Tuesday, October 27, 2020
Is your laptop vertical?
Furniture of necessity
My back has been hurting from all the sitting I do (I am a computer geek!) I'm finding that standing doesn't hurt and it gets better until I sit.
So, someone suggested I get a standing desk. I have some 2x4s...
The monitors should be about 20" higher. The keyboard should be about 12" higher. I have 2 monitors and a laptop taking up around 48".
I had some 2x4 that I previously cut in 1/2 and drilled holes in. They're ~ 24" long. I have a 2x8 that's longer than 55".
I didn't take pictures of the process. Last night I trimmed the 2x8 to be square. I traced the end of my 2x4s (2x2s?) onto it. Then I cut square holes into the 2x8 for them. With bolts through the holes, I now have a platform to put my monitors on. I can raise or lower it.
Wednesday, October 14, 2020
1st thing from the log
The 1st goal is a coffee table. But 1st, what did I want it to look like?
I wanted to replace the stack of books under my monitors, so I made mini coffee tables.
Saturday, October 10, 2020
Woodworking: Wood from a tree (green!)
This is recalling a project I started 2 years ago.
I was given 2 8' Red Oak logs by my father-in-law. I'd been interest in starting something from a tree instead of getting milled lumber.
Woodworking: tool tote
When there is something to do around the house i usually need a drill, lbits, evel, screws, stud finder and pencil. Some I want screwdrivers, sockets, wrenches, a ruler.
I was using a fabric bag that came with my drill. It barely fit the drill and all the other items would gather in the bottom and mix. Changing the contents for different jobs (plumbing, appliance fixing vs hanging things) meant emptying everything out & restarting.
I decided to make a wooden tool tote with an opening in the end for the drill to stick out.
The shell is spruce or the other pine, glued to make wider.
The ends are rabbeted as you can see. There is also a dado the bottom fits in.
The sides are grooved and the bottom slides into it. then the sides are nailed to the ends. Simple.
The handle is made from a white pine branch that fell in my backyard a few years ago. It dried out and the bark fell off. A peg holds it in and can be removed if it ever breaks and I need to replace it.
Inside I have 2 boxes. They are dovetailed and made from pallet wood also. The bottom is rabbetted and fits into a groove in the sides. One is walnut, the other (shown) is southern yellow pine.
When they're both on the bottom, the drill can't slide back.
So far it's worked really well. I can add tools easily. Swapping out tools is easy too.
The boxes let me arrange things when I'm working on the floor or lawn or wherever I work. I might make more. If I don't have things sticking up, I can stack them which is very handy.
Starting up again
I guess i stopped blogging about the garden. I have kept gardening, modifying my approach. I stopped with the plastic. I've too labor intensive. I switched to lots of straw (not hay). It only takes an hour with a 3 tine hay fork to get it all off the garden to rototill.
I still get squash bugs and I still haven't gone a year without planting squash.
We put an addition on the house and lost 1/2 our garden too.