PENDLETON FACTORY RHYTHMS from Jay Carroll on Vimeo.
Friday, September 28, 2012
Tuesday, September 25, 2012
Take THAT, huge retailers bent on taking over the World!
Step One:
Notice that you seem to be experiencing a pillowcase deficit in your home.
Step Two:
Stop in at a Big Box Store (a.k.a.: Ugh) the next time you are in town to see what they are offering.
Step Three:
Walk over to the linen department, find what you are looking for and hunt down the price tag.
Step Four:
Pick your jaw up off the floor.
(SERIOUSLY? $40 for two pillowcases? COTTON pillowcases? SINCE WHEN???)
Step Five:
Turn around and storm out of the store, muttering "No, no, no, no, no, no. NO. Just no." under your breath.
Step Six:
Drive home, thanking Heaven the entire way that your mother/grandmother/aunt/the internet taught you how to sew, and find some old flat sheets in the linen closet that you are currently not using - preferably the ones you bought at that garage sale for $1 each.
Step Seven:
Iron them.
Step Eight:
Using an older pillowcase as a template, cut out 8 rectangular pillow-sized pieces, match them into pairs (with right sides facing), sew three sides of each pair together, hem the openings and pop them right-side-out.
Step Nine:
Do a little victory shimmy, à la football touchdown booty shake, and sing "Oh no, you are NOT gettin' my money, SUCKAS!"
Step Ten:
Take a photo and blog about it, just because.
Notice that you seem to be experiencing a pillowcase deficit in your home.
Step Two:
Stop in at a Big Box Store (a.k.a.: Ugh) the next time you are in town to see what they are offering.
Step Three:
Walk over to the linen department, find what you are looking for and hunt down the price tag.
Step Four:
Pick your jaw up off the floor.
(SERIOUSLY? $40 for two pillowcases? COTTON pillowcases? SINCE WHEN???)
Step Five:
Turn around and storm out of the store, muttering "No, no, no, no, no, no. NO. Just no." under your breath.
Step Six:
Drive home, thanking Heaven the entire way that your mother/grandmother/aunt/the internet taught you how to sew, and find some old flat sheets in the linen closet that you are currently not using - preferably the ones you bought at that garage sale for $1 each.
Step Seven:
Iron them.
Step Eight:
Using an older pillowcase as a template, cut out 8 rectangular pillow-sized pieces, match them into pairs (with right sides facing), sew three sides of each pair together, hem the openings and pop them right-side-out.
Step Nine:
Do a little victory shimmy, à la football touchdown booty shake, and sing "Oh no, you are NOT gettin' my money, SUCKAS!"
Step Ten:
Take a photo and blog about it, just because.
Saturday, September 22, 2012
Wednesday, September 19, 2012
Bookcase
Feeling a little under the weather, this week. Decided to stay home today to see if I can get a handle on this bug that is desperately trying to drag me into the gutter (get off me, you stoopid microbe). Am currently sitting in bed with canine companions (they have commandeered all the space, by the way...I'm just squeezed in here, all pretense that I hold any authority over them has evaporated)(Maggie is trying to simultaneously flatten my kneecap and push my laptop to the floor with her head). I figured I would take the opportunity presented to me by my viral hitch-hiker and clean out my computer's folders between naps. Boring, I know, but my standards for distraction are low at the moment.
And hey, guess what? While tidying my laptop up, I came across a goodie that I meant to post here and had forgotten all about! Yay!
So without further ado, I present to you the following tutorial from the archive (this was originally published in Volume Two of Creative Humans):
And hey, guess what? While tidying my laptop up, I came across a goodie that I meant to post here and had forgotten all about! Yay!
So without further ado, I present to you the following tutorial from the archive (this was originally published in Volume Two of Creative Humans):
The One-Sheet-of-Plywood Bookcase
Just after graduating
from college, I got a job working for an architect from Europe who had just
finished building his own home (our office was actually in the attic). One of the things I learned from him was the knack of taking simple, easy-to-source materials and turning them into functional
and attractive objects. Their house was filled with ingenious little touches of
innovation, most of which was DIY and all of which was affordable.
This
“one-sheet-of-plywood” bookcase was his idea:
Materials:
*A note on plywood:
The quality of plywood can vary greatly, from
supplier-to-supplier. It can be very
disappointing to spend hours on a project like this and then discover that
there are gaps in the layers or imperfections in the veneer. Do yourself a favor and take the time to
source a nice, evenly-finished piece, with thick layers (a sheet should have no
more than 7 smooth plies and the thicker the veneer, the better).
-
1 sheet (4’ x
8’) of birch or maple-veneered 3/4” plywood
-
1-1/2” long
size 8 wood screws (min. 30 of them)
-
“finishing
washers” for size 8 screws (min. 15 of them) – these are also sometimes called
“cup washers”
-
1/2” long size
8 wood screws (min. 55 of them)
-
3/4” x 3/4” x
3/4” 90°
metal braces (if you look in the assembly photos, you’ll see what these look
like – they’re going to hold the shelves in place)
-
cabinet/furniture
legs (check out the Besta legs, at Ikea – I don’t have access to Ikea, so I
can’t confirm how they’re made…you’ll have to investigate your options
carefully in order to be sure that they’ll work)
-
1 quart of
clear, acrylic polyurethane, in satin finish
-
1 foam brush
or other suitable applicator for the polyurethane
-
an electric
drill
-
a size 8
screwdriver bit for the drill
-
a drill bit
suitable for drilling pilot holes for the size 8 screws (a 3/32” drill bit
should be fine)
-
sandpaper (220
grit)
-
a table saw,
if your hardware store can not cut the plywood for you
-
a pencil
-
a ruler
-
a measuring
tape
-
some masking
tape or labels to identify your pieces
Preparation
Instructions
Most hardware stores
offer a cutting service (they may charge a small fee per cut, which is totally
worth it) when you purchase lumber from them.
Have them carry the sheet of plywood over to the saw for you (remember: you
break it, you buy it) and give them the following cutting diagrams:
Step one:
Cut the long pieces
and label the first two, using the pencil and masking tape. One will be the top and one will be the
bottom. The skinny little strip (colored
in gray in the diagram) is waste - you
can discard it.
Step two:
Take the remaining
two lengths of wood and cut them like so:
*Note: Don’t cut your pieces in 24” increments, even
though logic would tell you that it’s a good idea. The saw blade “eats up” some wood, so if you
stick with the dimensions shown, everything will be modular and therefore, will
fit together.
Once everything is
cut, you will have a nice collection of pieces, ready to pack into your car and
take home. You do not need to be driving
a truck or an SUV in order to get them home – I’ve done this several times in
my hatchback. Just fold the passenger
and back seats down and slide the pieces in.
Have a backup plan in case it doesn’t work, but don’t sweat it – there
are many ways to get these puppies home.
The next step
involves finishing your pieces individually, prior to assembling
everything. Follow the instructions on
your polyurethane, which usually call for applying 2 to 3 coats, sanding before
and between coats, and permitting the pieces to dry adequately.
Assembly Instructions
The first step in the
assembly process is to make a box, using the top, bottom and 2 gable
pieces. The top piece will rest ON TOP
OF the gables and the bottom piece will be attached UNDER the gables. All the gables are the same height, so if you
attach the gables to the ends of the top and bottom, you will have a problem –
the intermediate gables won’t fit!
You need to carefully
identify (in the top and bottom pieces), where the screws will go and drill
pilot holes. Use the ruler and pencil
for marking the holes and don’t press hard.
Each gable gets 6
screws – 3 through the top piece (with finishing washers) and 3 through the
bottom. Use the 1-1/2” long screws for
this. Obviously, the bottom screws will
be concealed, so there’s no need to use finishing washers with them.
Mark the placement
for and install the three intermediate gables.
Here is your gable layout:
*Note: Because this
here pattern is intended to use only one full sheet of plywood, you will notice
that we are missing a shelf. That is ok,
we will leave one compartment smaller than the others and it will remain shelf-less.
This is what the top
of the unit will look like (the bottom will look virtually the same – just
without the finishing washers):
The next step is to
attach the shelves:
Using the 3/4” x 3/4”
x 3/4” braces, screw the shelves into the bookcase (use the 1/2” long screws,
here). Make sure you also screw up into
the bottom of each brace, or your shelves will be wobbly and likely shift
around:
Once the shelves are
in, your only remaining task is to find legs for the unit (or some other
imaginative way to elevate the bookcase off the floor, like a plinth made of
scrap lumber, bricks, etc). Follow the
leg manufacturer’s instructions, keeping in mind that you only have 3/4” of
plywood to “bite” into and install at least 6 of them in order to get a good,
stable base.
Once you’ve made one
of these, you’ll find that it becomes addictive. Why not make the next one with sliding
doors? Or mount it to the wall, so it
floats above the floor? This first
bookcase is really just a gateway bookcase…next thing you know, you’ll be
whipping together coffee tables on casters, desks, TV stands, you name it! *
*Trust me on this; my house is filled to the gills with birch
plywood furniture.
Monday, September 17, 2012
Eye Candy
I've always tried really hard to come up with "meaty" posts here because I figure if you're going to spend your precious time coming to read what I have to say, I may as well put some effort into it.
The only problem with that is that it's really time-consuming and after an excruciatingly long week at work, my brain (and body) shuts down. So I'm going to start publishing things here that I've simply found online during the week; things that have inspired me or made me sit up and take notice.
I hope you enjoy these little "micro-posts" and if you have any ideas or items you want to share that fit the theme, please leave a link in the comments.
Here's the first one:
BE LINEN MOVIE IN ENGLISH from Linen and hemp community on Vimeo.
The only problem with that is that it's really time-consuming and after an excruciatingly long week at work, my brain (and body) shuts down. So I'm going to start publishing things here that I've simply found online during the week; things that have inspired me or made me sit up and take notice.
I hope you enjoy these little "micro-posts" and if you have any ideas or items you want to share that fit the theme, please leave a link in the comments.
Here's the first one:
BE LINEN MOVIE IN ENGLISH from Linen and hemp community on Vimeo.
Wednesday, September 12, 2012
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