Eugene Has a Maker Space with a laser cutter. It's a pretty cool machine that can cut acrylic and quarter-inch thick wood. One of these days I'm going to have to cut cardboard stock and see if I can use it for various paper projects.
Alas, I missed the time two weeks ago someone used it to burn an image of their face into toast.
Last week I cut out an Eye of Horus. That project mostly worked, except that for whatever reason, the cuts didn't go all the way through. One theory is that the birch-ply I used has some uneven spots in it where the laser hits glue or a knot or something. I spent a lot of last weekend with various sharp, thin tools prying at charred wood.
The Eye was good for giving me an idea of how close I could place cuts to each other without becoming too fragile (about a sixteenth of an inch) and what to expect using a laser to cut wood.
My niece has a birthday coming up, so I thought I'd make a birthday night light for her.
It took me a while thinking how to put box sides together, but I came up with a mortise and tenon design that would allow cuts from a single piece of wood.
Since the cuts were mostly straight lines, the design took about twelve minutes to cut. I did a double-cut to insure there were no spots where the laser didn't make it all the way through.
When I opened the lid, there was the design. I hadn't masked the wood with tape, so there were some burn marks (which I expected).
For the most part, it was a clean cut. There were a few places where the bottom veneer was still uncut; I'm not sure if this is a focus problem or maybe places where the wood doesn't vaporize and so soot or ash is blocking the laser's beam.
The tips of the unicorns' horns were a bit charred. I managed to hit the bottom limit to how small I can cut unicorns without damaging them (hey, what do you know: it gets really hot between the acute angle a laser traces over wood).
I'd also assumed that the laser beam was one or two photon's wide, and that the sides' mortises and tenons would fit snugly into each other. It turned out that (hey, surprise!) the vaporized cut is about thirty thousandths of an inch wide, which meant the quarter-inch cuts I'd made for the mortises were noticeably deeper than the quarter-inch thick tenons. The difference wasn't too bad, and it gave the box a Frank Lloyd-Write or medieval appearance (especially since the mortise and tenons had a distinctly charred look to them).
I think for a more snug fit, I'd have to cut each side separately (so that the mortise from one side no longer form the tenon of its adjacent neighbor) and then scale them down about 99 percent.
"It looks like a puzzle," Mark said when I brought the box home to assemble.
I daubed wood glue between the sides.
My original plan was to have unicorn-shaped holes that an LED could shine through at night.
I went back and forth between wanting to leave the unicorns in their unicorn-shaped holes, or taking them out and gluing them on the plain sides.
Night-light functionality won out, and I left the holes open.
In this picture you can see where some of the veneer hasn't burnt all the way through. I had to use an exacto knife to clean up spots like this.
I also wanted a picture of the side design, because rotating the sides in my head to figure out if they would mesh with the bottom piece and other sides was really hard.
I had cut out two square-shaped pieces of wood. These became the box's lid; the smaller square fits in the rim, while the larger piece sits on top.
I held the box together with rubber bands while the glue dried.
At one point I was straightening up and I put one of the unicorn cut-outs on top of the box's lid.
"Oh!" I said, and so did Mark. He convinced me that one of the unicorns should go onto the lid instead of the side.
"Serendipity" would make a good unicorn name.
Later, I put a LED candle into the box and nearly died from the squee! factor.
We're still debating a finishing. When I asked The Child what he thought about it, he said that the burn marks made the lamp "look like it had been in a fire storm."
Also, it does smell a little bit like a campfire, which isn't the sort of thing parents like to smell in their children's bedrooms.
It's possible that glow-in-the-dark paint is in a unicorn's future...
Showing posts with label unicorns. Show all posts
Showing posts with label unicorns. Show all posts
Sunday, May 22, 2016
Tuesday, May 10, 2016
Gym Unicorn: Sought by Many, Tamed by Few
The pollen is officially here.
Working out: I found some exercise videos on-line and applied them to my routine. What I noticed was that my posture slips unless I'm thinking about my rhomboids and that some of the rowing motions I do probably work a little better if I imagine that I'm pulling back with my elbows instead of my hands. Went Saturday: About 210 calories in 25 minutes on the elliptical (I'm noticing my left hip gets a cramp if I start up too quickly). 100 calories in 10 minutes on the rowing machine. 3X12 at 15 on the assisted dip and chin machine. 3x12 at 50 on the pec fly (with a wider setting so I'm starting out a little more stretched out than I had been). 3X12 at 80 on the lat-pull down (being careful to pull from the rhomboids and not move my torso so much). 3X12 curl-ups (which I guess are really called vertical crunches or something). 3X12X35 lbs barbell curls. An assorted number of overhead dumbbell triceps curls until I had to flee the gym to avoid something horrific over the stereo.
I've been using a calendar app to remind me to go to the gym, and I think it's helping. On the plus side, I think I'm getting rid of some flab. On the minus side, I'm feeling sore; sometimes I think it's from when storms roll in, but other times my joints feel a little worn. I guess that's the peril of being over 50.
I saw an internet picture of a shirtless buff guy in a kind of unicorn outfit (rainbow lighting unicorn pants, fluffy white hat thing with a thick golden unicorn horn, and rainbow leg warmers). I'm having a moment of ambiguous body goals, because I'd like to look like that; but on the other hand, unicorn guy isn't an ectomorph; but back on the first hand, I think I could get obliques like that; but back on the second hand is breaking down my body into various sets of -oids a dismembered way of viewing myself; but back on the first hand "and I'd be as hard as nails / and they'd only want me more / if I was a folly girl ... (and continuing Dot's song, '...nah, I wouldn't like it much / married men and stupid boys / and all the smoke / and all the noise...").
Friday, May 29, 2015
Unicorns!
I mentioned on other social media that I had made a Unicorn Mobile for my niece's birthday.
More pictures here: Unicorn Album
I also made her a three-fold card. I think the next time I do something like this, I'll be a little more careful making the tree frame so it is easier to see the unicorn (or whatever the focus is) without it being obscured by random branches or tree trunks.
More pictures here: Unicorn Album
Thursday, November 20, 2014
Squick and Unicorns
Last night I discovered that the funny sexy-farce I'd written was squicking people out because readers missed the single cue that the couple was married and not brother and sister. I was assured later that at least I hadn't won a Leon West award.
Yesterday was a craft day. On the plus side: Unicorns! On the minus side, a star mesh that I'd worked on had a misconfiguration in it, with the result of creating a triangular bowl and not a hexagonal one. I could have gone on to make half a tetrahedron, but I'd been aiming for a dodecahedron.
The unicorns came out really well. The shop keeper and I were in squee! mode for a full five minutes. I particularly like the way the unicorns' horns came out. I'm hoping to turn this into a shadow shade for my niece.
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