Forgive the lack of pics, but the "projects" were made using reclaimed deck lumber, and some plywood.
I first cobbled together a shaving horse, using 2x4's, a few lengths of 3/4" dowel, and plywood (gasp!) for the seat and riser(for shaving). The pivot was made using 2 pieces of wood Lowe's used to support the composite decking delivered to my home. Now I can try out the spoke shaves I got from Harbor Freight, after scary-ing them sharp.
The other Saturday project was an elevated platform for my dog's food and water bowls. He is 16 years old, and it seems to be getting tough on him to reach down to food and water. I used my official calibrated hand to measure a height (8"),which seemed to work for my dog. For the top, I used 1/2" plywood (10"x8"), I measured the diameter of the bowls, and subtracted the width of each bowl's top lip. Amazingly, the holes were not too large after I finished cutting them. In practice, it was a tad too high, so I lopped off 2" from the legs (not my dog's). His sight is failing, but once I showed him where things are, he caught on to the idea.
I first cobbled together a shaving horse, using 2x4's, a few lengths of 3/4" dowel, and plywood (gasp!) for the seat and riser(for shaving). The pivot was made using 2 pieces of wood Lowe's used to support the composite decking delivered to my home. Now I can try out the spoke shaves I got from Harbor Freight, after scary-ing them sharp.
The other Saturday project was an elevated platform for my dog's food and water bowls. He is 16 years old, and it seems to be getting tough on him to reach down to food and water. I used my official calibrated hand to measure a height (8"),which seemed to work for my dog. For the top, I used 1/2" plywood (10"x8"), I measured the diameter of the bowls, and subtracted the width of each bowl's top lip. Amazingly, the holes were not too large after I finished cutting them. In practice, it was a tad too high, so I lopped off 2" from the legs (not my dog's). His sight is failing, but once I showed him where things are, he caught on to the idea.