Project:Tree Trunk Tealights: Difference between revisions

From CoMakingSpace Wiki

(started gallery)
(→‎Making: more gallery)
Line 43: Line 43:
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
</gallery>
</gallery>


[[Category:Quick Projects]]
[[Category:Quick Projects]]
[[Category:Woodworking]]
[[Category:Woodworking]]

Revision as of 00:23, 3 March 2019

ProjectInfoBox

Tealight Holders out of Birch Logs

Project-default.png
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!