Planning to make an authentic reproduction of this box but I'm having trouble getting dimensions off the following pictue.
Planning to make an authentic reproduction of this box but I'm having trouble getting dimensions off the following pictue.
It looks 12 inches cubed to me! :-)
I think, though, that the glue-up might present a little bit of a problem.
Keith
Shouldn't really be a problem. Most of my work comes out having "features" like these!
Dave on Lake Greenwood, SC
That makes my eyes hurt just looking at it.
Guy,
Aren't Mondays bad enough already?
Photoshop Take a picture of your box and then edit it
It does look cool though! Someone figure out how to do it!
Jeff Sudmeier
"It's not the quality of the tool being used, it's the skills of the craftsman using the tool that really matter. Unfortunately, I don't have high quality in either"
I expect that it shouldn't be all that hard to make this cube. Start with 12 equal lengths for the edges, use your joinery of preference
(probably tenons rather than butt joints!) and dry fit. Choose the perspective point that you want to observe (take picture from) and
extend lines from that point to the back vertical edge, showing where to cut the the front top edge. The angle will be critical, since
there can be no gap ( or overlap) when viewed from the perspective point. Cut, glue, and photograph. Proper lighting for 'good' shadows
and shading will help. Gluing the cut edge will be a problem - perhaps a splint clamped across the cut will permit clamping
pressure and assure that the edge pieces are properly aligned.
I've seen pictures of such a cube from angles other than the 'proper' perspective point, but never attempted to make one.
Steve
Shortcut, n: The longest distance between two points.
you're allowed to ask that according to the rules. Are you serious?
Alan T. Thank God for every pain free day you live.
Somebody has way too much time on their hands.
Dan
Eternity is an awfully long time, especially toward the end.
-Woody Allen-
Critiques on works posted are always welcome
The center back leg is over top of the front top piece. I just can't see how this would be possible.
Never afraid to take a saw to a computer...
Leigh has a jig to do this. Works with a tool from Festool or Binford. I hear the Festool has better dust collection, thou...
So, did the month of April start and I missed it?
Photoshop:Originally Posted by Jeff Sudmeier
1) Make a duplicate layer of the cube
2) Stay on original layer and select the eraser tool
3) erase over the front / horizontal bar to reveal the vertical ( back corner bar)
As John pointed out above, there are jigs for this box. Personally, I like the Binford jig best...the dust collection isn't all that important when working with Shlamaca, which of course, is the perfect wood for this project.
Your pic brings back a lot of memories. Years ago I when was in a band, we were in the studio recording a album and simultaneously trying to come up with a design for the album cover. The studio we were recording in had several carpeted walls, and on one of them they had done a carpet inlay of the same box pattern illusion. We ended up using a redrawn version of the graphic for the album cover.
- Vaughn