View allAll Photos Tagged circularsaw
one side light masked by the boards edge.
board is part of my homes staircase.
the light i used had a very shallow reflector giving as much flood to the area as i could but i still needed to diffuse the output and for this i used a top of a skin oil spray which by luck fitted the torch (flashlight) perfectly.
45mm across
Fabricado en 1890 por el renombrado relojero Antonio Canseco, que se encuentra en el Centro de Interpretación Histórica del Valle del Tiétar, en el castillo de La Adrada.
…. weather permitting!!
A couple of jobs to do before I start on my own.
Stacksteads
Lancashire
England
The Sawyer controls the carriage that holds a popular log being cut into boards as a worker pushes a board down the rollers.
and his circular saw ...
in People Series 3 ...
Taken May 21, 2021 ...
Thanks for your visits, faves, invites and comments ... (c)rebfoto
acrylic on saw blade, 2012,
painted Dutch circular saw blade
signed and dated on the reverse
diameter 235 mm
executed in 2012
Jan Theuninck is a European painter and poet
www.boekgrrls.nl/BgDiversen/Onderwerpen/gedichten_over_sc...
www.forumeerstewereldoorlog.be/wiki/index.php/Yperite-Jan...
www.graphiste-webdesigner.fr/blog/2013/04/la-peinture-bel...
Our Daily Challenge: Tools
Tom is building a shed in the backyard so this challenge was perfect. I noticed that he was about to cut a piece with his circular saw. I grabbed my camera to get a little action shot. I had the Lensbaby Composer Pro with Sweet 35 Optic and 8MM macro converter on the camera and went with that.
This is not a shot that you would use that lens with the macro converter, but I kind of like the result.
Having some fun with an image shot in my backyard with the Lensbaby Composer Pro with Sweet 35 Optic and 8MM macro converter.
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A little product shot trying some ideas in the studio. If you like my photography please visit www.fulcrumimaging.com for more. Copyright 2014.
J.E. Martel Portable Saw Mill Carriage and Circular Saw on static display at Centennial Park located in Chapleau Ontario Canada.
The portable saw mill was built by J.E. Martel in La Sarre Quebec. Brought to Chapleau in 1950 to salvage timber after a forest fire in 1948.
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Today officially kicked off my Spring 2025 projects week. I have not done one of these since 2022, and I think I am long overdue.
I have three projects I am working on for this next week, and the first happens to be a lifetime dream of mine to build and stock a library in my house. And as it happens... my fiancée is an avid reader and has the same ambition, so win-win!
Today I spent the entire day cutting all of the width cuts, between the circular saw and table saw, and this was the first cut of the day-first cut for the library. This will be one of four lower cabinets, which will eventually connect to a floor to ceiling library / bookcase system. It's gonna be epic!
"Let’s be reasonable and add an eighth day to the week that is devoted exclusively to reading.” - Lena Dunham
Theme: Dream A Little Dream
Year Seventeen Of My 365 Project
Throw in a Skilsaw!
Apparently I am not very skillful at using it by all the rust on it. The hook is just in case I DO use it.
and I most definitely did NOT cheat. After all, I did skillfully compose this shot.
View wearing safety googles
for
Our Daily Challenge: Skil Wha? It's Skill? Dang it!
I save money by using a circular saw to cut my toothpicks in half. That way I have TWICE as many. Anybody have any bandages?
View with all your fingers
for
Sliders Sunday
HSS
On an old road we passed the remains of this mill in Quebeck, Tennessee. I could see the steam engine and boiler. The community was founded in 1880's by J.S. Cooper, a local sawmill operator.
At the recent Bicker Steam Threshing Weekend, there were various smaller displays of 'Yesteryear' activities. Tucked away in a shed we found this little belt driven sawmill display being powered by a small petrol barn engine.
The main photograph shows 'Tom' (as I have named him), dressed in period costume, adjusting the saw table, an operation which has to be liberally lubricated with Guiness :-)).
A profile shot of Tom is in the first comment box below.
This is likely to be my last upload for a week, as we are away from tomorrow morning for a week's holiday in Yorkshire. I will see you all on Flickr when we get back.
Today I started making my cuts on my next project: a wood cart to house and hold all of my grilling supplies. It will have one drawer for the supplies, a shelf for the wood chips, and a cabinet for the charcoal totes.
I always find it funny how much time is spent setting up the cut. Measuring, setting up bracing to hold your work, making marks then checking your marks, lining your blade with the saw bracing, and the list goes on. All that for what is usually one 30 second cut- but lesson learned it's always better to take your time and only have to cut things once!
Theme: Re-Creation
Year Eleven Of My 365 Project
"E. R. Parker, manufacturer and dealer in new hardware specialties, 227½ Wyoming Avenue, Scranton, Pa. Parker's Patent Combined Clamp and Filing Guide."
Handwritten in elaborate Spencerian script on the other side of this business card: "Presented by C. B. Winchell, Harrisburg, Pa."
The illustration of "Parker's Patent Combined Clamp and Filing Guide" refers to a patent for an "Improvement in Saw-Clamp and Filing-Guide" (see below) that was issued to Edwin R. Parker in 1879.
Improvement in Saw-Clamp and Filing-Guide. U.S. Patent No. 219,650, dated September 16, 1879.
"Be it known that I, Edwin R. Parker, of Scranton, in the county of Lackawanna and State of Pennsylvania, have invented a certain new and Improved Saw-Clamp and Filing-Guide . . . . The object in making this invention is to produce a convenient instrument or machine for clamping and holding the saw-teeth and guiding the file in filing all sizes of circular and mill saws of any gage, size, and shape of teeth, and whether the saw be on the arbor or removed therefrom; and the improvements consist, respectively, in the several devices, and in the combinations and sub-combinations, as hereinafter described and claimed."
the sawblades are marked 'Thos. Firth & Sons, Sheffield' with a windmill logo.
date & photographer unknown; whole-plate sheet film
Please press L
I converted this macro shot of a circular saw blade into a lithograph style image.
Posted for
Happy Slider Sunday April/07
An early morning start to my cutting, routing, sanding, and painting. I sadly got a bit over-heated, but hopefully tomorrow I will be able to assemble and photo some of the cabinets!
Theme: Re-Creation
Year Twelve Of My 365 Project
One of the strangest toys I have ever seen in a pound shop (and they have many strange toys!). I doubt very much its a completely original figure as they are almost all knock offs. Anyone got any ideas what it is based on?
As always, the paintjob was very poor so I have given him some dental work and a better eye (he needs to look after what few organic bits he has left!).