Reading Aids, Bookmark and Wooden Page Hold Open Gadget
by buck2217 in Workshop > Woodworking
703 Views, 19 Favorites, 0 Comments
Reading Aids, Bookmark and Wooden Page Hold Open Gadget
I was at a loose end and had a couple of hours to spare and thought that I would make something for the Books and Bookshelves Contest.
I have gone for the Book Accessories Category and am making a "Paperclip" Style Bookmark and Page Hold Open Gadget.
Supplies
Scrap Wood
Drill Press
Bandsaw
Forstner Bits
Bench sander
The Bookmark
The bookmark is a prototype, just to see if it could be done, so is made from a piece of framing timber.
I will make one out of Teak later.
First I sketched a rough plan on a handy scrap of paper.
Drawing on the Wood and Cutting the Outside
I then drew out the shape I wanted onto a piece of scrap framing timber and using the Bandsaw cut the outside shape.
The timber was an offcut found in a skip and is about 50mm x 5mm
As you can see by the numerous pencil marks a bit of guesswork was used to get the shape I thought was best.
Drilling the Holes
Using my pillar drill and various size Forstner bits I drilled the internal holes of the "Paperclip", as you can see I started cutting it out with the bandsaw then realised that I needed to drill one more hole (the smallest).
Fortunately I was able to do so without anything breaking.
I bought a full set of Forstner Bits recently from a garage sale really cheaply and have to say they are excellent
Cutting Out and Sanding
I then completed cutting the shape and sanded using increasingly finer grades of sandpaper to remove any bandsaw marks.
In Use
Here it is shown in use (appropriately in a woodworking book!)
Bonus - Because That Didn't Take Very Long
I was expecting the "paperclip" to take me longer (as I am generally an oaf and was expecting to break at least one while making it)
So a "Bonus" 'ible.
A friend gave me a few lengths of this wood to make him 2 challenge coin holders, I believe that it is Totara.
It came from the framing of his house when renovated so is over 100 years old (he lives in a villa in Auckland)
When I was making his coin holders I really liked how this cut and polished, he was happy for me to keep the spare pieces.
Cut a Slice
I cut a slice off the end roughly 2cm thick and gave it a rough sanding on the bench sander. I then marked the centre.
Marking Our
With a compass and pencil I marked out the shape that I wanted.
Thumb Hole
I selected a Forstner Bit approx the size of my thumb and drilled a hole in the centre using the Pillar Drill.
(Actually the hole is a little large for by thumb, but I expect that I will sort that out at some point with a hammer and my clumsiness!)
Shaping
I then used the bandsaw to cut the outer shape.
Sanding
Finally I used the bench sander to sand the block into a more streamlined lozenge shape and applied a coat of Neopol furniture polish to bring out its colour.