Mister S
Established Member
Just finished this, so I thought I'd share.
Only a small project, but one that I'm happy with now it's finished (it doesn't always turn out that way!)
It's pretty cold in the workshop at the moment so I wanted something I could spend a couple of hours at a time on (after letting the fan heater run for thirty minutes before I venture in).
I came up with the idea of a wooden bookrest. Not too big and I could use up some of my stock of small pieces of reclaimed oak. I couldn't find much in the way of design ideas on the forum, so I looked online and adapted the design of one that I found and liked the look of.
This was the outcome:
It folds flat
It stands up
The proportions look good
The oak is a good colour match with our kitchen
And it works!
Even with a big heavy book on, the centre of gravity lies within the base so it's stable.
I'm generally pleased with this and when I set out I thought if it turned out ok, I would make a few and put them away for presents at Christmas. Trouble is, it's a bit fiddly and took a lot longer than I thought to make. But I suppose I've done the hard bit of the trial and error learning so I could do a mini production run and save some time.
cheers
Steve
Only a small project, but one that I'm happy with now it's finished (it doesn't always turn out that way!)
It's pretty cold in the workshop at the moment so I wanted something I could spend a couple of hours at a time on (after letting the fan heater run for thirty minutes before I venture in).
I came up with the idea of a wooden bookrest. Not too big and I could use up some of my stock of small pieces of reclaimed oak. I couldn't find much in the way of design ideas on the forum, so I looked online and adapted the design of one that I found and liked the look of.
This was the outcome:
It folds flat
It stands up
The proportions look good
The oak is a good colour match with our kitchen
And it works!
Even with a big heavy book on, the centre of gravity lies within the base so it's stable.
I'm generally pleased with this and when I set out I thought if it turned out ok, I would make a few and put them away for presents at Christmas. Trouble is, it's a bit fiddly and took a lot longer than I thought to make. But I suppose I've done the hard bit of the trial and error learning so I could do a mini production run and save some time.
cheers
Steve