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Firedkm

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Everything posted by Firedkm

  1. What is the thickness of your plywood?
  2. Welcome to the Village Pat
  3. Whizbin welcome to the Village
  4. Frieke you did a great job!
  5. Firedkm

    vase

    Great job Ron
  6. Looks great Sue
  7. lmao............
  8. Looking good Mike.....An I am glad to help out
  9. This morning I decided to put up a Facebook page for Dales' Puzzles. It was very easy to implement. I just added some info about what we do and put some pictures up too. In less than a day I all ready have over 20 fans! I even got some sales out of this too. My sales are over $100.00 so far plus I am doing some bartering with an old friend. I have not seen him in over twenty years. He is a into Graphic design. So I am getting some art work done and he is getting a couple of puzzles I would have to say not to bad in less than day for FREE advertising. I think the one thing that has helped is how many "friends" I have. I had sent an invitation to almost 300 people!
  10. Nice job Mike.....and thank you Chris for helping out a fellow scroller
  11. William that is just one piece of art and love put together. Great job as usual and keep up the good work. Hope your back feels better soon.
  12. Try out Sloans Woodshop http://www.sloanswoodshop.com/plywoods.htm
  13. You luck dog Good luck with the saw. I am the same way here with a table saw. I have a Hitachi that i bought at lowes several years ago. Not very accurate but it does the job!
  14. Firedkm

    gift

    Ron that is really nice. I am sure your daughter will love it!
  15. Welcome to the Village Ron
  16. Firedkm

    Saluti

    Hello Gianluigi and welcome to the village. We love to see pictures of everyone's work. If you have any pictures please post them!
  17. OH BOY!!!!!!!
  18. Welcome back Chris.....you were missed. Congrats on the job....I am sure that puts your mind at ease that your working again
  19. LMAO.....I think that is everyone here!
  20. The reason the pieces were loose was the blade was probably to big. However I recognize the tree from the scrollsawer magazine. So they purposely had the blade bigger since you were to paint the tree! By the way.....the tree looks really good
  21. Wow......That is a good reason to use a band saw to resaw instead of a radial arm or table saw!
  22. Welcome to the Village Roger. I also checked out your site and your work looks great.
  23. That looks great Sue!
  24. Firedkm

    Jigsaw Puzzles

    Originally published in The Village Square newsletter - Oct. 2009 Jigsaw puzzles were first made in England around 1760 and were mainly used as an education tool. Today most jigsaw puzzles are die cut and made out of cardboard stock. A lot of scrollers like to cut there own puzzles out of plywood. The type of plywood is a matter of choice. Some use Baltic Birch, Oak, Cherry and Poplar to name a few. However most agree to use 1/4 inch, 5 ply, top quality plywood. There are several cutting styles that can be use to cut your puzzles. Traditional Cutting - Traditional cut puzzle is done with a grid pattern. This cut is the same type you would find in your store bought cardboard puzzles. This is the easiest puzzle to assemble Diagonal Cutting - Diagonal cutting is also done on a grid pattern. This cut makes it very challenging since all outside pieces do not lock together without an inside piece to connect them. Color Line Cutting - Color Line cutting is the process of cutting the edges of pieces along color boundaries within the jigsaw puzzle's picture. Color line cutting makes the puzzle more challenging as pictorial clues is reduced, leaving the shapes of the pieces as the primary clue. If the color boundaries consist of straight lines, the puzzle can be quite hard, as areas of similar color have to be assembled before the assembler can figure out how the regions fit together. Continuous Cutting - This style of cutting is started at one point on the puzzle. It is then continued making loops, knobs and earlets in one continuous cut throughout the puzzle. In essence you will have two puzzle pieces when we are done with this cut. Then you will cut the pieces into smaller individual pieces to make your puzzle. This technique can make the puzzle hard for the assembler. Figural Pieces - Figurals, or as they were called in Britain, whimsies, began to be popular at about the turn of the 20th century. They were special pieces put in at the whim of the cutter. They were one piece or a multiple pieces. They can either complement the puzzle image, or be a personal touch such an object from a favorite sport or hobby. Figural pieces don't have to be objects. You can put names, initials, dates or even a small message into your puzzle. The only limitations are space in the puzzle for the figurals, and interlock ability if not enough regular pieces surround a figural.
  25. rotflmao......Sounds like your sitting on the toilet! Wood-n-things said "NOSE"! True but its the presto log that got me!
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