS Supporting Member.
Joined
Nov 20, 2009
Messages
2,308
Location
Madoc, Ontario, Canada
The local young fella who runs a micro street-side cafe bought some slabs I milled couple of years ago and made 2 tables and two stand up benches as his only cafe tables. Recently he and his business partner also bought a small roastery and came to see me to buy more slabs. This is one they made into what is called a cupping table - the term cupping refers to "coffee cupping" a minimal interference method of brewing the roasted coffee not long after it comes out of the roaster. Usually the roasters plus the hangers on all get to try the cupping. They did both the wood and metal work.
View attachment 662603
What kind of wood is it Bob?
 
MGoodwin

MGoodwin

ArboristSite Member
Joined
Jan 4, 2010
Messages
50
Location
Bellingham, WA
Posted about my boat a few months ago. After working on and off its finally complete. The boat is birch with ponderosa pine oars. The oars are pretty down and dirty, wasnt sure how I wanted them so I plan to make a new set. I did three coats of epoxy and three coats of spar varnish for UV. All in all it turned out great, wish I had spent more time on the epoxy as a closer inspection of finish isn't what it could have been. Not a big deal as its a work/play boat.
upload_2018-8-28_13-24-56.png
 

Latest posts

Top