handyman dave
Newbie - Still old but not dead yet!
- Joined
- Dec 3, 2007
- Messages
- 661
Just finished this and thought some of you might enjoy seeing it. It was commissioned by a BOTL in Virginia.
This is made of first growth (virgin timber) yellow pine that I salvaged as stair treads from a 125 year-old farmhouse that was going to be torn down. The paint and ground-in dirt on the stairs was so abrasive that it made short work of a set of planer blades! (Yikes!) There are some patched nail holes that are unavoidable in material like this.
You can see the door latch at the middle, front surface of the side.
I resawed the board with the best figure and "book-matched" the two halves for the front door.
The interior is fully lined with Spanish cedar. The seal around the inside edge of the door is so effective that when the latch is released, the door is slowed in opening as the air squeezes in around the door edge.
The drawers are 3" deep and have slides extended beyond the drawer backs so that they can be completely accessed without the drawers falling out of the humidor. Notice the "book matching" of the Spanish cedar drawer fronts.
He will be picking it up this Friday and, although he has seen pictures as it progressed, I trust he will be pleased by the final product.
Nothing fancy but simple, unique and effective.
I have some wonderful first growth American chestnut salvaged as floor joists from a courthouse here in PA that would make a beautiful humidor. American Chestnut is now virtually extinct because of the imported Chestnut blight. Perhaps the next humidor will be out of that special material.
This is made of first growth (virgin timber) yellow pine that I salvaged as stair treads from a 125 year-old farmhouse that was going to be torn down. The paint and ground-in dirt on the stairs was so abrasive that it made short work of a set of planer blades! (Yikes!) There are some patched nail holes that are unavoidable in material like this.
You can see the door latch at the middle, front surface of the side.
I resawed the board with the best figure and "book-matched" the two halves for the front door.
The interior is fully lined with Spanish cedar. The seal around the inside edge of the door is so effective that when the latch is released, the door is slowed in opening as the air squeezes in around the door edge.
The drawers are 3" deep and have slides extended beyond the drawer backs so that they can be completely accessed without the drawers falling out of the humidor. Notice the "book matching" of the Spanish cedar drawer fronts.
He will be picking it up this Friday and, although he has seen pictures as it progressed, I trust he will be pleased by the final product.
Nothing fancy but simple, unique and effective.
I have some wonderful first growth American chestnut salvaged as floor joists from a courthouse here in PA that would make a beautiful humidor. American Chestnut is now virtually extinct because of the imported Chestnut blight. Perhaps the next humidor will be out of that special material.