Been really busy with life, work, puppies, and workshop projects for a bit. Nothing "finished" to post this time around, but I can share some in-progress shots.
First... Puppies!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Daisy is fitting right in. Devilish at times, sweet at others. Mostly devilish. Fast, but not as fast as Mabel yet.
She has a totally different relationship with our other two dogs. She definitely treats Buttercup as more of a "mom" figure. They play a lot of tug of war, and like to steal toys from each other. It makes us really happy as Buttercup is definitely in her final chapter - a couple of seizures lately, a scare where she wouldn't eat for a couple of days (she now enjoys rice and chicken for each meal), and her hips don't allow her to move around much. But, she barks and shuffles around the yard and seems happy.
Daisy then treats Mabel as an older sibling basically. Constantly play fighting with her, and they love to chase each other around the yard. Mabel is so damn fast it's crazy, so she toys with Daisy... but Daisy's day is coming because she's getting quicker by the day.
In the shop, I have been working on a new "hutch" for our entry area. For years, we've had a cheap store-bought hutch where we store shoes in the lower bench portion, and hang coats above. Beyond being cheap and ugly, it also blocks the view of our stone wall in our living room.
So, I'm building a nicer version as a two-piece system (to allow more wall to show) and incorporating cubbies in the lower portion, and cubbies and coat hooks above too. Here's the lower portion nearly ready for assembly:
To make this more fun, I'm calling this the "breadboard hutch" because I'm using breadboard ends style of joinery all over the place. The legs of the lower portion (aka the "toybox") are joined using breadboard technique and walnut pins. The top of the toybox uses walnut breadboards and poplar pins. Etc.
All of this will receive Danish oil with a walnut tint, so the contrast between woods will be a bit more subtle in the end.
The interior of the toybox has a series of cubbies. Each one will fit a single "sneaker" or can fit 2 smaller shoes such as my wife's dress flats. There are 16 cubbies, so a lot of footwear can be hidden away in an organized fashion.
Here's approximately what the toybox will look like when fully complete: