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working from home today as my car is being repaired - completed a huge stack of filing which i found to be very therapeutic away from the interruptions of the office - staple, punch, file, staple, punch, file, staple, punch, file, staple, punch, file, staple, punch, file, staple, punch, file...
FILE Magazine Issue 2.
124 pages and over 3 hours of short films, documentaries and music videos on DVD.
FILE Magazine is a bi-annual publication featuring a broad selection of visual communication in the fields of graphic design, art, photography, fashion and moving image. Beautifully presented in a 30 x 39 cm hard cover with a full colour 52 gsm newsprint stitched inside. Each issue is accompanied by a DVD featuring short films, music videos and documentaries. A magazine to Watch & Read.
ACCESSION NUMBER: 2007.086.0002
PHOTOGRAPHER: Cecily North
DESCRIPTION: Our filing cabinets inside the vault
Information about the Douglas County History Research Center and photo reproduction information is available at www.douglascountyhistory.org.
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High quality steel vertical filing cabinet. Promo of 20% discount!! Japan Surplus from Megaoffice Surplus
This shot got beat-out by one that eventually made Explore....
I felt it needed just a little respect soooo.....
I haven't posted these colors often..It only happens ..Just a Moment....LOL
Have a Wonder-Filled Day...
Shoot Your Own..8 Nov....Photo Op.......Mid - River at Sun Set....
Fixturing a workpiece against the stop (bench dog and so on) is very common in woodworking, since it allows not to apply pressure by using vise. However, in metalworking it's rare, because more rigid setup is usually required and risk of damaging a part by vise jaws is lower (at least, it's easy to use softer spacers made of copper, aluminum or plastic). In traditional Japanese metalworking, vise is almost unknown tool. Parts were usually fixtured using various jigs, utilizing wooden wedges and metal brackets. One example of it is せん台 sen dai - scraping bench. I decided to follow the same way with making my tantō: not to use vise, but make a jig to hold it.
I made it of relatively soft and easy to cut basswood plank, then glued pieces together. Side pieces helping to keep blade vertical, front piece works as a stop. There is no wedges or friction parts - blade holds itself in this jig when force is applied when it's being filed with two-handed file I made before.
Advantage of two-handed file is that material removal rate is significantly higher, long scraper-style strokes helping to keep curvature uninterrupted and smooth, process is way less noisy because of virtually no vibration, usually caused by file, jumping on every unevenness and on workpiece edges.
To ensure comfortable work, jig should be tilted to make filing surface parallel to natural trajectory of hands. Here, I'm using some cedar bar leftovers for that. 20lbs barbell serves as weight to make everything steady.