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Thanks Trevier......the ceiling took a lot more man hours than I thought it would, probably why you see so many builders try the cheaper way.
Kitchen install is underway, farmer apron sink in the island is a nice feature I think. |
Painted and stained stairway. I thought I was finished...but now customer wants wall panels going up stairway wall and adjacent dining room. It's an easy job that I like doing anyway.
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Diet A&W ?
;-) |
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Never been on a diet ...190 lbs for the last 30 years...never changes? Both my boys are well over 200#....always busting my balls about being too thin....but they both agree to who is the most agile. Funny how things get into the pictures that you would think no one would notice.:nopain: |
I zoom in Bob, if I'd seen anything wrong I'd a really laid into ya LOL
Nice job as usual |
all done with this one...I added brackets under the granite overhang after the picture was taken... on to the next one.
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a few more
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Countertop support brackets ..Fireplace mantel and built-ins in progress...stairs.
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Ok Mr. Marsh, I've zoomed in and everything looks ok... ;-)
Nice work as usual, Saturday night? |
Starting to think about redoing the kitchen. Wish you lived closer.
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Guppy.....thanks for the thumbs up....if you zoom in too close you will see that nothing I do is ever "perfect". But always at least adequate.:kewl: The customer, who I have not met in person, provided a small vague picture of what they wanted for the fireplace and built-ins. No other discussion or plan, so I had to design and build my interpretation. It will all be painted except for the base cabinet tops, which they wanted stained oak to match the flooring. |
more stairs......lot of hours to get it done right.
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He also said that I have the knees of a forty year old ;), and that they should carry me along with no problems....i have never worn knee pads...tried them once.... too uncomfortable. |
Stairs again......nothing special about these....but most of the stairs we do use 5/4" thick treads which finish out to just over 1"thick. To save on material costs we are switching to 3/4" thick....when the oak cove moulding gets applied under the tread nosing it gives the appearance of being thicker. It is so much easier to cut and fit these thinner treads too!
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I agree.....the 5/4 are stronger and look better....but 99% of our customers would not even notice. Yep...the tread is rabbeted to slide into the groove in the riser...and tapered to tighten when driven back with a heavy rubber mallet. I did a lot of business with Van Lumber back when I was building custom homes.....always good quality stuff. |
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HAha...the faster I go the more work they give me.....calling in a day off today to try for albies... |
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A delivery guy drops a load of roof trusses on my job, and comes over for to me to sign the slip. As I'm doing so I see his truck rolling slowly away and ask him if someone is with him. He turns to run towards the vehicle, trips over a pile of dirt and falls into a puddle of mud. Well, I could see he wasn't going to get up right away so I take off running after the truck to see if I could stop it before something bad happened.
Luckily it veered off the side of the road and came to rest without hitting anything.:doh: |
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Yup...its also the pitch block with the stair angles....and helps with post height variables.. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
Dark stained cabinets are a bitch......every speck of dust and the tiniest of scratches show through. The finished flooring is 3/8" thick engineered hardwood.
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Trev....I worked for years installing commercial millwork in banks, libraries, and country clubs, cherry was the wood of choice, and one of my favorite woods to work with. Like most wood, cherry has a distinct smell. I believe I could be blindfolded and identify most common hard and softwoods by their aroma.....:hihi:
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Door pull jig....accurate and efficient. I use a 3/32 bit to mark them...then 3/16 to finish them. That keeps the hole in the jig from becoming larger and wandering.
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Good idea doing it that way
I always have to make more since they wear out, I’ll have to try the smaller diameter first then drill with the 3/16 I think it can be almost as fast if I have two drills set up and swap out while still holding the jig in my left hand. But I have so much scrap maple available, it is easy to make more. I have made them for drawer front pulls also, it’s faster than measuring and marking. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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