Dolphin Inlay Box
My box has 3 distinct differences from Steve Good's demo:
- First, I used maple and purple heart wood where he used walnut and maple. There is an interesting and frustrating story that goes behind that (posted at the end for those who want to read it. Bottom line -- DO NOT use www.wildwooddesigns.com). I will give a shout-out to Randy Smith of Hill City Hardwoods (https://www.facebook.com/HillCityHardwoods http://www.HillCityHardwoods.com) who GAVE me -- a complete stranger -- a beautiful piece of 1" maple that I used to finish the box after my online debacle. If you live in the Lynchburg, VA area, I highly recommend working with Randy for your hardwood needs. He's a very down-to-earth woodworker and a fair-minded businessman. Thanks Randy.
- Second, I didn't like the dolphin design in his pattern (no offense, Steve. I love your designs). I found a dolphin coloring book page online, printed it out, traced the outline onto another piece of paper, and scanned it into the computer. Then I re-sized it and made my own pattern.
- Lastly, I added a purple heart ring to the box with the cutoff piece from the inlay.
| Underside |
with 1/4" plywood. I got it close and moved to the hardwood. It was close enough to sand flush after the glue-up. To finish the project, I used spray shellac. I've become very fond of this product as it dries very quickly and gives the wood a very natural color. I learned that working with purple heart is not easy. It is very hard and it turns brown when sanded, but will regain it's purple color over time. The shellac allows the oxidation to still happen. Now after several months the purple heart is a beautiful rich purple and my oldest daughter keeps the box full of her "treasures".
Ballerina
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I used oak dowel for the structure of the rest of the toy. I ran nylon cord through the cross-brace and tied it off, but I think I'm going to have to remove that and use screws. I think it will still have enough movement to work. A carved ballerina would have been even cooler, but time was running out and I didn't have a pattern to carve from and I don't really have the confidence as a carver to do it justice. People are harder to draw and sculpt than animals and other objects, in my opinion.
Cork Pop-gun
My son found a cork pop-gun at his grandpa's house last summer that he thought was a lot of fun. It was made by his great-grandfather. It looked simple enough to build so I made one for him. The finished product is demonstrated on my YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pYbVLavLl50.I used this website: http://www.sciencetoymaker.org/popgun/index.html for the mechanics of the tube and the cork.
I free-handed the butt-stock from 3/4" cherry. I turned the hand-grip on the lathe. I probably should have figured how to put the groove in the wood for the PVC to set in before turning it because it wanted to roll. I wanted it to be self loading so I attached twine from the end of the dowel to a screw eye that I screwed into the small end of the cork. I bought the cork (size 7) from Lowe's. After he used it a bit, and broke the cotton twine I changed to nylon line. I also had to drill a hole through the cork and run the line through it because the screw eye didn't hold. With the line in the cork I filled it in with glue so that it would still pop. One of the keys to the pop-gun is the gasket. I tried an inner tube, but it was too thin. I had some dense foam rubber from some packaging lying around. I sharpened the inside of a piece of PVC and cut out a perfectly sized gasket from this dense foam rubber (~3/8" thick) and screwed it to the center of the end of the dowel (the same screw is used for the string for the cork.
Unicorn Automaton
I used a pine 2x6 for this project, since I planned to paint it from the start. There is a bit of wood filler under the paint to hide the holes that were drilled in the wrong places while I tried to figure out how to make this thing actually work.
Clocks
Two of my sisters came to visit for Christmas, so Steve Good bailed me out with some great plans for small desk clocks that I was able to knock out in short order.The wolf clock (http://www.stevedgood.com/miniwolfclock.pdf) is actually made from that yellow heart wood that came instead of the purple heart. Isn't is pretty?
The penguin clock (http://www.stevedgood.com/animals.pdf) is cherry so it will darken over time. Both clocks are finished with the clear spray shellac.
I made a butterfly clock (http://www.stevedgood.com/bflyexpose.pdf) for my wife from the rest of the maple that Randy Smith gave me (thanks again, Randy!), but it got broken before it got finished. I have since glued it back together but it never got it's protective coat. It's that dreaded sanding that got in the way. It was the one gift that didn't get finished before Christmas. Nobody's perfect.
The Rest of the Story
Inlay box wood choice story -I decided to order wood as an add-on to an online order for small clocks (www.wildwooddesigns.com - won't use them again). The website had the purple heart on sale at a lower price than the walnut I was going to use, so I ordered a 1/4" and 3/4" board of purple heart and a 1/4" piece of maple (yes the box was supposed to be opposite of the way it looks. They charged me for "2-day mail" (their most inexpensive shipping option), but didn't even process the order for nearly a week. I was not notified of any issues and nearly 2 weeks later when the wood showed up (getting very close to Christmas), instead of a piece of 3/4" of purple heart, there was a 3/4" piece of yellow heart (not the look I was going for). Their customer service was extremely poor and unprofessional. They claimed that I had ordered the yellow heart and were unwilling to put forth any effort to correct their error, but I persisted and they discovered that there was an error on the website where the same item number was listed for both the purple heart and the yellow heart. They promised me that they would send the purple heart as a replacement but didn't promise me any priority shipping. I had already decided not to do business with them again, but still wanted to get the project done. Overnight, without contacting me about it, they discovered that there was no 3/4" purple heart in stock so they refunded the money and sent me an email to keep the yellow heart. That didn't solve my problem. I called the next day to complain and mention that if I had known they didn't have the purple heart I would have bought the walnut that I was originally going to buy and could I exchange it. Well yes I could but I would have to pay shipping both ways. I hung up the phone. Don't buy from Wild Wood Designs or their affiliate, Cherry Tree Toys. It's not worth the headache. They are after your money not your business.So then I was left with very little time before Christmas and still didn't have the wood I wanted for the box. I found a local hard wood seller. He had a craigslist add, a facebook page and website. His name is Randy Smith and his business is Hill City Hardwoods. I called him to see if he had any small pieces of 1" maple. He said he had some cutoffs from some of his projects that were in the burn pile and I was welcome to look. I drove down to his home shop and he not only GAVE me the maple piece but insisted I walk out with several other small pieces of hard wood cut-offs that I'm sure I'll eventually use for small projects. some of which I already have (like the clock previously mentioned). He refused payment and just asked that I pass the word on to my woodworking friends that he has some nice kiln-dried wood for sale. Here are links to his business: https://www.facebook.com/HillCityHardwoods and http://www.hillcityhardwoods.com/. If you are local and like wood, check it out. I have since bought some rough-cut maple and walnut from him with an upcoming project in mind. If I had a bandsaw and a planer, I'd probably already be knee deep in that project. Thanks Randy, for making lemonade out of my lemon experience buying wood online.

Nice write-up and projects. You did a great job on all of the toys, and I especially appreciated the link to the video to see the horse/unicorn work. I thought I had sent you some purple heart? Anyway, I am very impressed with your woodworking skills. Know your kids were thrilled with their gifts. Hope you will include the wedding gift you gave to Alan & Angelene - it was a work of art!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Papa. You did send me some purple heart earlier this year. The box was already done and I haven't figured out what the best project for it would be yet, but I'm anxious to use it. Not much woodworking gets done between April and October since the garden and summer activities keep me outside most of the time. The pattern for the wedding gift also came from Steve Good's website. If you haven't already, you should check it out. Thanks again.
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