How does one go about restoring a 20,000 year old woolly mammoth tusk? Yes… as in the woolly mammoth, who walked the earth 300,000 years ago. If this is the first time you’ve had to consider this question, you aren’t alone.
Read MoreWhat would you do if a table you had dedicated a lot of time and effort to crafting for a custom order, was held up on its way to New York City? Not because of a misprint on a shipping label, or the parcel itself having sustained damage, but because you were being accused of potential drug smuggling. Specially: chalking a table’s shipping crate full of marijuana.
Yeah…this really happened….
Read MoreHow do you justify burning a perfectly good slab of wood? You don’t. Unless you’re planning on doing something completely different, inarguably ambitious, and potentially dumb. When making tables, every decision from what base hardware will be used, to the specific colour palette chosen, to the wood itself; is made from a place of pure subjectivity. That’s why, when given a $20 slab of clean maple, it made sense to try something entirely new. Because why not?
Read MoreWhat started as a visit to Goby walnut to inquire about using their kiln to dry a seven foot wooly mammoth tusk that will be a part of an upcoming tusk restoration project; quickly turned into the beginning of a new project. When the good people at Goby Walnut offered up a slightly (very) damaged slab of Redwood, at a price that was too reasonable to pass up (entirely free) the idea to recreate a previous table arose.
Read MoreWhat happened?
To fully understand the gravity of what created a visceral sense of panic at the very end of an otherwise successful project, we need to first set the scene. If you have ever built anything then you know that there is no greater sense of accomplishment than the moment of successful completion. Now, imagine working your way through an entire project, only to find out, upon finishing, that there is an integral flaw. The flaw, in this case, is that the moisture level of the wood was irreparably high. If you want to experience this feeling first-hand, check out the video appropriately titled:I Lost $30,000 .
Read MoreThis is a surprisingly easy DIY project, that you might be able to make for free if you have some epoxy left over from an old project. I took some old cedar fence panels, burned them with propane torch, then covered with epoxy. What I got was a pretty cool 3D wood and epoxy coaster unlike any I had seen before. Hope you like it, let me know if you have any questions!
Read MoreStep by step guide to make an epoxy resin and wood table at home.
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