I've been guilty of getting my kids into situations (bicycling) that are slightly above their capabilities and if they manage, they're usually willing to acknowledge the struggle, and feel proud and encouraged, looking for more next time...
I've also gone past that point a time or two, but fortunately they're resiliant and bounce back pretty well. The last line is a pretty good indication that you didn't go too far.
You've identified one of the greatest achievements a parent can have - give a child an experience that causes true joy.
Sorry to be absent lately. I've had a bunch of work and no time for any projects or even catching up. It's looking like I'll have a break here with Spring Break coming up.
Also, in an attempt to fight off the depression of lockdown, I've started making an effort to work out again regularly and a few weeks back Nadia asked to go on walks with me every day in the morning. She's discovered the wonder of getting up before dawn and how much free time there is then so every day she wakes herself up a 6am. After a week of walks I asked if she wanted to try running and she did.
So for the past few weeks Nadia and I spend 30 - 60 minutes either walking or running. No pace, no plan - we just walk out the house and pick a direction. If we see a new road we explore it, a path, we'll take it. It's quite random and I think a pretty great thing to share as she becomes a tween.
I like Scott Brown and I think you guys are totally right about the videos - I need a good accent. I'll start thinking about what ones might work best but you guys clearly like the down under accents. I really love an Indian accent so maybe I'll try that.
So, yup, no way that could go wrong!
So while busy I did take a bit of time to fix an Ikea book shelf that broke. I know, I can hear you saying it now, "But how? How in the world could anything you ever bought at Ikea fail?" I want you to know I share your astonishment. Isn't pressed sawdust and glue one of the strongest things known to man?
To be fair I let the kids rearrange their room and they moved the bookcase while it was filled - by pushing it across the floor. So Ikea + kids = destruction.
My plan was to get rid of the legs - they weren't worth fixing - and make a simple box to put on the bottom. I didn't have any baltic birch laying around the right size but I did have a cheap old pine board that if I ripped in half would work. I also made a little jig to try my hand at making box joints. I was going to buy something and decided that it seemed simple enough to make one for the Festool router table. So I did.
It's just a board with a notch and a... tenon that I bolt into the sled of the router table. A small 10mm notch that I put a small piece of 1/4" baltic birch into to serve as the indexer. I originally planned to use this to make small boxes for kitchen drawers from 1/4". Box joints are my favorite sort of joint but I've never made them because I always thought you needed a fancy jig. Turns out not really.
(if you're wondering about all the wood flakes - I didn't hook up the vacuum so that I could capture all the sawdust to make fire starters. I figured they'd be good filler)
You just need perfect spacing from that stud to the bit. The 10mm spiral router bit is set to the height of the boards width and just a tad more and then you stand it up and run it through moving it over to register on the stud/tenon. You use the first board to set the spacing for the second. I honestly can't really explain it because the entire time I'm doing it I'm fighting my dyslexia and trying to remember which board is which. I mark them all 1, 2, 3, 4 and then put the numbers towards each other and do them in sequence.
(Also! If you can't quite tell, I got a new lens for the Sony - a 24 f1.4 and it's my new favorite lens. Sorry if I'm abusing it's depth of field at the moment but it's a fun lens and I'm still learning it.)
The first board is the top one and then setting it on the stud as the upper photo sets it up to be offset for the bottom board. Honestly this was an experiment to figure it out. Mostly an excuse so I could spend some time in the garage which I'd been lacking. I could have just screwed it together.
I cut the boards for the cabinet base, then cut a few shorter lengths to make a square so I could try a box and then used the scraps to test it out. I held these by hand and that was the issue - I couldn't hold them perfectly enough to make a good joint...
... and once I clamped the boards to the backer it was much tighter and the fit up was very tight. I set the bit heigh to be just a shade deeper so the fingers would be slightly proud and then sanded down to be flush.
I decided to take the smaller ones that formed a square and make them into a new knock box for the coffee station. I didn't have a good plan for the bottom and didn't want to breech the joint with a rabbet (or try to not do that) and so I just cut a scrap to fit and glued it in.
I had a few tiny gaps here and there and just filled them in.
I sanded it smooth and put a chamfer on the edge of the box because I like chamfers. Also, fun word to say. Chamfer...
Confident that the box joint thing was working I made the box for the bookcase and then pocket screwed it in place. I know I said I was done with them but I guess there's still a place and time for them. And a few hundred screws in a drawer that won't use themselves.
I sanded to to 220 and then put on my ever favorite satin poly making sure to almost soak the inside so that it was waterproof from the coffee grounds.
And there you go. A simple box joint and a new knock box. I'm sure that pine is probably the worst wood I could use for something like this that gets hammered every day but now that I know how to make a box joint I can make another when this gets beaten up too bad.
I probably should have turned this into a video but I think that's the thing that holds me up. I didn't think this was a "project". I needed to fix the book case and making it more complicated allowed me to spend a bit more time in the garage and away from the computer. The box was just a glorified test fit for the ****** Ikea cabinet. It wasn't a "project" until I realized that the joints were good enough that it was worth keeping. In hindsight it probably would have been simple but I don't know how to shoot video yet without getting in the way, of me or the project or itself. It's not my language yet.
I am planning on making a couple of pizza peels and I'm going to shoot those as videos so that will be my experiment. Super simple project with a very simple timeline.
In the mean time I'll start working on my New Zealand accent mates!
Gregor