View allAll Photos Tagged ToolBox
Vintage Waterloo metal tool box with metal handle and removable tray. Looks to have originally been a green color and has been painted a vibrant blue. There is some surface rust, particularly in the bottom of the tool box (see pics), and a few areas have chipped paint. Dimensions are approximately 19(l) x 7(w) x 9(h).
My new Dutch Toolchest.
The lower compartment is kind of a mess: I'm going to need to find a better way to organize it. It currently holds a combination plane + blades, a rmoving fillister plane, a mallet, a hammer, a brace and forstner bits, a coping saw, and a 16" combination square.
You can just see the tip of the Veritas Carcase saw poking down from the top compartment.
Canadian skeptic Michael attends the Saturday night banquet and magic show at Skeptics Toolbox in August, 2007.
Summer is over, time to get back to the jobs that had to be fixed around the house and that were put on hold in the summer.
Enjoy, and fav it if you like
This horse sculpture was commissioned by the residents of Morundah to commemorate 100 years of both registered and bush picnic horse racing in the village. It was made by local artist Andrew Whitehead of Urana. The horse was named " Toolbox "
Vintage Waterloo metal tool box with metal handle and removable tray. Looks to have originally been a green color and has been painted a vibrant blue. There is some surface rust, particularly in the bottom of the tool box (see pics), and a few areas have chipped paint. Dimensions are approximately 19(l) x 7(w) x 9(h).
Min gamla hederliga Kamasa 88-bitars verktygslåda. Slipning av gräsklipparkniven stod på tapeten.
Graphics from brochure. For more info, visit: www.ericsson.com/ourportfolio/products/microwave-networks
This is my Christmas present for this year from my wife. I finally have a real tool chest for the garage. I can hardly wait to get all of Grandpa's tools organized in it!
I built this box last night as a way of developing my understanding of a traditional Japanese tool box. It's just balsa wood: not really serious woodworking at all. But the more often I build these projects, the easier it is to think in three dimensions. And the easier it is to build these boxes again in full size, full-weight materials.
All of this is training for the Kavad, of course.