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Been messing around the shop
Posted on 8/13/17 at 5:30 pm
Posted on 8/13/17 at 5:30 pm
Made me one(the good looking one) and one for my stepson
Had to make the UGA one to get the bad juju out of the shop
Had to make the UGA one to get the bad juju out of the shop
Posted on 8/13/17 at 8:44 pm to bdv1974
Nice! Did you burn it or rout it?
Posted on 8/14/17 at 10:14 am to Cobb Dawg
router, looked like a snowman when I was done
Posted on 8/14/17 at 10:33 am to bdv1974
Awesome looks good wish I had time to try making some of these. You did a great job
Posted on 8/14/17 at 11:19 am to bdv1974
You got the notch just right on the paw. I made one of those one time, very difficult. Years ago when I was poor, I was going to start ripping off Dallas' idea and selling them for side money, but out of respect I wasn't going to do any UGA ones.
It's now in the Oglethorpe county dump, nobody wanted to buy it.... but this was pre-natty... would probably be worth a few hundred today.
eta- zero power tools, hand crafted with coping saw.
It's now in the Oglethorpe county dump, nobody wanted to buy it.... but this was pre-natty... would probably be worth a few hundred today.
eta- zero power tools, hand crafted with coping saw.
This post was edited on 8/14/17 at 11:22 am
Posted on 8/14/17 at 11:26 am to bdv1974
For fake aged barn wood with that gray color-
In a mason jar, plain white vinegar and plain steel wool. Let it soak for 72 hours. Don't cap it, gasses are released. You don't want it to explode.
Then make Earl Grey tea. I tried others with bad results, use Earl Grey.
Then, paint your wood with the vinegar mix. Let it dry to the touch, don't let it get bone dry, but not dripping. Then paint it with the tea. The initial stain is very light, but over the course of several hours it will darken significantly. Try it out on some scrap wood.
Pro-tip- The longer you let the vinegar and steel mix sit in the jar, the darker your final stain will be. Also, the more steel wool you put in with the vinegar, same thing.
ETA- This chemical process is the exact natural process that takes decades on the wood in nature. It is oxidation, accelerated. The Earl Gray tea adds the oxidation tint, mimics the natural gray color of various detritis and particles in the air that settle on the wood as it oxidizes over time.
In a mason jar, plain white vinegar and plain steel wool. Let it soak for 72 hours. Don't cap it, gasses are released. You don't want it to explode.
Then make Earl Grey tea. I tried others with bad results, use Earl Grey.
Then, paint your wood with the vinegar mix. Let it dry to the touch, don't let it get bone dry, but not dripping. Then paint it with the tea. The initial stain is very light, but over the course of several hours it will darken significantly. Try it out on some scrap wood.
Pro-tip- The longer you let the vinegar and steel mix sit in the jar, the darker your final stain will be. Also, the more steel wool you put in with the vinegar, same thing.
ETA- This chemical process is the exact natural process that takes decades on the wood in nature. It is oxidation, accelerated. The Earl Gray tea adds the oxidation tint, mimics the natural gray color of various detritis and particles in the air that settle on the wood as it oxidizes over time.
This post was edited on 8/14/17 at 11:34 am
Posted on 8/14/17 at 12:46 pm to GurleyGirl
quote:
nicely done
Thanks, I worked pretty hard on it.
Posted on 8/15/17 at 6:46 am to DawgCountry
quote:
Damn. You selling these?
Well duh not with out the proper licensing through the university.
Jokes aside I'm in process of getting crafters license from Clemson/Bama/SC/ and waiting on what UGA requires. The craft licensing allows the use of the trademarked logos for a yearly fee up to a certain amount of sales at a hell of a price difference from the full NCAA-Teams licensing $150 vs upwards of $5k
Posted on 8/15/17 at 6:47 am to deeprig9
I still have the one Dallas got me hanging in my office at work. Get a lot of comments on it even from the enemy.
Posted on 8/15/17 at 7:22 am to bdv1974
I got a family full of Clemson Alums that would love that
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