Building a Colossal Wood Picture Frame
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- Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024
- Making a picture frame from wood can be easy unless you are making it oversized. In a previous video, I showed how to glue a huge puzzle together. Now we are going to create a simple wood picture frame so we can hang that puzzle on the wall. Or you can build something similar for a painting.
I took a lot away from this process and I hope you can get inspired to try something new.
Gluing a Puzzle Video: • How to Save Your Favor...
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#pictureframe #woodframe #frame
John 3:16-17
I really appreciate there is no hiding of mistakes as it is encouraging to know that I am not the only one. I commonly refer to them as design modifications when things have to be altered to work.
I love the slip-ups, to human is error & no one's perfect. I'm playing catch up today.
Ha! That 4/4 cherry bit me in the back side this week 🙄 Made my first piece of furniture. A side table for my daughter. I wanted 1” legs. We are very rural, and drove 2 hrs to pick up the hardwood, so a bit difficult to just run for some 5/4. Ended up laminating two pieces for a 1x2 look,. Your 1/4 in face piece would have SO much easier, and I think would have looked nicer!
Thanks for showing the “opps”, the lessons learned are just as valuable. Think I will stick to signs and cutting boards for a while. It turned out beautiful, but lots of time, and lots of things learned!
Sounds like a piece of furniture she will cherish for a lifetime. And thank you for the support.
Agree with everybody else. Thank you for not hiding the mistakes. We may learn more from those.
Wow, everything went wrong in this build! Thanks for showing us the real world of woodworking.
Glad you liked it!
Love it!
Looks great.
I had great success with walnut, I also used maple to make splines across the corners that were put together at a 45°! It was the first picture frame I've made! And I'm very happy with how it turned out! Anyhow thanks for another great video! Take care.
Thank you very much for the suggestion. I might try that in the future.
@@SpecificLove7 your welcome. Keep up the great work.
You probably had less trouble putting that giant puzzle together than you did making the frame. But in the end everything looked great. If I started a puzzle that large I’d probably have to leave it to my son to finish after I died. I like puzzles, but you must LOVE puzzles.
LOL, I think of them as relaxing. They allow me to get out of my head.
The corners of my first picture-frame-like project turned out similar. The second time around I used a table saw sled and got much better results. 7:34
Looks Fantastic!!
Very cool
Lol 😂
I’m predicting you may be painting a room to match a puzzle!
Very nice, thanks for the video.
Gorgeous!
Don't know if you've seen the movie "Mr. & Mrs. Smith", but be ready to change ALL your furniture to match the puzzle colors, lol. For those who haven't seen it, she bought new curtains and, because they didn't match the colors of the sofa, she wanted to change the sofa, and everything else. BTW, good project!
To minimize tare out use some tape on the miter
That is a great idea. I guess I was not thinking that day, lol
Could zero clearance tape on miter saw. Good luck love your videos!
completely unrelated to frames but any videos with ideas about flat shelving. I just built a french cleat wall for use as a wall easel. I paint on Dibond aluminium so it cannot attach to anything and I was hoping to lean it up against the shelving on a the cleat wall. Great videos. thanks for any help
If I understand right, if you build a shelf that attaches to the cleat but hangs far below, you should be able to make it work.
ok great thank you. what is the strongest depth from the cleat or is closer to the cleat better for hanging weight that is close to the wall.
Years ago, I found a special frame that was sized for standard puzzles. The frame had a fiber board back and you built the puzzle inside the frame. When finished, there was a groove inside the frame to slide a plexiglass pane over the puzzle. the top of the frame was removable to allow the plexiglass pane to slide in or out. The result was you didn't need to glue the puzzle together. The advantage was that you could hang it up for a few months or years and later change puzzles with another standard size puzzle. That might be better option for your 1000-piece puzzles.
That sounds like a really nice option, I will have to keep an eye out for it.
I got it at a store that specialized in puzzles and games. They've gone out of business and I've never seen them again. However, if you made your own it would be a unique project for your channel!@@SpecificLove7