[blindwoodworker] BloodWood

  • From: "John E Sherrer" <john@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <blindwoodworker@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Thu, 5 Nov 2009 22:08:08 -0500

    
Since you are from Austrailia, I have to mention this.  My wife has an uncle 
who lives on the eastern side of Austrailia in the mountains.  His son cut down 
a bloodwood tree and used it as fire wood.  What a crine!

John
http://WhiteCane.org
http://BlindWoodWorker.com
http://abrcaa.com
http://www.holyteaclub.com/whitecane. 



  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: JDM 
  To: blindwoodworker@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
  Sent: Thursday, November 05, 2009 3:05 AM
  Subject: [blindwoodworker] Re: Lets get started


  G'day Tom,

  John in Australia here, I've been subscribed for a couple of years, and the 
only 2 posts I have ever received from Blind Woodworker arrived in the past 2 
days.  Your post got through to me, so I guess that means we are both 
subscribed.

  I know that there are many many blind woodworkers out there in cyberspace, 
who like me, would enjoy to share a little of what they're doing, and to learn 
from others successes and goof-ups. Now that you, John and I have gone public, 
it might encourage others to join in and get the ball rolling.

  My most recent project was a Coffee table, 1200mm's by 600mm's, made entirely 
from salvaged Douglas fir. Its previous life was as my driveway Pergola. The 
coffee table has an inlayed Chessboard, each square being 45mm's by 45mm's 
which forms a Chessboard of 360mm's by 360mm's. The white squares are English 
White oak and the dark squares are of dark chocolate brown Peruvian Walnut (a 
very pleasantly aromatic timber to work with). I'm still very much a novice in 
woodwork and timber selection, and although I was told that Douglas Fir (called 
Oregon in Australia),was too soft to make good durable furniture, I went ahead 
to find out for myself. My advisers were correct, it is extremely soft and 
every minor bump while handling the timber caused large deep dents in the 
material.

  After getting the hang of being less hasty, and more gentle in the way I 
moved the timber around, I found that I could minimise the number and severity 
of dents.  Nevertheless, I've had to rename my finished product from, a fine 
coffee table with inlayed chessboard, to a rustic coffee table with inlayed 
chessboard and pass off the dents and bumps as design features.
  I do have a photograph available, but I'm not sure of its usefulness in this 
forum. Being totally blind myself, it's of absolutely no use to me, other than 
to post on the notice board at my woodwork clubhouse for visiting sighted 
guests to exhale ooh's and aah's at.

  I'd enjoy to learn of other blind woodworkers current projects, or of a 
favourite past finished project.

  John Milburn

  Melbourne Australia.
    ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: Tom Hodges 
    To: blindwoodworker@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
    Sent: Thursday, November 05, 2009 2:35 AM
    Subject: [blindwoodworker] Re: Lets get started


    I believe I subscribed to Blindwoodworker a few days ago but I haven't 
received any messages from people on the list as yet.  Can you tell me if I am 
subscribed? 

     

    Thank you, Tom Hodges

     

    From: blindwoodworker-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
[mailto:blindwoodworker-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of John Sherrer
    Sent: Tuesday, November 03, 2009 7:21 PM
    To: blindwoodworker@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
    Subject: [blindwoodworker] Lets get started

     

    Hi Woodworkers    I plan to use as much of the information on this list to 
build pages on the blind woodworker web site.

    Please post any suggestions that you have for the web site.]

    If you are comfortable, please tell us a little about your self.

     

    John
    http://WhiteCane.org
    http://BlindWoodWorker.com
    http://HolyTeaClub.comcom\whitecane
    http://anellos.ws

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