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Dave Lehnert
08-14-2017, 9:53 PM
30+ years ago I made a pie safe out of construction grade lumber. Used a nail punch to punch the door panels.
Just a short time ago that pie safe was in a little small town country store displaying jams and jelly.

Ever find a project you built in the wild?

Andrew Hughes
08-14-2017, 10:38 PM
I had the same thing happen to me.Was at a Christmas party last year and saw a blanket chest at a friend of a friends house.
It caught my eye because it had Dovetails.I stared at it and decide I made that way before the Internet days I just don't remember when or were.
It was before I met Bill W.:rolleyes:

Tom Sontag
08-30-2017, 11:05 AM
Not exactly "in the wild" but my brother-in-law just built a new house and the box I gave them years ago is now displayed on the mantle right under a genuine Miro painting. That was nice to see.

Bill Berklich
08-30-2017, 12:01 PM
Not exactly "in the wild" but my brother-in-law just built a new house and the box I gave them years ago is now displayed on the mantle right under a genuine Miro painting. That was nice to see.

Nice - if it's under the Miro it is truly an honored piece.

glenn bradley
08-31-2017, 9:39 AM
I used to adorn standard metal mailboxes to turn them into sharks, mermaids, elephants, boats and the like. These were "crafts-fair" type objects, painted and so forth. I would make these for neighbors to keep them from yelling at me about all the noise from the shop :rolleyes:. People would take them with them when they moved and I got a picture the other day from one proudly installed in front of a house in another state. Good for a chuckle and nice to know my gifts (read bribes) live on after their primary use has passed.

Mike Circo
08-31-2017, 3:47 PM
My now step daughter worked a class at the church doing confirmation or something like that... anyway.
The last day of the classes was a ceremony where they place a ribbon on a cross with something written on it... (promise, wish, I don't know what exactly.) But they never had a cross the right size to use. They would often just dash out to the woods in back and lash together a couple of sticks as their cross. So the step daughter comes to me and asks for a cross. She's expecting two boards nailed together... well we woodworkers know better. Cherry trimmed with maple, on a walnut stand. They were ecstatic.

About five years later, I get a letter with a newspaper clipping in it. An article and photo of the latest class going through their ceremony, and right in the middle is my cross adorned with many ribbons.

Took a few hours to assemble, but has lasted a decade now. really cool feeling.