I had a neat little log that I was planning to cut into circles and make placemats, but lack of any equipment (i.e. a band saw) kinda made the job way harder than worth the effort. I gave it a manual try anyway:
Category: DIY
DIY Christmas toys
Posted by Zen On 10 December 2018
HOW TO MAKE A BENCH VOL.3
Posted by Zen On 18 February 2018
Here we are again. This is finally the last of the leftover wood that I have!
And this time I took the lesson I learned from bench N2 and pre-painted it already, before putting it together. Some will say it’s a hack job at this point, and they will be right. From what I have seen and read, everything points to making a project first then painting it. Which is fine and grand for actual projects worth putting artistic effort into, but this not such a project. Also I just used straight up ‘outside wood paint’ on pre-lacquered panels, so go ahead, judge me.
HOW TO MAKE A BENCH VOL.2
Posted by Zen On 25 July 2017
You know all those pinterest ‘pins’: “Build a bench for $15!” “Build a patio from an old pallet for free!”?
They are all lying.
Local Housing Market Developments
Posted by Zen On 30 March 2017
New Property for lease! A comfortable countryside cottage situated in a maple grove, with a garden and a view on grazing fields. The house is surrounded by beautiful natural ivy foliage which shields it from heavy rainfall without compromising light space. The house is structurally designed to withstand strong winds. Spacious inside, fully equipped with easy-perch(tm) access to the entrance for young families. Made fully from natural recycled materials. Payment accepted: local community service or environmental work only. Call us now on 110-254-448 Springmove.
How to make a bench.
Posted by Zen On 8 May 2016
The 13hourcafe.com bench.
How to learn to machine embroider.
Posted by Zen On 2 November 2015
Step 1.
[ It’s advisable that you want to learn to embroider. ]
Make sure you over-saturate yourself with ideas on Pinterest.
Step 2.
Buy either an embroidering hoop or/and a sewing machine and some colourful threads.
Step 3.
Plan something small you can practice on.
Step 4.
Start.