We bought a dart board and needed a place to store the darts. I saw a similar design and decided to make it out of walnut. I cut the H in Old English font. It will hold 9 darts. I still have to cut plugs to cover the screws but thought I'd show it anyway.
Some of the guys asked me to make a sign for our department. I made it out of ash and used green and blue dye for the background. I plan to take it in on Tuesday.
Sawdust I put in the garden or compost. The wood shavings from the planer I put in empty paper towel and toilet paper rolls, seal the ends with wax or masking tape, and use as fire starters for the fire pit.
Maybe you should save the beers and meds for after scrolling. The quality is good so maybe you can adhere the pattern, take the meds, scroll, then drink the beer. Or just send me the beer.
I have not done one but it looks like the bevel cuts are to drop the three sections lower. If this is true and you make the cut without a bevel it will fall through. If you don't want to make the bevel just done cut those parts or change the pattern slightly so the pieces don't drop out.
For my grandson. It's not as fancy as some that I've seen but it was fun to make. Sycamore and walnut. I made the wheels using a hole saw and a Forstner bit. They came out alright, I guess. I am very pleased with the ladders. I made a dowel for the rungs from a video I saw on YouTube. Many coats of poly. It was fun to do but took forever because halfway through my bandsaw blade broke. I procrastinated on getting a new blade.
I have a cardboard box that I place over items I have applied a finish to. It protects the finish from any dust I happen to blow around while working on other projects.
Just to clarify, the derivative work only applies to the pattern not the finished piece cut from wood. Is this correct? If not there are a whole lot of us in violation.