(in)frequently updated log of stuff

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Wednesday, November 28, 2007

coffee scoop

For my first turning project after getting back into the game, I decided to go small and turn a coffee scoop. It comes in the same sort of kit that the pens do, where you buy the brass parts and turn the handel out of whatever. I started with what appeared to be a really nicely patterned wood blank that I had laying around, but by the time I turned it down to size, there was no more interesting grain patterns left. So I bailed out on that before I assembled it, because it was really boring looking. And lets face it - if you're making your own coffee scoop, "boring looking" isn't really a desiralbe quality. The 3 plastic ones I already have were "boring looking" - I might as well have just stuck with those.

50 cents for a new brass tube insert later, and I found a piece of (what I think is) ziricote or bacote that was too short to make 2 halves of a pen, but plenty long enough for a coffee scoop handle in my pile-o-randomness. The end result is pictured throughout this post. I think it came out pretty nice.

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Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Coffee Table

I'm pretty much finished with my new coffee table. Given that it will take a lot of abuse, I want to put several more layers of polyurethane on it before calling it "officially done", but it's pretty close. Since the shop (garage) is so dusty, I've been applying the finish up on the dining table, so I had to put off the finishing project, what with Thanksgiving and the whole "needing the dinner table for dinner" thing. Women!

I used cherry for the legs and aprons, and imbuya veneer over MDF for the table surface. The more observant of you will remember that these are the same woods I used in the speakers I made several months ago. What can I say -- I really like the way they look together. Plus I was relatively certain that I wasn't allergic to either of them, which was a big deal for a "first forray back into woodworking." Sawdust, in general, is an itchy thing which tends to dry out skin, so naturally my mind went into paranoid mode as I was cutting the parts, but fortunately I didn't break out or anything.

The legs are made from 2 glued up pieces of cherry, totalling about 2.75" square. The outside edge is rounded over, and the inside faces are tapered to some degree that I found pleasing to the eye. I was intending on making them as close to 2" square as I could, but once I got done planing the 8/4 stock, they just seemed a little bit too narrow, especially when I considered how they'd look with the taper. I think I made the right choice -- the thicker legs add a nice visual balance. The aprons are inset about a quarter of an inch, which I also think add a nice look.

One of the legs came out a little crooked during the glue-up (I need more clamps!), but not enough for a casual glance to notice. Overall, I'm pretty pleased. We may have to turn into a "coaster-using" household, though, which would pretty much be impossible to enforce with 50% of our friends and 66% of the household members.

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Wednesday, November 14, 2007

molting follow-up

I've pretty much finished molting. I went back to the office for the first time on Monday, after working from home for about 3 weeks. I have to say - I got accustomed to having a fireplace in my "office". I'm going to miss that. That and spending more time with Judi. But mostly the fireplace.

Here is the latest udpate on the whole skin peeling off / rash thing.

  1. The dermatologist says it's (was) the most severe case of erythema multiforme (minor) that she has ever seen that didn't involve the patient (me) winding up in the hostpital due to it (the rash) either spreading to places like the esophogus (and therefore having breathing issues) or organs, or from getting some sort of secondary infection due to the large areas of missing skin (think burn victim, if it helps to visualize).
    • After my first visit, she actually called me at home a couple days later to make sure I was doing okay. At first I thought this was a really nice thing for a doctor to do, but then I came to the realization that it was because she genuinely believed I should be way sicker than I was, which worried me somewhat.
    • She also took my case with her to a local convention (I'm assuming a convention with other Doctors, but possibly it was dragoncon), and apparently all the other people there (presumably Doctors) agreed that I should have been way sicker than I was. So.. yay me for being special!
  2. Treatment involves "staying comfortable" and keeping the skin moist. And letting the rash run its course. And trying not to scratch yourself while you're asleep.
  3. In many cases the thing that triggered it can never be determined. Once everything settles down for good, I'll seek out an allergist to see if my "exotic woods" theory might hold any merrit. The trouble with my "exotic woods" theory is that the rash wound up in places that the wood had no contact with. And if it's something I breathed (wood dust) I should have had some breathing issues, which I didn't. Years of troubleshooting computers prevents me from accepting the fact that sometimes you can't determine the source of a problem. My "best guess" currently is that I had a contact reaction on my arms, neck, and to a lesser degree on my chest and ankles, where it first appeared. Then I figure I must have also been allergic to (something in) the ointment that I was given initially to dry out the skin. As I rubbed the ointment on, the rash grew and grew to new surrounding areas. Whether this is the case or not, the description fits the symptoms. I'll find out eventually once I determine if I'm allergic to those things.
  4. I have the blood of a 20 year old, apparently. (I was told this as she was looking at the results of some bloodwork). And I'm otherwise healthy. Just a little itchy now and again.
  5. And that's about it.

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