Last time out, Rob asked for ideas
for holiday gifts, and our readers responded generously with
suggestions. Here are a few of them. - Editor
"Hi,
Rob, I feel your pain. I go through this routine yearly. Do you have
a small lathe? I don't do a lot of turning, but when I do, it's
usually around the holidays. Another favorite of mine is the business
card holder, [pain in the a**] to build one, but a batch of six would
make the aggravation even out a little. I don't know how many gifts
you need to make. I have six for sure, and I make two spares for
those awkward 'oh, I didn't get you anything moments.' Usually I have
a couple of pens at the ready. I made a 'batch' of coffee grinders
one year; never again, what a disaster." - Doug Whitson
"Several
years ago, I had the same problem. What I did was get a three-ring
binder, and whenever I came across a picture, plan or whatever of an
item I thought might make a good Christmas (or other) gift, I put it
in the binder. By now I have several subdivisions of types or things.
I just use the idea
and almost always modify it to my material, taste or whim. Gifts
given range from keychains, bottle stoppers, trivets, breadboards,
sushi trays, cedar planks, turned bowls, small boxes, booster seats,
picture frames and of course all kinds of toys for kids and for
adults (games, rattles, cars, trucks, trains, planes, etc.). Most are
made from scraps!" - Ron Orr
"Actually,
I have one serious one and one not so serious. The
not so serious idea is the dulcimer featured in the Nov-Dec 1989
Woodworker's Journal. I built it for a 21st birthday present for my
son. Using a single piece of cherry salvaged from a woodyard dumpster
in Schwetzingen, Germany, I resawed the stock to 1/8th inch and did a
(I think) decent job.
"The
serious idea is making footstools. I've been making them for 10-15
years now and give them for wedding and birth presents.They're
roughly one foot square, by six inches high with ogee bracket feet
and an upholstered cushion. You can make them as ornate or simple as
you choose. I've also done them with carved designs. Here in Texas,
UT or Texas Tech or Texas A&M logos are always sure to please.
With your level of expertise, you could probably mass produce five to
10 in a week." - E. J. Eiteljorge 
"So far, I have done for holiday
gifts: small picture frames, different kinds of boxes, jewels,
calligraphy, (paper, ink and pens), other small boxes, tea bags
boxes. For this year, the plan is to do dinner table centers. The
design is not finished yet, but will be a nice, flat piece of wood,
probably that can be folded, to be placed at the center of the table
and support the common things that you usually need (bottles, bread,
salt and pepper, salad dishes to share). Saludos from Chile." -
Luis Felipe Guglielmucci
“My friend built a brewery a few
years ago in a shell of a building that was built in 1856. I acquired
77 red pine floor joists, 27' x 14" x 3-1/4" from the
demolition. I’ve built harvest tables, coffee tables, end tables,
bars and a ton of other things from it. I now find the back corner of
my home shop stacked with cutoffs 12" x 14" x ¾' of the
stuff. (I hate to burn old beautiful wood.) So I’m making 14"
x 9" elliptical stools about 13"-14" high to put your
shoes on at the back door or mudroom. Tapered legs, high gloss spar
varnish finish, might even personalize them on a CNC machine." -
Joe Mathison
"I'm making wife a picture frame.
That alone would not usually do the trick. But I am making it around
a nice panorama picture she shot while on a business trip; I'm having
it printed way bigger than our printer would do. Will undoubtedly
spin off a handful of Harry Potter wands for kids. So easy, fun, you
cannot make them wrong." - Don Valleskey
"I’m on my fourth year of making
Christmas gifts (I have 18 in my extended family). I turn a lot of
them, because that tends to be relatively quick and easy. For a
personal touch, one of my favorites is a band saw box of the first
letter of their name (some letters work; some don’t." - Chip
Trebour
"Have you thought about intarsia
scroll sawing for a gift? I have found it to be very rewarding."
- Doug Green (See this issue's Reader's Project Gallery for more examples of Doug's intarsia work. - Editor)
"I have made my wife a floor lamp:
all turned but two shelves. She loved it, and my daughter-in-law took
the walnut one I made. Good luck." - Rex Worrell
"You can
find these old brass post office boxes on eBay or Craigslist. From
these boxes you can make banks or keepsake boxes for the kids. Cut
four pieces of nice wood either miter cuts or fancy dovetails. Make a
cut on the top piece for the coin slot and your set. Kids love them
and you can knock out several using a jig." - Brent Gayler
" Lately,
since we are slowly sinking into a period resembling the Great
Depression, I've been going through an interesting periodical of that
era. I have a bound set of four reproduced volumes of 'The
Deltagram', from 1932 to WWII, and the very strong emphasis on saving
money, recycling materials (while somehow also using expensive power
tools!), is remarkable. It's worth a look.
"The
contributors, both readers and professionals, are constantly talking
about low material costs, using packing crates, etc. Many of them
seem to be unemployed guys trying to make a new living with widgets
and giftware. Ah, the days before China... While this resource must
have been mined over the years by other publications, there are still
hundreds of interesting ideas left, especially for toys, and a surprising
number of ideas for the newly-available plastics. All the
smoking-related items, of course, can be safely ignored.
"One very
striking aspect is how compact and clear the construction articles
are - one or two pages to describe fairly complex furniture, as if
the readers were mostly very skilled. Illustration quality is typical
for the era: amazing." - Richard
Stein
Have
Microwaves Grown?
We also heard
a response who had faced the same "cabinets around the
microwave" dilemma as one of the questioners in last issue's Q&A
section. – Editor
"In
response to the Q&A about the microwave that's too big: I've
already had to face that problem. It's actually simple enough, if
just a little unwieldy, to remove adjoining doors and outfit a
straightedge to allow a router -- trim or full-size -- to remove
sufficient material to allow the microwave to fit. I suspect that the
normal opening was on the order of 29-1/2" back when the kitchen
and cabinets were built, but microwaves have grown. I've seen this in
several kitchens, mine and friends'. Perhaps a little research will
yield the information on when the standard case size increased."
- Gerry Creager