Up-down board
The main body of the up-down board is carved from a single piece of timber. The feet are sliding dovetails which act as ‘breadboards’ to keep the board flat and free from warping.
The one in the photos is made from Oregon fence posts someone threw out in Lilifield, Sydney. The bottom few centimetres were rotten but the other 2 metres of each piece was completely sound. This is what’s wrong with our throw-away society. Just because stuff is not fit for the original purpose, does not mean that it needs to be put in landfill.
The main body of the up-down board is carved from a single piece of timber. The feet are sliding dovetails which act as ‘breadboards’ to keep the board flat and free from warping.
The one in the photos is made from Oregon fence posts someone threw out in Lilifield, Sydney. The bottom few centimetres were rotten but the other 2 metres of each piece was completely sound. This is what’s wrong with our throw-away society. Just because stuff is not fit for the original purpose, does not mean that it needs to be put in landfill.
The main body of the up-down board is carved from a single piece of timber. The feet are sliding dovetails which act as ‘breadboards’ to keep the board flat and free from warping.
The one in the photos is made from Oregon fence posts someone threw out in Lilifield, Sydney. The bottom few centimetres were rotten but the other 2 metres of each piece was completely sound. This is what’s wrong with our throw-away society. Just because stuff is not fit for the original purpose, does not mean that it needs to be put in landfill.