Hi Everyone,
If youre like me and you generate a lot of small scrap lumber, youre probably always wondering what to do with it all. One thing that you can make and that is useful are coffee cup lids. These are small, circles of wood that have a small knob on top that you can put on top of hot cups of coffee and they will help to get your coffee warm for a lot longer than just living the top of the cup uncovered. In this blog posting Im going to describe how to make them.
I work with local hardwoods which means I often have a lot of oak, hickory, maple, and birch scrap in the shop and these pieces are perfect for small things like the coffee cup lid in the center of the photograph. This particular lid is made from hickory:
To begin with youll need a piece of wood at least 3 1/2" wide. Mark off a square and then find the center by connecting the opposite corners with a straight line. Then mark off a circle with a compass. In the photo the wood is about 4" wide and the circle is approximately 3 1/2" in diameter:
This first blank is hickory:
This blank is maple. Maple is my favorite turning wood. It cuts cleanly and smoothly:
The next step is to drill a hold in the center of the circle on the drill press with a Forstner bit (see my discussion about this on my previous posting about the black walnut vase). Be sure and clamp the wood down with a clamp before drilling:
After youve drilled the hole, roughly cut out the circles. You dont have to cut these exactly into circles but you do have to cut off the corners:
In this photo Ive mounted the blank on the lathe and have begun truing up the edge. Ive begun cutting from the face of the blank towards the center of the edge. This is a much easier way of truing up the blank without damaging the surface of the wood:
Next Ive trued up the face and made it flat. Even though it looks flat in the photograph, its not:
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