Shawn Pixley
01-05-2015, 10:00 PM
I am pretty good about finishing up projects before starting another. Sometimes that doesn't work so well
So before New Year's, I ordered some binding for a guitar I was making. it was to be delivered on January second. So having some time, I buckled down and built a couple of shop storage boxes that would stack on top of each other. I used left over odds and ends from other projects (African Mahogany and European Beech). One would hold my sharpening stones and accessories. The other would house my inlay tools. So, I knocked them together so they would stack and interlock. Wednesday the 31st of December, the binding came early. So, I got the boxes to a good stopping spot and went back to the guitar.
I routed the binding ledge and glued up the binding on the back. I planned on double binding (front and back). Fitting binding by yourself is a bit frustrating.
303474303475
It cures overnight before scraping and doing the front binding.
303476303477303478
Above, the guitar with a little MS on it to represent the finish color if undyed. So, a couple of days would be used waiting for the binding glue to fully cure before it can be scraped. So LOML says, "since you gave me the nice hydraulic press, I need a stand to put it on." So my plan was to knock out a table in one Saturday. From raw stock to fully assembled took a day. Tapered legs. arched aprons, mortise and tenon construction. I cheated and used plywood for the top and shelf. By the way, It was another example why I hate plywood...
303479303480
You can see the storage boxes peeking out from behind the leg glue-up. The table material would be Red Oak as it would be painted with Milk Paint. Sunday, the Table got 2 coats of the milk paint and Ren Wax on the top. Back to the guitar! My next decision is what color to stain / dye the Ash back. The Spalted maple top will get BLO or Tung oil, shellac to seal and then Nitro Lacquer. I think the neck and spalted maple go well together. Time to go back to work...
So before New Year's, I ordered some binding for a guitar I was making. it was to be delivered on January second. So having some time, I buckled down and built a couple of shop storage boxes that would stack on top of each other. I used left over odds and ends from other projects (African Mahogany and European Beech). One would hold my sharpening stones and accessories. The other would house my inlay tools. So, I knocked them together so they would stack and interlock. Wednesday the 31st of December, the binding came early. So, I got the boxes to a good stopping spot and went back to the guitar.
I routed the binding ledge and glued up the binding on the back. I planned on double binding (front and back). Fitting binding by yourself is a bit frustrating.
303474303475
It cures overnight before scraping and doing the front binding.
303476303477303478
Above, the guitar with a little MS on it to represent the finish color if undyed. So, a couple of days would be used waiting for the binding glue to fully cure before it can be scraped. So LOML says, "since you gave me the nice hydraulic press, I need a stand to put it on." So my plan was to knock out a table in one Saturday. From raw stock to fully assembled took a day. Tapered legs. arched aprons, mortise and tenon construction. I cheated and used plywood for the top and shelf. By the way, It was another example why I hate plywood...
303479303480
You can see the storage boxes peeking out from behind the leg glue-up. The table material would be Red Oak as it would be painted with Milk Paint. Sunday, the Table got 2 coats of the milk paint and Ren Wax on the top. Back to the guitar! My next decision is what color to stain / dye the Ash back. The Spalted maple top will get BLO or Tung oil, shellac to seal and then Nitro Lacquer. I think the neck and spalted maple go well together. Time to go back to work...