Maybe youve experienced this too, but I just couldnt get focused. I swept up some shavings hiding under the bench. I filed a few cardboard templates that I had left sitting out. I put achoice some leftover hardware. I cleaned and oiled the new marking gauge that had just arrived in the mail. In short, I puttered my time achoice.
No matter how hard I wanted to get things moving, it just wasnt happening. I had been achoice too long. The problem was certainly not a lack of projects: the partially finished set of blocks, the Arts & Crafts lamp, or even the long dormant bench. Nor was there any lack of potential projects I could start: the file box, the traveling tool chest, the small box, the shaker shelves or the wall cabinet. I could even work on tools: the chisel handles, sharpen the saws, fix the dovetail saw, or replace the missing boxing on the moulding plane. No, a lack of things to do was not the problem.
Finally, with almost no time left, I got things moving in one direction. I settled on making a new knife holder to replace the one that arrived broken. Two Christmases ago I placed a large order with Lee Valley. One of the things I ordered was a knife holder with plastic rods that hold the knife blades. Well, Lee Valley packs their stuff well, but not alchoices well enough to insure survival through whatever the Alaska division of the USPS does to boxes. The box was practically crushed, and while everything else made it out alive, the knife holder did not.
Heres a picture of the broken holder:
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And then it sat there. And sat there. And months went by, and then a year. In the meantime, I saw (I think over at Schwarzs Woodworking Magazine Blog) a version that used bamboo skewers instead of the plastic rods. I liked that even better.
So now that I have had this broken holder for over a year, I finally decide to scrap the whole thing and build a new one from scratch. Sheesh!
I decided to use pine for this project. And so the first step was to resaw 3/4 inch stock to 1/2 inch. For this I use my frame saw. Heres a shot of the process:
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