My boyfriend, Joe O’Leary, is a very talented composer of piano music. I have made a video of him playing one of his compositions, ‘When I Daydream’.
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My boyfriend, Joe O’Leary, is a very talented composer of piano music. I have made a video of him playing one of his compositions, ‘When I Daydream’.
I have been working on a chess board. I am making it using solid wood rather than marquetry, out of purpleheart (A.K.A, peltogyne) and a lighter softer wood. Purpleheart is an extremely dense wood from Central and South America, which has a purple colour.
I first cut a similar rectangle out of both the dark and the light woods with the table-saw and cross-cut, and used the planer-thicknesser to make the thickess identical.
I then cut the wood into strips on the table-saw, and glued them together in alternating stripes.
I did it in two halves intially, because that was the length of my clamps. Once all eight stripes were glued into a solid piece, I sliced it up the other way on the table saw.
Then I rotated every other slice 90 degrees and reglued.
The next job will be to add a border and then sand it down and varnish.
How keen are MPs of each political party to engage with social media?
I thought this might be an interesting question to examine. I’ve been gathering some Twitter usage data over the last week, and realised I was able to attempt an answer.
If you can use the joining of Twitter as a rough measure of the uptake of the social media as a whole, then it is clear that the Liberal Democrats are more eager than the Labour Party, while the Conservatives are the most sluggish.
Proportionally, nearly twice as many Liberal Democrat MPs are on Twitter as Conservative MPs. The current proportion of Conservative MPs on Twitter is similar to the Liberal Democrats in September 2009.
Our Settlers of Catan board has at some stage got damp, and the hexes have curled. This causes us no end of problems trying to get the board assembled without overlap, let alone when balancing roads on the gaps between tiles. I thought it would be a fun project to mount it onto wood.
I bought a large block of rosewood for a ridiculously small price (£5), which was large enough to make bases for the game and the expansion. I started out by cutting a column from the block on the band-saw, and then cutting it into a hexagon-section on the table saw with its table at 30°.
I then set the band-saw fence at an appropriate thickness and sliced the column up like a piece of salami.
I then cut the edge shape on the band-saw. I decided to use straight-edged holes and prongs for the jigsaw pieces for simplicity.
This was then sliced to make the six edge pieces and four extension pieces. I removed the jig-saw holes with a chisel, and then sanded each one until the best fit was obtained. Some ended up looser than I wanted, but it was a very difficult thing to be precise about.
Then I sanded all the pieces, and mounted the cardboard. They were extremely difficult to glue as the card was so warped. I had to clamp the pieces in stacks of six or seven to hold the card against the wood, but the process of clamping invariably caused the card to slip on the wet glue. The best method I found was to let the glue dry half-way, and then clamp.
We went to the Botanic Gardens in Cambridge today, giving me another chance to play with the macro lens. I found it to be amazing at portrait photography too! I think this is the best picture of Sarah that I’ve taken.
I’ve recently bought a macro lens (100mm prime, F2.8). I’ve been missing macro photography since I sold my old Sony Alpha and bought the Canon, so I was very excited when it arrived.
It had its first outing in the back garden. It’s amazing how much wildlife there is around if you look.
The sign is now complete and is on the wall. It has been given a roof, three coats of wood preservative, and three coats of varnish. So hopefully it’ll survive the British weather.
We seem to have a recurring problem. Because our house has a name and not a number, visitors and delivery drivers struggle to find it. Therefore, I have been making a new large sign to put on the front.
To make it as easy to read as possible, I wanted to ensure there was a lot of contrast between the background and the letters. I’ve carved it from a piece of sycamore, which is a very light-coloured wood, and I’ll paint the letters black.
This is a stop-motion animation of the carving process, taken over a few hours on a Sunday afternoon. When I’ve finished weather-proofing, varnishing and painting, I’ll publish a picture of the final result.
It’s best in HD.
This Easter I went to stay with my family and a couple of friends. We went to Ely for the day in beautiful weather.