Sidebar

Woodworking

woodworking
Woodworking alleycat 4 days ago 100%
New instrument! A rebec - kind of an early precursor of a violin. https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/0f74a9ba-1641-4937-a11f-132ca99c6bba.jpeg

Most parts are cnc-carved. The body is usually carved from a single block of wood, but for my cnc, I split it into three parts, including a decorative strip of amaranth. Vibrating string length 29.5cm (3/4 violin). Strings are Aquila F-Red superior tension, G-D-A. Materials used: maple, spruce, amaranth, ebony. Some build pics: ![https://pxscdn.com/public/m/_v2/632520794410387667/586f75268-5004eb/p0WyoXm7hbXQ/8UuyIqEgB7QXTob7l3gnyINpnnoAdVXPuFSdwCU3.jpg](https://pxscdn.com/public/m/_v2/632520794410387667/586f75268-5004eb/p0WyoXm7hbXQ/8UuyIqEgB7QXTob7l3gnyINpnnoAdVXPuFSdwCU3.jpg) ![https://pxscdn.com/public/m/_v2/632520794410387667/586f75268-5004eb/W0pwDFUugibK/796cZ7IMdFWwtGAqbxV8o5aX6FDZA0MY7pn7srWu.jpg](https://pxscdn.com/public/m/_v2/632520794410387667/586f75268-5004eb/W0pwDFUugibK/796cZ7IMdFWwtGAqbxV8o5aX6FDZA0MY7pn7srWu.jpg) ![https://pxscdn.com/public/m/_v2/632520794410387667/586f75268-5004eb/cGr758rOlcKG/wYshSIstTgNVQeD9SP3JnV1HWJMBxFVBIiUaau9w.jpg](https://pxscdn.com/public/m/_v2/632520794410387667/586f75268-5004eb/cGr758rOlcKG/wYshSIstTgNVQeD9SP3JnV1HWJMBxFVBIiUaau9w.jpg) ![https://pxscdn.com/public/m/_v2/632520794410387667/586f75268-5004eb/MAAlUaDPI6w3/MZkE6pilc8pzFtGL6iS9AVoM927gEPhzVZsiehC9.jpg](https://pxscdn.com/public/m/_v2/632520794410387667/586f75268-5004eb/MAAlUaDPI6w3/MZkE6pilc8pzFtGL6iS9AVoM927gEPhzVZsiehC9.jpg) ![https://pxscdn.com/public/m/_v2/632520794410387667/586f75268-5004eb/54tFPFbmKaSG/yV5SGVL56BsQtuSTgzIKTsIDRqGYX8BS2B2hUrTR.jpg](https://pxscdn.com/public/m/_v2/632520794410387667/586f75268-5004eb/54tFPFbmKaSG/yV5SGVL56BsQtuSTgzIKTsIDRqGYX8BS2B2hUrTR.jpg) ![https://pixelfed.social/storage/m/_v2/632520794410387667/586f75268-5004eb/DJXZ42HTD65o/VG81W50MWzUfITDaw7Yt35qHHe5wXw7ZJs4pLLOo.gif](https://pixelfed.social/storage/m/_v2/632520794410387667/586f75268-5004eb/DJXZ42HTD65o/VG81W50MWzUfITDaw7Yt35qHHe5wXw7ZJs4pLLOo.gif)

129
19
woodworking
Woodworking Prettywhooped 1 week ago 98%
Love a good set of rim jobs https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/f0ae55fd-4eeb-4f73-91ba-533027919ff9.jpeg

Continued from previous posts. As usual, it took longer than expected, but here are the rims all bent and blocked up. Next steps will be getting the tops and backs all braced up and voiced. After that I’ll install the kerfed lining and side braces, do some final bowl sanding, notch the lining and finally put the boxes together. Simple as that. Should have more to share in the coming weeks. Thanks for the support! Happy to answer any questions!

131
11
woodworking
Woodworking Knitwear 1 week ago 100%
Advice for managing folding table legs

Noob here I have a wooden sheet of plywood that acts as a protective topper for an outdoor bath tub (don't ask). I'm looking for a way to add folding legs to the underside that will rest in the bath tub when the topper is on, and fold out to form a table sitting alongside the bathtub while it's in use

6
6
woodworking
Woodworking IMALlama 2 weeks ago 97%
Ever catch yourself spotting burls during your everyday life? https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/d04a6863-106a-43e1-8ce8-5b0ef1651802.jpeg

Not *that* big, but it would still be interesting. I pulled some honey locust from our firewood pile a few years back and incorporated it into a desk. It has a fairly boring grain pattern, but I like the color a lot.

42
7
woodworking
Woodworking almar_quigley 2 weeks ago 100%
Choosing between joinery planes

Not sure how many hand tool users there are here but I’m going to buy a new plane and am debating between a plow plane or a combination plane (both Veritas). Plow plane gets me what I need today which is cutting grooves, dadoes, etc but the combination obviously gets a bit more in functionality and available blade shapes plus it has nickers on both sides so reversible direction. I already have a router plane with a fence which is almost as good as a plow but not quite. Trying to figure out if combination plane has any down sides to it at all that I’m not thinking about before I pull the trigger on it.

21
6
woodworking
Woodworking Policeshootout 3 weeks ago 98%
Four-Poster Maple Bed Frame postimg.cc

My first time building any sort of furniture. I'm a journeyman redseal carpenter in Canada and spent my career building houses for 15 years and recently started a new job where I have access to a shop and some better tools.

73
16
woodworking
Woodworking loopy 3 weeks ago 100%
low Roman bench and joiners mallet postimg.cc

I made a low Roman bench out of a piece of bowling alley that was being trashed and some old fence posts. I fitted the legs with slanted mortise and tenon joints and realized that was a lot of work, so I did the other side with bored out round mortise and tenons, which was somewhat easier. There is a notch in place of a full vice, and I mad e a “crochet hook” attachment for wedging up large boards for edge planing, but it split so I’ll need to figure out a different grain direction. More pics: * [square mortise](https://i.postimg.cc/YqB3377N/IMG-8424.jpg) * [round mortise](https://postimg.cc/WDr0szkP) * [wooden bench dog](https://postimg.cc/hQ4m803S) * [notch vise](https://postimg.cc/ftfX0PC2) * [round mortise needed a peg](https://postimg.cc/XrBCgqxy) * [crochet hook](https://postimg.cc/dL1dL4y6) I also made a new joiners mallet. My other one’s handle broke because it was pretty soft. The head is a chunk of 3” thick red maple that I’ll use to make my full-sized bench top, and the handle is something dense (oak?). I had to slim down the end of the handle so it would fit through the head. I cut the curve of the handle by cross-cutting lines and then chunking them off with a hatchet and smoothing it off with a spokeshave. I didnt have an actual mortise chisel, so I essentially had to chisel out the whole mortise. I plan to go back and clean up the fit a little better and smooth out the edges later. I’ll use both of these to make a larger bench to work with, and use the Roman bench as a sawhorse. Pics: * [joiners mallet](https://postimg.cc/0bBSmDGs) * [head](https://postimg.cc/QBLWYDnY) * [handle](https://postimg.cc/cKQtVzpx) * [starting handle](https://postimg.cc/TppLR1zH) * [smoothing handle](https://postimg.cc/hh4Q5ppn) * [starting head](https://postimg.cc/Lgsqg8n5) * [making handle smaller to fit](https://postimg.cc/TpFyhGG2) * [cleaning out head](https://postimg.cc/47P7394j)

54
5
woodworking
Woodworking PlantDadManGuy 3 weeks ago 100%
DIY router planing jig help needed https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/8f5fdbdb-ee29-49d8-b158-7e0aefb058c7.jpeg

Bought this black walnut cookie off of Facebook marketplace for a good price. The only catch is it is warped, cracked, cupped, and twisted. It's about 4 in thick and that's plenty of material to make a coffee table, but I need some advice and guidance on making a router planing jig please.

51
17
woodworking
Woodworking alleycat 4 weeks ago 100%
How can I mask off an area from an oil finish?

I have a workpiece that I want to give an oil finish, but a certain area needs to stay oil-free, because I need to attach a part later on using hide glue. What masking method is safe for oil?

18
8
woodworking
Woodworking NataliePortland 1 month ago 98%
Made the potting shed of my dreams ❤️

The potting bench has a hole so that soil can be brushed into the bucket below. I was able to salvage some of the older boards from the old pile of junk that stood there before, which are in the roof. Speaking of the roof, see how some of it is clear? I’m going to build a cold frame into that part of the roof for hardening off plants! I’m having a hard time deciding how to do that but though. The wife wants gravel on the ground but I’m not so sure. I think that the gravel will just end up filling with dirt and debris and weeds. I think I might prefer to just leave it bare earth. What do you think?

118
9
woodworking
Woodworking NataliePortland 1 month ago 93%
Congratulations to @Captain Aggravated the winner of our summer '24 woodworking contest!

With their 'Tale of the Cedar Planter Box.' This beautiful planter is now the new icon for our community and they are credited on our sidebar! Question for the winner: what would you choose for our next theme if we do another contest in the fall or winter?

38
5
woodworking
Woodworking alleycat 2 months ago 95%
How can I drill a hole into a large workpiece at an exact angle?

I need to drill holes at exact positions to affix large workpieces to my cnc for two-sided machining. My drill press is not large enough to reach all drilling positions, and drilling by hand often results in a non-90° angle. I know for metalworking there are magnet drill presses to drill holes in steel beams. But is there something similar for wood?

19
11
woodworking
Woodworking Marafon 2 months ago 94%
Baby Shower gift. Kid won't be able to read for a long time but I think it turned out nice.

Thin pieces of white limba and purple heart laminated to a piece of walnut and then hand routed with a v groove bit. Put a chamfer on all the edges to give it a purple heart border and then I think I finished this one with Polycrylic. Pounded a v tooth wall hanger into the back and called it good. ![](https://sh.itjust.works/pictrs/image/11c5ad7f-019d-45ee-a7a1-233686b9ee3c.jpeg)

33
2
woodworking
Woodworking jubilationtcornpone 2 months ago 98%
New (To Me) Planer

I had to show off my newest acquisition. Picked up an old Rockwell 22-650 planer from a guy on Craigslist. I replaced the knives, greased it, and dialed it in. It works great! If I ever have to move it again, I'll get someone with a tractor to help. Still not sure how I managed to muscle all 400+ lbs of it into the basement by myself. I was dumb enough to try that once but not enough to do it twice.

94
10
woodworking
Woodworking NataliePortland 2 months ago 91%
Does anyone have a trick for this problem with self-driving screws?

Situation: using a screw gun to drive in the self-driving screws (the star shaped ones) horizontally, and sometimes at a difficult angle above my head. Hard to get good leverage like that. The driver starts spinning the screw but it doesn’t catch right away and then the screw jumps out and falls on the ground. Has this happened to you? Is there a trick for that?

19
13
woodworking
Woodworking Kallioapina 2 months ago 94%
"Pain dog" pain hook

A pain hook (self-use massage device for the neck and back) made from a pine branch. Snoopy-like dog appeared from the branch while whittling, hence the name. Lightly stained with walnut colour stain and a light beeswax layer on top of that so it feels smooth on the skin. Handle made from old repurposed leather belt strips. These pain hooks are an old Finnish and Karelian thing for massaging one's neck and back, and I was wondering if these sort of self-care "devices" are known and in use in other cultures?

59
7
woodworking
Woodworking pageflight 2 months ago 100%
How to attach miter saw to flip top worktable?

I've built the section of the table that flips. On the saw side, I have 1-1/2" to build up so the bed of the saw is flush with the rest of the table. How would you attach the saw so it's secure to flip upside down? The top only has holes at the front, for inserting a side clamp. ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/97fc2f8a-61cb-4a99-85d0-0029b99096b0.jpeg) Maybe bolt through the ends into a block underneath? ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/df9f6296-5b38-446a-81fb-ad1e3b6ab667.jpeg)

29
4
woodworking
Woodworking Reasonable_Guy 2 months ago 100%
Ladder Frame Planter Box https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/cdb20f00-ec2c-4b38-93bf-83369394184a.jpeg

Here's the planter I built last year. It's a simple stair stepped frame w/ wooden boxes that wrap store bought plastic window boxes.

46
0
woodworking
Woodworking NataliePortland 2 months ago 99%
I call it a Looky Lou. Can you guess what children's book inspired me?

Sorry for the glare making it hard for you to play along. I’ll have to take better pics. I came up with the idea last year, but I live on a dead end street. Then my cousin said I could put it at his house. He was helping me glue in the pieces when the concept of it finally clicked for him and he got so excited about what clues you could give to search for and things to put inside. It’s so fun. I went to the Goodwill “bins” and just filled up a box with every little object I could find. The pieces are hot glued in place just in case the box rattles. Maybe in a few months we can change the sign so you have to find new things. I can also remove entire shelves or maybe just pop off the toys. Hot glue comes off easy enough. I live in Portland and would love to make another and find someone around willing to host it in their yard. So if you’re interested let me know.

127
8
woodworking
Woodworking Mwallerby 2 months ago 97%
Desk riser thing I just finished for a comish, really happy with it and now I get to never see it again yay!

Oak top, oak faced ply shelf with walnut edge, and sides made of _something_ from an old table ![](https://startrek.website/pictrs/image/59f01ea0-5b4d-4176-86cd-8226bd0c4354.jpeg) ![](https://startrek.website/pictrs/image/b23ff5d7-59cd-4e1f-ae33-1d62f34b8239.jpeg)

72
2
woodworking
Woodworking captain_aggravated 2 months ago 98%
Planter Box Contest Entry

Submitted for the approval of the Midnight Society, I present to you The Tale Of The Cedar Planter Box. Solid cedar, mortise and tenon joinery, with a nice bead detail on the slats. Garden hose sold separately, pine straw not included.

95
9
woodworking
Woodworking rescue_toaster 2 months ago 98%
Catwalk for neighbor's cat

So our neighbor's cat has been visiting us for a while, so I decided to build this ramp so that she could more easily get into and out of our yard. I'm not much of a woodworker, but was happy with how this turned out. It's made almost entirely from cedar fence posts. Nearly 18 feet long (3 fence posts end to end with the dog ear tip cut off). Ripped cedar planks into 3 for a frame/support to prevent flexing. Posts are pine 2x4, and go 18 inches into the ground, which was the majority of the effort, since our ground is like cement...

214
14
woodworking
Woodworking Prettywhooped 2 months ago 98%
Box follow up. Here’s some backs. Rims soon https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/3584dd11-2d83-4241-8c3f-5822422f5c18.jpeg

Bubinga, Plum, and Walnut (yes it’s 4 pieces; I had to get creative and it’s getting color so you’ll never notice 😄)

50
5
woodworking
Woodworking SolarMonkey 2 months ago 100%
Working with intimidating tools

I have very very old power tools. I cannot afford new ones. The problem is, if I’m being totally honest, I’m largely afraid of the tools I have. I’d like to get over this. How does one do that without direct supervision? More info: I inherited tools from my parents and grandparents. Things I could afford to replace, like drills and drivers, I did. What I have left are big bladed things (chop saw, table saw, tile saw, etc. no lathe sadly :( ) None of the users of these specific tools are still alive. They are all probably 30+ years old, and work fine, probably, but… are just super intimidating (tho my grandfather had a lot of pre-electrification manual tools and I love those - So nice to take a manual plane to a solid door and end up with something that closes properly!). Some of them have plugs that screw together so you can repair them and everything (those I probably won’t use, absolutely terrifying if you fuck up). I’m mid 30s so I remember most of these things being used but I also remember the table saw I have in my garage taking off half my step-dads thumb.. I know power tools today are built to be a lot safer, but I definitely can’t afford those (I wouldn’t even be able to afford these but they were free for me), and I don’t know anyone with power tool skills (last learning I got was in hs shop class almost 20 years back) so how do I get comfortable with them enough to actually use them for the little projects I need them for? I don’t live in a big metro area, so there aren’t clubs afaik.

22
16
woodworking
Woodworking Prettywhooped 2 months ago 98%
Starting in on a few boxes

Everything is Sitka. Back and sides will follow shortly. I’m what you might call a professional.

67
2
woodworking
Woodworking sneekee_snek_17 2 months ago 98%
A cutting board emerges

I've got my work cut out for me, there's a decent amount of flattening needed on a few strips, and the planer I have access to is abut rough around the edges, so not all the joints are perfect, but it's alright overall. Once it's flattened and cleaned up, the remaining aesthetic flourishes are to use walnut/sapele to put an edge around it or just cap the ends, then ease the edges and router handles into the ends. I was looking at the boos block website, and they offer the option to put the finger grooves in the middle or in the bottom edge and I really like the functionality of having them on the bottom

110
12
woodworking
Woodworking sneekee_snek_17 2 months ago 98%
So it begins

First off, boy did I underestimate how much wood a butcher block cutting board this size (approx. 15×20×2) would end up using. The joints also aren't perfect, but I don't have the time or energy for perfection at the moment, this one is kind of a functional proof of concept. I'm going to give it to a friend of mine, but I've been upfront that it will not be perfect. The next one, that will be made from the same beam, but MUCH cleaner, straighter-grained wood, will be more precise, more consistent color, probably marginally stronger because of the grain, just better in every way But this only took two days and like three hours of work to go from a massive, rough-cut hunk of maple to this, so I'm pleased with it ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/eaf7335f-d10c-4aad-989b-955d19c07bee.jpeg)![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/f61bb311-9920-45e2-b868-61c454c7be48.jpeg)

87
7
woodworking
Woodworking clay_pidgin 2 months ago 100%
Suggestions for a two-child height tracker

Hello Lathe Ladies, Mitre Mates, and Plywood Pals! I've been tracking my kids' heights on a wall for several years but I'd like a prettier solution. Something I can screw on the wall and mark their heights on (maybe temporarily and then go back with a wood burner or something). Ideally, sometime that's two identical adjacent pieces that I can give them if I'm ever lucky enough to be a grandparent. A straight 7' board with a cutout for the moulding and burnt or painted 6" increments is the simplest solution, but can y'all think of anything nicer? I would prefer to keep it on a semi visible wall instead of the laundry closet. Thanks friends.

20
9
woodworking
Woodworking litchralee 2 months ago 96%
A wood bench made from scraped pallets

This entry of mine will not match the customary craftsmanship found in this community, but seeing as this was formerly a pile of miscellaneous, warped scrap 2x4 segments recovered from old pallets, I think I've made a reasonable show of things. This bench is for my homegym, designed to be stood upon, which is why there's a rubber mat inlaid on the surface, a leftover of the gym floor. My design criteria called for even the edge of the top surface to support weight, so the main "box" of the bench uses 2x4 segments mitered (badly) together at 45 degrees, held together with wood glue. I then routed the inner edge to support a 1/2" plywood sheet, which is screwed into the box. And then the rubber mat is glued down to the sheet, so there are no visible screws. Finally, the legs are also 2x4 segments, cut so the bench sits 43 cm (~17 inch) from the floor; this is only coincidentally similar to the IPF weightlifting bench standards. I used screws instead of glue, just in case the legs needed to be shortened later. All edges were rounded over with a 1/2" bit, as the bench is expected to be picked up and moved frequently. And everything stained in cherry and clear-coated. Some of the annoyances from using scrap included: * Stripping old paint off. Awful chemicals, awful scrubbing, awful disposal. * Sanding away twists along the 2x4 segments * Filling nail holes or arranging them so they don't draw attention * My lack of experience with clamping and gluing wood that's not dimensionally consistent ![wood bench beside a leg press](https://sh.itjust.works/pictrs/image/235cb904-d512-402e-b620-f6cbc45b187b.jpeg) If I were to do this again, I'd figure out a way to reduce the amount of routing needed for the inner edge, since I essentially removed 0.75 inch by 1.5 inch of material all around the edge. This took forever, and perhaps a CNC machine would have simplified things, in addition to squaring and planing the surfaces before mitering.

72
0
woodworking
Woodworking sneekee_snek_17 2 months ago 98%
Cutting board questions

So I just picked up this 12"×6"×10' maple beam at an auction today and had to chop off two feet of it to fit it in my car. I'm thinking of making a couple end-grain carving boards for friends with what was cut off. I'm tentatively thinking of just slicing it into 2" cookies and gluing them together, but I've never seen a cutting board like this that wasn't a collection of like 1" pieces glued together. Is there any reason not to use larger pieces when gluing up a cutting board? Thanks in advance ![This is the face that was cut today, feels bone-dry](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/a6282e7c-c860-4cfe-8bdf-1deba64ca31b.jpeg)

54
14
woodworking
Woodworking sneekee_snek_17 2 months ago 95%
Olive wood uses?

In a couple days, I'll be the proud new owner of a big-ass maple mantle and 22 square feet of olive, which I've never worked with before I'm tossing around the idea of using the olive for a table top, but that's far from certain, as I haven't seen any of it in person yet. What experience do y'all have with olive and what do you recommend?

19
3
woodworking
Woodworking sneekee_snek_17 2 months ago 99%
My Proudest Creation

This is my first piece of furniture with hand-cut mortise-and-tenon joinery. It's far from perfect, but I managed to hide most of the imperfections inside the frame. I finished it with 50/50 beeswax and mineral oil. I think the table top and long aprons are cherry, with two strips of what may be oak in the table top? It was in the miscellaneous pile at my community workshop, so your guys is as good as mine. The legs and short apron are sapele, which is probably my favorite wood when it's finished, it's unbelievably lustrous in person. Happy to answer an questions, otherwise, I just wanted to share the first thing I've ever made that I didn't finish and immediately tear apart all the mistakes I made, I'm genuinely pleased with this one!

376
35
woodworking
Woodworking technomad 3 months ago 100%
fridge/cooler slideout (recommendations please)

Hey, I'm just wondering if any of you have built your own cooler slideout for your vehicle's cargo area or could recommend some good plans to go by.

12
1
woodworking
Woodworking NataliePortland 3 months ago 97%
Let's have another friendly woodworking contest! Make your best planter box by August 1

Thank you technomad and dubyakay for inspiring our third woodworking contest here. This contest will be to build a planter box or I guess a plant pot would work too. Submit your work as a post in this community by August 1 at the latest, and the post with the most votes will win. The image will be our new thumbnail picture and the user will be credited on our sidebar. I’ve noticed that posts often collect votes for up to like 3 days so I will wait until August 4 or something to announce the winner just to make sure everyone has had a chance to vote. Good luck everyone!

88
6
woodworking
Woodworking alleycat 3 months ago 95%
CNC-carving of "Bacchante with Roses"

Just a test for my new CNC machine. I got the file from here: [Scantheworld](https://www.myminifactory.com/es/object/3d-print-bacchante-with-roses-at-the-runion-des-muses-nationaux-paris-14240) and turned it into a relief using ZBrush and Photoshop. The wood I used is cherry and the sice of the carving is roughly 60x50mm.

68
3
woodworking
Woodworking original2 3 months ago 98%
my turning has improved a bit recently

And toolmaking, the gouge was hand-fashioned from some vanadium steel.

156
5
woodworking
Woodworking BlueSquid0741 3 months ago 100%
Doll house Christmas present (bit late posting!) https://lemmy.sdf.org/pictrs/image/fd0b694f-d4b3-4dac-ba9c-d6dca04c5ed5.png

I’m not active enough of an internet guy to remember to actually post stuff - so we’re going back 6 months… I surprised my daughter (and the entire family) on Christmas morning when they found this waiting in the living room. I hadn’t told my partner I’d been working on anything, kept it quiet. It’s all just pine, dressed all round. Had to go buy a cheap and nasty jigsaw to cut the doors and opening between floors since my coping saw broke whilst trying to work this (handle snapped clean off, thanks Stanley) The roof- cut at an angle, turned one piece over and glued it. Then stood like a statue holding it for half an hour pressing it against the ground until it dried enough. Couldn’t think of any other way to hold it tight at that angle -_- The floors and balcony are all slotted into through dados. Cut, chiseled and then cleaned up a bit with trim router. And I hate so much working pine with chisels! (I’ve since got a bigger router bit that would have made this much easier) Finished with water based Jarrah stain, with water based acrylic paint on the roof and “bathroom”. Some of that finish is _really_ sloppy, I was still out there late on Christmas Eve trying to get the last few coats on. A leftover sheet of mdf (think about 5mm) just painted and nailed in as the back wall. There’s a little set of stairs on the ground floor finished with dark carnauba wax. There’s also a little rope ladder going up to the top floor - was from our pet bird who had left us recently. A whole mish mash of different ideas here, but I just wanted to make something fun and interesting for my daughter. For what I wanted to do for her first big Christmas (just turned 3), this turned out better than I thought I could do. ![](https://lemmy.sdf.org/pictrs/image/0bbb718d-7c65-4e1b-8820-1a9668642b0e.png)

79
4
woodworking
Woodworking technomad 3 months ago 94%
hey, why is there a coffin on the thumbnail?

It's super cool and all, but also kind of ominous? I feel like something more inviting might be a better fit.

67
16