Friday 4 July 2014

light butler

i love having a picture in my head and being able to make it real. so others can see it too.

for a while now i have been wanting to make a lamp that can light up your book that you are reading and hold the book till you have time for the next chapter.

ok sure put the lamp on a table and sit next to the table. but what if you could sit close under that lamp that had its own table.

i had 15mm (half inch) copper pipe left over from previous projects at home so that was it. i carves some feet out of some pallet wood with a jigsaw and some rasps. and made a little plywood base. this added weight and stability to the lamp that was about to grow out of it.

from here i started to build a little man with cross-overs for knees and combinations of 90 and 45 degree elbows for the hips shoulders elbows and neck.

it holds a little table made from an off cut i had int he shop. the base was stained and all the wood was given a coat of boiled linseed oil. the copper was cleaned off and also rubbed down with some linseed oil.

the cable runs up the left leg, up the spine and the light is operated by a foot switch. this was loads of fun to build! and i'm loving the end result.




best of all, the light butler is for sale... 



still alive

i have always thought that people that say that they don't have time for stuff just need to prioritize. i would like to apologize to those people... i have been extensively prioritizing the last little while and thus managed to both eat and sleep (a little). at least that is what it feels like. 

but i have been able to get my hands on some goodies and to make some other goodies and have been having fun. 

my automation for my gate, the gate motor, died. it gave us little notice and i found it rather rude. we had not other choice to replace it. like most diy jobs its always a quick and easy "little"' project until you get started. lucky for me i had ll the power cables and intercom cables conduits in place for the new installation. shock and horror thought when i removed the old motor to find that the conduit was coming up out of the ground int he wrong spot. it  was a long week, working on the installation after the kids went to bed every night but may i say, i wish the old unit had died earlier. it has been a lovely upgrade! i even installed safety beams so i no longer run the risk of my gate closing on my visitors cars! 

with the ground sloping quite a bit towards where the motor is placed, it is always a problem when it rains. loose soil gets washed into that area, grass cuttings joins the fray and regular cleaning around the mounting area was regularly required. this new installation was special and did not deserve that kind of invasion. 

so i tried my hand at bricklaying for the first time. i guess that is why i waited so long before posting anything about it. it was the first time. i needed to make sure that wall stays standing before i tell the world who built it... it sis also the only picture i have of the entire job. don't think it is too bad for a first go...