This morning I loaded the front seat, back seat and box of the truck with completed signs, materials and tools I would need and then headed to the Fox & Hounds Pub. The dart board was the first piece, then the cooler (CELLAR) door. Above it I finished sculpting the fittings and taps onto the purposely exposed telephone conduits
Dan Sawatzky’s Blog
Score another for me
Today’s project didn’t happen on the router table, nor on a computer.
A little of everything
One of our current projects is one that will use pretty much every feature and technique we can muster including the four axis capabilities of the MultiCam. Textures, bevels, layers, fancy turning, indexing, and plenty of bits and pieces and lots more are used on the sign. Our client owns a small acreage, with buildings that evoke a Hobbit feel.
Go ahead – throw things.
It’s not often we would encourage anybody to throw sharp things at something we have labored over but as always there are exceptions. today’s project was just such a case
Two more pics
Today we had company and went for lunch at the Fox & hounds Pub. I was delighted to see the place buzzing. I sat facing the door and watched people as they came in.
EnRoute 5 – MOST exciting feature so far.
Yesterday I posted about my first impressions of version 5 of EnRoute. I had discovered the warp/distort feature but didn’t have much time to play as of yet.
Laying on the paint
Today was spent largely laying primer and base coats on a whole lot of small routed pieces in the shop. This stage of our projects is the least spectacular but time consuming none-the-less. The small shady rest sign got the most color with the foliage receiving one glaze with more to come.
Kicking the tires on EnRoute 5
EnRoute 5 has been eagerly anticipated for some time. Now it is only weeks away. Recently, I was asked if I wanted to test drive a pre-release version of the software.
Darts anyone? Part two
The second part of the project was the frame that would go around the dart board. Yesterday’s project fit perfectly in the center to take full advantage of the material.