Project:Tree Trunk Tealights: Difference between revisions
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File:birch tealights 07.JPG|another week of drying on my [[CoMaking Benches|CoMaking bench]] with better spacing | File:birch tealights 07.JPG|another week of drying on my [[CoMaking Benches|CoMaking bench]] with better spacing | ||
File:birch tealights 08.JPG|there was still some new mold after all this, but it was easily sanded off by hand | File:birch tealights 08.JPG|there was still some new mold after all this, but it was easily sanded off by hand | ||
File:birch tealights 09.JPG|finally, the logs were ready for drilling with a large [[Forstner Bit|Forstner bit]] | |||
File:birch tealights 10.JPG|more drilling...good to have a [[Drill Press|drill press]] available! | |||
File:birch tealights 11.JPG|after shaping, the ends were finished with [[Coconut Oil|coconut oil]] | |||
File:birch tealights 12.JPG|make sure to insert the steel cups soon afterwards, the wood (and the hole!) will shrink as it keeps drying | |||
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[[Category:Quick Projects]] | [[Category:Quick Projects]] | ||
[[Category:Woodworking]] | [[Category:Woodworking]] |
Revision as of 23:23, 2 March 2019
ProjectInfoBox Tealight Holders out of Birch Logs | |
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Status: | about 40 made, now documenting |
Release Date: | spring 2018 |
Initiator: | Lukas |
Team: | Gesa |
Materials Used: | birch logs, coconut oil, steel tealight cups, tealights |
Tools Used: | chop saw (and crosscut saw where too thick), drill press & Forstner bit, eccentric sander, sandpaper |
documentation unfinished, ignore this page for now ;-)
I made a bunch of tealight holders out of birch trunks as a wedding decoration and will now work on turning this project into a woodworking seminar for beginners.
Materials
Birch Logs
- from Bauhaus, very wet!
- better cut & dry in advance next time??
- risk of mold forming at the cut faces...
Tealights
- steel holders from <smile link>
- "eco" tealights without aluminum cases <smile link>
Making
Need to test whether this can be sped up - drilling into the wet wood was very difficult! Lots of unforeseen mold problems..
- cut with chop saw - log often too thick for the small Herkules saw...switch to bandsaw next time?
- sand cut faces with eccentric sander
- let dry - continue & seal ends immediately next time?
- drill with <specific> Forstner bit
- let dry/seal again so the bottom of the hole is protected
- insert steel holder before the log shrinks too much!
cutting approx. 8-10 cm long pieces with the chop saw
the logs were often too thick for our (then) available power saws and needed to be finished off by hand with a crosscut saw
after superficial heating, we applied hard wax oil in an attempt to protect the wood
another week of drying on my CoMaking bench with better spacing
finally, the logs were ready for drilling with a large Forstner bit
more drilling...good to have a drill press available!
after shaping, the ends were finished with coconut oil