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Framing comp piece

Posted: Fri 11 Jun, 2010 2:45 am
by Nigel Nobody
I made this for the framing competition at the recent Melbourne PPFA convention and it won the "Funky Framing" category:
Funky1.jpg

Re: Framing comp piece

Posted: Fri 11 Jun, 2010 4:24 am
by Keith Hewitt
G'day Ormond,

COOL 8)

Like it

Re: Framing comp piece

Posted: Fri 11 Jun, 2010 7:18 am
by John
Inspired!

Re: Framing comp piece

Posted: Fri 11 Jun, 2010 8:13 am
by markw
Fantastic.

Re: Framing comp piece

Posted: Fri 11 Jun, 2010 9:46 am
by pinkybanks
That is wonderful, :clap:
I'm sure you could produce a series of those and market them to the trade.

Re: Framing comp piece

Posted: Fri 11 Jun, 2010 10:58 am
by stcstc
this is very very cool

would you mind explaining how you built it etc?

was it from bare wood, or actual mouldings etc

Re: Framing comp piece

Posted: Fri 11 Jun, 2010 1:51 pm
by Dermot
Very elegant.

Re: Framing comp piece

Posted: Fri 11 Jun, 2010 4:22 pm
by framemaker
Love this design Ormond! :clap:

looking forward to reading the methods used!

Re: Framing comp piece

Posted: Mon 14 Jun, 2010 7:58 pm
by Nigel Nobody
Thanks to all of you for your positive comments!

This frame was constructed from raw wood using standard woodworking joints. Stopped, half, (not quite half as the thickness of each piece was different) lapped joints in particular, except for the top peak which was butted together then a piece routed out of the back and a solid piece fitted and glued in for strength.

The size of each piece was such that the back of the frame is flat but at the front the bottom piece protrudes as do the top angled pieces. I have a circular saw bench and an El Cheapo thicknesser to size each piece.

The reddish rounded piece at the top is actually a flat piece that covers the top entirely with the front rounded off by planing at several angles with a small hand plane, then sanded to remove the flats made by the plane.

The rebate in the back was made with a small router, with a roller bearing on it. The rounded corners were chiseled out.

Acrylic interior house paint (blue) applied all over, then a coat of white wash, sanded randomly through the blue. This was the most tedious part. Another couple of coats of white wash, then masked off the top part to be painted red.

The frame was fitted up in the standard way and as it had to be packed in a box and thrown around by baggage handlers several times, acrylic glazing was used.

Easy peasy.....but time consuming!

Re: Framing comp piece

Posted: Mon 14 Jun, 2010 8:01 pm
by Nigel Nobody
pinkybanks wrote: I'm sure you could produce a series of those and market them to the trade.
I'm not so sure about that. It takes too much time to make them and finish them!

Re: Framing comp piece

Posted: Wed 21 Jul, 2010 12:31 pm
by Nickz1971
That really has the WOW factor !