26 December 2009

Sandy Way Dartboard Frame


My family's place at Squaw used to have a terrible dartboard over the fireplace upstairs -- it was worn down, at the wrong height, in one of those bar-style mini-cabinets with doors.

I finally got around to tearing that down and replacing it with a new board from New Zealand company DMI darts. It plays really well, and has a super skinny "spider" (metal frame that divides the scoring regions). Highly recommended.

The frame is made of vertical-grain Douglas Fir, with a water based dark brown stain. The carved letters are the natural color of the fir.


The chalkboard is genuine slate that used to hang in a San Francisco School District classroom. I found it at a spot in SF called Andreas Stone & Marble, some old Italian guys who took down a bunch of schoolroom chalkboards and put in new white boards around the city. I like the thought that generations of people (many older than me) learned from that stone.

More importantly, this project nearly used up the enormous trove of wine corks that people have been giving me for the past few years (since I started making trivets). Not sure how many are there in total ... maybe sometime we're snowed in with a blizzard we can count them.


I used the same method I used on the dartboard in my SF pad ... scroll down to see that one.

24 March 2009

Sutro Tower coat rack


Aliph's walls are cast concrete, making it tough to hang things like coat hooks on the wall. After a few months of setting my clothing and backpack down on a crowded desk or distant floor, I decided some kind of standing or leaning coat rack was in order.

I ended up using a structural column to locate the lean-to, which is made of solid padauk:



The edges are routed with a sine / radio wave design and the graphic was carved from a vertically stretched photo of the Sutro Tower, the 762-foot antenna that stands atop central San Francisco:


10 February 2009

1919 living room set


The front room at my house used to be the TV room. At some point Noble and I cooked up a scheme to redesign the "bar room" as the living room, and turn the front room into an office / sitting room.

I built two desks out of Red Oak with a thin stripe of American Walnut trim:



The window desk:



The wall desk:



Then we hooked up the sitting area with a coffee table and matching end table. The end table houses electronic components that drive a projector for big screen action.

The end table has the material scheme flipped -- walnut with red oak trim:



Same with the coffee table:



Projector ledge:



Projection:



The coup de grace was the idea to hang the projector over a mirror. This way people sitting across the coffee table from the projector can still see the TV image in the mirror:



Of course, all the text is inverted ... what can ya do?

18 July 2008

Jen's TV stand / wine rack


For her birthday, I built my beautiful girlfriend a stand for her TV. I decided to integrate a wine rack, since she has a pretty nice collection of wine ... she has been studying for the bar, so I thought this piece would tie together two nice distractions from the 16-hour-a-day routine.


The semi-octagonal shape is based on a smaller coffee table that Jen got from her family. Construction is solid American Walnut. It holds dozens of DVDs / VHS tapes (yes Jen has some choice movies on tape), 18 bottles of wine, a big TV, cable box, and a combo VHS/DVD player.



Happy birthday, baby!

28 August 2007

Jeff and Heather's wedding present


For the wedding of Jeff Condon and Heather Porter, I decided to build the happy couple a piece of furniture. After some consideration they chose a coffee table. The concept was all Jeff: he wanted the table top to be made of broken down wine boxes, which he provided, including the illustrious Opus One.



My mom completed the present by buying them a bottle of the famous Napa Valley vintage.



Mazel Tov!

03 April 2007

Ski tracks coffee table


The dining room table needed a little brother. Partially thanks to leftover material, and partially thanks to renewed inspiration I decided to build a coffee table to match the piece in the dining room.



The material scheme is inverted, meaning the top is solid teak with an inlay of twin red oak stripes. The piece in between is a darker piece of teak.



The ski tracks were modeled in Pro/E, 3D printed as templates, and cut on a router.



This was the most challenging thing I have ever built, primarily because that shape requires the router cut across the grain, on both sides of a narrow piece ... it loves to grab and shred your part. I had to cut 6 red oak pieces before I got these two.








31 March 2007

1919 Dartboard


After watching our 1880s-vintage drywall get chewed up by dozens of wayward dart strikes, I decided to do something. After making a few trivets, the cork collection had been steadily growing, and I did a little math and realized that I could surround both our dartboard and a miniature white board I picked up at Office Depot.



Fun house rule: if you hit a cork, you have to take a shot (usually, whiskey).