Ruling teh World
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Boston, MA
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I made a custom lamp for my bedside in using a metal bracket, some wire and two giant screws. I bent the bracket with a vice and wrapped wire around it to keep the cord in place. It works very well and is easy to read by. I can also turn it off by flipping a switch (bonus!)
(Crappy Flickr processing) ---- Oh, and I also moved into this little thing I've been working on for a while: |
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Ruling teh World
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Boston, MA
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I built a table for my sweet attic.
I naturally required the table to be as sweet as the room it is in, so I made it a cool, low-slung modern table. Behold! I built it out of 3/4" MDF, and 1_1/4" steel piping. (Ignore my hand modeling) I painted it and sanded and used over 15 cans of various spray paints to get it kinda like I wanted, then I rubbed and rubbed some wax on the table top until it was shinny. It gave the table a very cool distressed look to it. It is also smooth as crazy, and waterproof! I finally assembled it in my attic. It is very shiny! How does it look? Pictures don't do it justice... I think the total cost was around $130 finished. |
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Stallion
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Milwaukee
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WLP that is really slick looking. I love the steel legs!!
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Ruling teh World
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Boston, MA
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Ruling teh World
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Boston, MA
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Da bump!
I've recently completed two projects, one was a pair of speakers and the other was a bed-stand thing. First the bed stand. I basically just hacked a couple of ideas together and did some improvising and revising, but it turned out very nice... and very heavy! I built it in two sections, the headboard and the big double thick board. All MDF, so it is straight and smooth but heavy. Finished in ultra-flat black. Now I need to get some cool lamps for both sides, but otherwise yeah, I'm set! And a close-up showing the very smooth finish of the two top pieces: Rock solid, and shares the same steel legs as the rest of the furniture in the room that I've built. ---- Now the speakers are pretty cool as well. They are a kit design from GR Research, the AV-3, with a few upgrades. My grandpa and I built the cabinets, and I finished them. The top section is gloss black with tons of lacquer, polished automotive style, and the lower section is wrapped in high-grade stainless steel. The bases are flat black with silver spikes. They sound awesome (naturally, they have very high-end components, and the MSRP is around $1400/pair, so the kit at $350-ish could be considered a steal. Now I'll just have to think up a new project, maybe some shelving? |
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Veteran Member
Join Date: May 2004
Location: Promise Land of Trustafarians
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Those are some great-looking speakers, WLP!
Makes my little shelf project seem pretty pathetic. (click for bigger) I posted this in the computer set-up thread as well, but it fits here. It's just a small shelf made form 3/4" birch plywood that lets me slide my keyboard out of the way. And, it raises my display up to a more comfortable level. |
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@kk@pennytucker.social
Join Date: Jan 2005
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WLP, the work that you have done in that attic is very impressive. I wish I had a space like that where I could do what I wanted. Guess it'll just have to wait until I buy my own house.
Back to what I was saying, Great job WLP!! |
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Ruling teh World
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Boston, MA
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Kinda like: "well, looks great! How much do you owe me for all that?" Parents these days. |
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Avast!
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: New York?
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Great work overall, too. You should consider getting a "fixer-up" down the road someday. You could build a beautiful home. "How could you falter / when you're the Rock of Gibralter? / I had to get off the boat so I could walk on water. / This ain't no tall order. / This is nothing to me. / Difficult takes a day. / Impossible takes a week." |
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Hates the Infotainment
Join Date: May 2004
Location: NSA Archives
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Nice craftsmanship WLP, but where's the damn spider tape for the bed legs? The spider tape, man! Are you completely mad?! Wasn't it you that had the run in the colony of brown recluses? I expect to see little spider-sized howitzers, booby-traps and other military hardware to win the final battle!
...into the light of a dark black night. |
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Ruling teh World
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Boston, MA
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If you are using MDF, try not to sand any of the surface. Only sand the joints. MDF absorbs unevenly if you break the factory finish too much. You could also light scuff the entire surface, but I wouldn't recommend it. If you are using other materials try to get the surface as even as possible. Give the item a good 2-3 coats of the flat black paint, and let dry to the touch. Coat the item with as many coats of spray lacquer (clear gloss) as you want, a minimum of 3 coats. You don't have to sand between coats, and you can re-coat after it is relatively dry to the touch (lacquers set up and dry fairly fast) After the lacquer is applied let it dry the full amount so it is completely dry, then start wet-sanding the lacquer starting with a 400 grit on up to a 600 grit. Once it is to the point that wet sanding is ineffective, use some automotive "rubbing compound" to further remove small imperfections. The rubbing compound is like a cream and you just have to rub it into the finish with a rag. Then buff the rubbing compound away. At this point you have a gloss-black finish that should look pretty good, but if you want that ultra-smooth flat look then carefully take the original black paint, and mist it from farther away then normal. Try to avoid any concentration of paint. This will give you a really nice flat black surface, although you probably would get away fine just using the flat black without the whole lacquer stuff. |
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Avast!
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: New York?
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WLP--great info on the painting. You are a patient and talented individual. I can't wait to give it a shot.
I've had a lot of arts and crafts projects lately--I've moved into a new apartment (with a new (and first) wife!). I was frustrated by the lack of space for an office, even before we moved in. Because there are so many big windows (which I love), there really wasn't a spot for an office or desk that wouldn't block a window or just be plain awkward. So I made myself a closet office in our biggest closet (which is about 5'3" x 2'6"). It was just a big, completely barren space before I started: I had to cut my desk down to size (it lost about 4 inches of width, but was exactly the right length). And the bookshelves are pretty simple to put in once you get the measurements down. Still, I'm pretty happy with myself. The door to the closet closes perfectly when you push the chair in, and the whole thing is wired with a printer and my iMac, but in a way that will make it easy to use my MBP and old typewriter in it too. I can get to everything I need, plus I have some sweet knick-knacks that would never have made the cut in the apartment's general scheme. In general, I'll be able to do most all of my work there, without having the unsightly (and stressful) mess of my job (which I start Monday) showing all the time. Pics below... The whole deal: The bookshelves go up pretty high: Dude, where's my office?: I've also had a neat project converting a clothes wardrobe into a cabinet for pots and pans / wine & liquor. But I want updates on any chain-mail or nerf projects, as well as some of the other unfinished ones first. "How could you falter / when you're the Rock of Gibralter? / I had to get off the boat so I could walk on water. / This ain't no tall order. / This is nothing to me. / Difficult takes a day. / Impossible takes a week." |
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Lord of the Rant.
Formerly turtle2472 Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Upstate South Carolina
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Wow, that's a great job of hiding your office. I have to say, it's really packed in there, but at least it isn't like that out of the desk area.
Louis L'Amour, “To make democracy work, we must be a nation of participants, not simply observers. One who does not vote has no right to complain.” Visit our archived Minecraft world! | Maybe someday I'll proof read, until then deal with it. |
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Stallion
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Milwaukee
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bump since WLP is awesome and I want to see some more cool stuff
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Ruling teh World
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Boston, MA
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Actually, I'll just post a link to my little site: LINKLINKLINK It is fully adjustable and awesome.. but it was hard to get a good picture of it. |
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