hey it's Adam from tested in my cavewith another one day build what I've been noticing is that each time I postsome of the more repeatable craft projects that I do here in the cave likethe fire Lantern and specifically the poker table that they've been goingwildfire you guys really like those videos and I've I've in the past I'velike made the joke that tested is not a how-to channel it's more of whathappened channel so you get to watch me screw up in real time and and talk aboutit and we are still that kind of channel but I also watching the responses tothese build videos that people are building their own versions of I realizeI have something to contribute there too one of the things I build a lot in thisshop is boxes you know that whenever I find an object I love I make a box tocelebrate that thing in fact a box for my Blade Runner Blaster is the veryfirst of all the one day builds so today I'm gonna build a simple box for thisbeautiful pair of Apollo gloves made by Ryan Nagata and I'm gonna just walk youthrough the rudiments of how I make a simple sturdy lovely box now I likebuilding boxes so much I often go online and buy box hardware parts just to makesure I've got what I need when the time comes and so many box builds for mebegin with a examination of what I've got in front of me so I'm about to builda box for these NASA gloves which means I can throw out all these flowerycorners and stuff like that I think much more something along the lines of thesecorners might work for such a thing so I'm gonna pull out eight of those I'mgonna need a handle on top of the box I don't it's pretty straightforwardhardware store handle but I don't love it I think I'm gonna go with one ofthese which I had a while back and I'm still saving I'm gonna need some kind ofclosure for the box and on that front I have outas well ah these guys here these guys might be perfect so I've got one toothat's alright I have some ideas about the shape of this box so let me do threefour one two three four one two three four yeah so this is sort of thepreliminary shopping I might not end up using all these partsbut I might you will see see what else I've got here I've got these guys whichare a little more substantial but that you really would NASA be using these Idon't think so look at these guys oh these are prettier these are muchnicer yeah these feel more like a kind of a piece of NASA hardware to me ohI've true sizes look at this how well-prepared I am okay one two threefour when you use the small sizes one two three four yep okay I see now I'vegot two large with locks on them and four small one two three so let's dothat I've got two large in front and two small in the back cuz I like thosebetter than these now the question is how big should this box be when I amdrawing out how big a box should be I have learned the hard way to draw itsinterior I can't tell you how many times I've measured a thing that I'm gonnabuild a box for and then I build a box to the measurements of that and whatI've done is made a half-inch thick wooden box that's too small on theinside to hold the thing I want yeah I've made that mistake so I think thisone is pretty straightforward I think it's footprint is probably 14inches yeah let's say 14 by my 8 8 by 14 okay and then how high how high the interior12 is it gonna be wider than it is tall it's gonna be 14 yeah it's gotta be 40well it could be 13 actually 13 is better and 13 tall actually when I go 15talks I have I have the rudiments of my boxthe shape worked out let's cut some plywood that's some nice quarter inchply and like that let's see I've got a bunch of these smaller cuts of quarterinch plots would be great to use yours this is really nice stuff one two threefour five this is six ply beautiful finished quarter inch it's really robustcuts well oh it's just glorious to work with yes look at that I've got fourbeautiful pieces actually that might be the end of my good quarter inch plyalright so I got to make a note to get some more oh okay this is some niceeighth inch three ply birch okay I can use that for part of this I am NOT gonnause any of this luan here's a sampling of the different kinds of plywood I havelike this is some regular three ply kind of moderately it's not quite crap butit's not excellent I have beautiful six ply that stuff I love I've got somesuper three ply I think this is called luan so this is like a central layercovered by two veneers it's fine for sets theater sets it's actually whatmost theater sets are built out of I mean it's just a super common materialnot very good structurally and when it starts to go oh it goes so I think thisis enough here now I know I said that I was measuring the inside but I see thatI have enough slop so I'm gonna build the box to these actual dimensions eightinches by 13 inches by 15 inches in fact just the one dimension that I'm a littlenervous about is the 8 inch so I'm gonna do it eight and a half by 13 by 15 thereare six sides to this box these are three of themand these are indicative of the other three since the box is symmetrical thisone two and three side one and two and three have mates on their opposite sidesthat they are equivalent to so I need to come up with three sets of measurementfor these pieces because it's not just that all of the pieces are it's not thatpiece one is simply 13 by 15 and piece 2 is 8 by 15 if I want these to be mydimensions then I need to actually accommodate for the thickness of thematerial so now I make a cut list and the first cut the first decision to makewith a cut list is one of these pieces is going to be a full piece and theothers will be bolted to it so what's the full piece look there are plenty ofother ways of making boxes you can you can do 45-degree cuts and everything iscut to those extents I tend not to go for that level of precision here in theshop because I'm usually covering and/or painting the boxes so I'm just goingwith a you know edge gluing with some nails you'll see this later but herecomes the cut list I think piece 1 here is going to be thefull piece so I need 2 pieces cut at 13 inches by 15 inches then this piece isgoing to be 15 tall so I need 2 pieces at now I said I wanted the ultimatedimensions to be 8 a half since I'm using quarter-inch material this pieceis actually going to be 8 inches by 15 inches so that leaves the cut sizes forpiece number 3 and its mate on the bottom now I have to accommodate for thethickness of material which means I need to remove one quarter inch and twoquarter inches so instead of well let's just say that the actual box 2mentions as eight-and-a-half inches since I'm using quarter-inch material Iremove a quarter inch and a quarter inch that removes a half inch which means thefirst dimension for piece three oh so one two three the first dimension forpiece three is eight inches now on this side 13 it'd be 13 minus 1/2so it'd be 12 and 1/2 inches there we go that's my cut list to it 13 by 15 2 at 8by 15 2 at 8 by 12 and a half I'll tell you one more secret I uh actually let mejust double check it's really important when you're doing cut lists like thisnot to trust what they stated thickness of the plywood is you gotta measure itjust know that the dimensions of wood are not the dimensions that the wood iscalled don't measure a 2×4 oh wait yeah it's not 2 by 4 inches is it don't getme wrong I've seen a 2×4 in the distant past it's pretty cool so this is wowthat is actually only 10, 000 citizens of an inch under a quarter an inch it's0.
24 inches it's literally the equivalent of two and a half sheets ofpaper so I'm just gonna go with the measurement of quarter inch but measurefirst 14 inches now 8 by 15 since I cut my long piecesat 15 this is still 15 white here and I know that this is more than 8 so Ialready have one cut done for these 2 pieces I just need to set my fence to 8inches now let me tell you about using a table saw the blade super-dangerous andevery time I use the table saw I'm terrified of it I'm expecting somebodyto walk in here with a bucket full of grease and marbles and spill it at myfeet so I start to rot and fall on the table saw I consider this a healthyamount of respect for the table saw alright so here we go last piece is two times three eight bytwelve and a half two putts at eight two cuts at twelve point not gonna workthat will now on a table saw in general I probablyshould've done the 12 and a half cut first because you don't want to fitsomething into the table saw that's wider than it is long certainly possibleto make that cut it's not great table saw practice so I'm not gonna do thatI'm gonna pull out my fence which I know well clear and if I do that then thefence holds onto the piece for me I just have to raise it so the blade comes upthere we go okay here comes my 12 and a half every time I'm making a cut I'm checkingthe corners of the piece that will be the final piece and making sure thatthey're okay on this piece I got this little Mickey ding here I don't wantthat to be part of my box so I make sure it's on the end cut every time I put apiece in the table saw I'm double checking to make sure it's going to benice once it's done being cut now there you have yep six pieces of wood all cutto size now it's time to glue them bad mm-hmm all right I'm gonna do my boxassembly on the table saw specifically because it's a beautiful flat surfacebut let me show you what I'm gonna use to put this box together I'm gonna usesome tight bond wood glue I very much love this stuff and in my opinion woodglue might be the best of all glues I'll explainthere are glues that are faster there are glues that give me surfaces I liketo work with better but almost all glues are an exercise in some compromise andoften disappointment that is my personal experience and for a glue to call itselfwood glue and then to glue wood so well that the glued part is the strongestpart of the wood that is absolutely delivering on the promise it says woodglue man it glues wood like nobody's freakin businessit's basically a PVA but and there are many different brands of this everybodyhas their favorite I like the type on right now but I'm not super superpersnickety about the kind of wood glue I use they all have worked for me thesecond thing I'm going to use to put these together is this 22 gauge nailer22 gauge is the size of the wire that makes these staples and holy hell arethey freaking tiny it is so lovely look at how smallthose are look at how okay here let me get one out that is a 22-gauge nail waittill you see the mark that it leaves when you use it which is to say youwon't okay and the last thing is some acid brushes because if you're going tobe gluing wood to wood it's not just enough to lay a bead of glue down andhope that it squeezes out you want to cover it and make sure it's got ahundred percent coverage on that joint just make your life a lot easier lateron woodworking is one of those things that an ounce of planning in thebeginning saves you a pound of headaches on the other end repeatedly repeatedlyrepeatedly in order to come up with my Cutlass I chose the full pieces thatwould be the unbroken sides first and that's these two pieces and they will besandwiching two sides that go on the inside and two top and a bottom that goon the inside so I'm going to assemble this ring of plywood first and then putthis on the outside I have found that to be just the best way of thinking throughthe problem great practice for woodworking is to soften the edges ofyour freshly cut plywood it just makes for a cleaner project later on and Ihave a kind of a fast shop hack for doing that this you might recognize ismy sword grinding Linna sure AKA belt sander and i have on it a bit of scotchbrite 3m scotch brite material this is fabulous for doing finished polishing onmetals it also is spectacular for taking just a tiny bit off of wooden cornerswatch this take a look it's just the tiniest bitbut honestly since I started doing it my woodworking has become a lot cleanerwait one more thing you should know that they make these scotch-brite belts formany many different kinds of belt Sanders so if you have a belt sander inthe shop go looking to see if they make one for it because I've also got one forthese these 24 inch and they're on the back here somewhere they're justspectacular finishing belts in general you don't want to necessarily use thelongest nails for your project I like these which are just about fiveeighths of an inch long four quarter inch ply I find it's pretty versatile soI'll load these in there's usually an arrow on them which shows you can seethe arrow that shows the direction that they get stapled in and just for testingI'm just gonna see if it's actually going through yeah there you go and notethat's actually one of the dangers with a pin nailer like this is it canactually travel all the way through the wood and across the shop so in the sameway that you don't point any gun at anything you don't want to destroy youdon't point a pin gun at anyone in the vicinity it's bad practice so you wantto be super careful and I'm actually going to talk about a couple more waysto be super careful with a pin nailer because they can drink a lotta havoc onyour fingers and thus your work you're the business end of your ability to work listen there's a reason every youtubercarpenter does this and make sure they have full coverage it just makes muchbetter world let's see here I'm not worrying about how square it isright now because it doesn't need to be I'll square it up later when I put thepieces on it and so here goes and I'll do a second one and a third one turn itover at the top now I want to point out something that I'm doing herebut I'm about to put in this nail right here I'm like holding the pieces inorientation and then when you notice me doing was just before I put in the nailI raised all my fingers this is because wood is a often fairly homogenousmaterial but with all sorts of things going on inside and anyone who uses apin nailer can tell you that the pins can go in and come out at all sorts ofweird angles you want to keep your fingers clear not just of one pin nailswidth from the gun actually more like two or three pin nail woods I've hadfriends who fired a pin into a piece of wood fired a second pin into the firstpin and drove the first pin out through the wood and out through their damnfinger yeah these things are really problematic from an injury standpoint soI'm gonna keep on doing this and you'll watch I set up get my hands in positionand then before I pull the trigger I bring everything up so there's no chancethat the nail can get to my tender flesh now look I totally agree with you ifyou're a bit lazy that like that's probably plenty in terms of the gluecoverage but no listen take the time you'll be happier later the things youbuild will last longer I swear it might not seem like a big change but it's alsoa little bit of like the consciousness you have around it that you're takingcare of every single join all right so again I do the top same wayI did before bring it up clearing right it's like I'm using the defibrillatorclear all right I've got it set I'm putting in the same hole clear okay andeach time I'm doing this I'm looking down on the pin nailer to make sure it'sperfectly parallel and square to the work that means I don't get any blowthrough inside this is a common problem with pin nails is that sometimes they'llcome up on the inside if you're not perfectly aligned and frankly whenyou're working with material thinner than a quarter-inch it becomes you justhave to be really really on your game again also you want to inspect everyface you're going to glue to make sure you've removed any debris even a littlebit of sawdust can actually prevent stuff from sit and tight so on something like this now I've got abunch of orientations going on I'm gonna just start and do sort of some corneringwork – another one here again we're moving all fingers before the staplebefore this pin goes in here comes the next one getting it all in place now I'mactually using the pin gun to kind of clamp for me here great and then thelast one so often when I'm pinning something together I'll put in themission-critical pins and then fill it in with the other ones later so here wego I know not the same amount of pins on each side that's just my lazinesssloppiness as a carpenter so InTouch each take a look a visual inspection ofthe inside shows no blow throughs which is nice and actually frankly uncommonI'm gonna test fit this side here and it's lovelyit's lovely in the width again this piece isn't fully square yet because itstill has some movability but that's fine I don't need it to be I'm gonnamake it square with this puppy one thing sometimes to keep an eye onthese acid brushes can tend to lose some of their some of their bristles justkeep an eye and make sure there aren't any there's one in your way here we goand again I'm going to do this the same way I did those other ones which is todo the corners first to make sure I'm super lined up with everything yeahthere we go now I'm using really good plywood so it'snot wandering very much but if I would can tend to wander so for instance thisis flush here but a little proud here this is why the next set of pins you putin should be in the middle sometimes you can have plywood that's really wanderingagain you can kind of creep on it and just sort of pop up and stitch it intosubmission this one looks great this one seems just fine there we go oh okay thatone's a little bit proud good okay so so there you have it that is one whole sidedone and if I look on the inside I found a bristle of my acid brush but no pinsblowing through very happy let's do the last side just the same wayI talked in a precent recent video about using my pinky to guide a pencil lineI'm actually using my pinky the pad of my pinky to guide the glue line all theway down there we go and some glue will squish out that's totally fine that'sall deela bellator and it's getting you out of there now again even here it'swrecked just a little bit off of square and that can happen which is why youwant to do the corners first if I started stitching this up and I was alittle bit off I'm not gonna learn that it corners out of phase until I get tothat corner don't assume you can stitch it right perfectly into the corner now Ibet there's a question forming in your mind what are you wondering well if Ihad to if I was watching this video I'd be saying wait a minute Adam if you'remaking a box to hold your gloves presumably one would need to get intothat box and I've just made a perfectly sealed thing how am I gonna get mygloves in there well this is one of my personal little secret things that I dohere in the shop when I'm gonna make a box with a lid I make the box first andthen I cut it apart that way all the pieces that I've used match and marriedto each other just perfectly so now what I want to do is I want to figure outwhere I'm gonna make the cut and then I want to make sure I've put acouple staples on either side of that cut to give it a little bit moremechanical support oh I'm so sorry can we talk about this pin nailer for asecond come on over here look at how tiny these holes arehonestly on some materials you can't even see it and once you give it a coatof paint it's gone entirely 22 gauge pins are fabulously invisible really itchanged my life I didn't know that you could get pins that small just until acouple years ago and it's seriously altered all of my carpentry before thatI was using a bigger pin gun which is fine and you can carefully set it andall that's really great but 22 gauge man it's the it's the business so where do Iwant to cut this now I had this idea about this box that I don't want it tobe a lid like I'm often making my boxes because I want to celebrate the objectthat's going in them which means I want it to be a kind of a display and so onthat front then I think what I'm going to do here is I'm going to cut it likehere so that this part has a handle on it and this lifts off so you'd have saya closure here and here and a closure on the other stuff two closures on theother side and you would undo those and pull off the top of this box and thenyou've got the two gloves standing there being displayed for all the worlds likethe beautiful pieces of art that they are yeah so now the question is wheredoes that dividing line happen so let's bring a glove over and take a look nowthe gloves are gonna sit in here like this oh that's lovelyI'm gonna sit about like that that high off and I don't want a lot of materialhere it's kind of like that isn't it yeah I think it's like that so how faris that is oh let's say two inches I like round numbers do you want to knowwhy round numbers are really awesome to build with when I machined the front couplers ofthe Apollo space suits what I found was every I I had a wax casting of anoriginal coupler to measure off of and what I found was every measurement ofthat piece was a whole number I mean within the English within the you knowimperial measurement system which is a dog's breakfast to be surehowever it's like it was one in three-quarter inches in diameter not onepoint seven to one seven it's like a round number 1.
75 and every time youwere measuring the width of a Dulli or the distance between two things it was around number of degrees and it was around it was like 1/8 of an inch 1/4 ofan inch and what that does is it is a real tip of the hat to the people comingbehind you what you're saying is I used all whole numbers so you don't have toguess to the ten thousandth decimal point of what measurement I was usingwhen I made this part you can see that it is exactly two inches and thus allyou need to do is measure exactly two inches not two point oh seven three twoone yeah and that's a significant thing so like the NASA engineers of your andcurrently I try and use all whole numbers when I do this so I'm gonna gotwo inches from the man look at that okay now I look at that and I think yeahthat's right mm-hmm could it be two and a half to be two anda half I think it could be two and a half this just looks a little anemic asthe second part of this box and that feels just a little more substantial soI don't need to measure it because we're going to make the cut using the tablesaw I'm going to set it add a width of two and a half inches I'm gonna set itjust higher than the plywood you know and away we go now I'm pushing thisagainst this I have a lot of meat with which I can grab this this is a trickycut you don't want to mess around with it but honestly I haven't gotten intotrouble making this one before so hopefully I won't here let's see I'mgonna use that there we go now I chose the order of these cuts carefullyI wanted the widest flattest most stable surface for my last cut because as soonas it releases the material in the other end this piece becomes a potentialprojectile and I don't want that so I'm going to be holding this tight pushingdown also using this other hand like any to push against the fence and make sureeverything is being really well held once I get through the blade there we go I don't have to worry aboutthis piece it's just sitting there and there you have it thank you gentlemen abox and its lid it's always good to just always go from the same sides when youbuild this like you don't want to try and put the box together like this itjust it might not go back the way you think just don't ever count oneverything being perfect in square and symmetrical now the only other person I know who hasa linear with a scotch-brite pad on it is Peter Lyons so Peter at Wetty ifeveryone starts coming to your shop to do their woodworking corner roundingsorry about that I've got my box and my lidbut they how do I make sure if they connect to each other well I can putsome connectors on the other side to be certain but I also don't want a littlebit of alignment so I'm going to add a lip to the inside of this that holds thetwo boxes together in fact I think I'm gonna put that lid the question iswhether to put it on here or here so that begs the question of what looksbetter like if that's like that looks like it it looks kind of like a trayit's kind of neat all right I'm gonna have these on thatlittle bit of a riser there yeah yeah okay so I think I'm gonna put it in hereokay so uh in order to do that I'm gonna use some super short nails and I'm gonnause some thinner plywood now this beautiful this is actually made byRevell model company it's they're a 8 inch by 12 by 24 inch birch ply and likeI said it's lovely stuff it has a little bit of a bend to it which means youcould do some relatively shallow curves and when you start curving plywoodthings get pretty magical but that's another video two pieces that areexactly twelve and a half by 1/8 you want to do one inch wide so I don'twanna write okay I'm gonna cut some one inch strip and that will get me all theway around and then I'll make the cuts on the one inch so here we go so the reason you don't want to cutthings that are wider than they are long is imagine if you tried to cut this onthe table saw as you fed it in and this blade is creating all of this energyattacking this piece of wood pushing it down it's also trying to cast it thisway which means as you're pulling any bit of torsion like this any bit ofadjustment that happens is going to get kicked into the blade and this thing'sgonna go all the way across if you're in a woodshop right now I'm sure you canpoint to the piece of plywood that shows how unhappy mr.
table-saw can get whenyou don't feed him correctly yeah every shop has that piece of wood so in orderto cut these pieces down I'm again gonna go to my fence this is the point in myconstruction where I often stop using rulers to come up with my criticaldimensions and just start using the real world so now I'm just measuring this tothis there we go so I'm going to cut to that side of this line using my fence now I'm gonna cut both pieces at oncewhich means I'm lining their ends up so they're super square and then I'mholding them down on the fence and I'm bringing them over to the blade and nowI'm gonna make incredibly sure that the edge of the blade cuts precisely to theline that I want yeah if you look at this shot you will see and I am right onthe freaking money test fit oh look at thatit actually wedges in that's the ideal that's like when it wedges in that'swithin like mm measurement I need is minus the thickness of these two piecesof wood because I'll have one on either side I put them both at the bottom andthen I put this piece up to it press it down and make my measurement if I haveto take this down a little bit it's easy enough to do on the belt sander but Ithink that went really well and I'm doing I cut these little pieces of paperfor a really specific reason and we're gonna kind of love it and that is that Ihave found in the past that when I make a alignment border like this for joiningtwo boxes to each other that I often end up with a little bit of a fitment issuebecause it's all meant to fit together a little come on come on there we go alittle too closely right so this is my biggest issue as a builder is I oftenbuild things to to haigha tolerance and then my lids don't go back on again andif I made this I would be able to get it into here but I'd have to sand theinside of this and sand the outside of this as I've done many times so now whatI do is I'll frequently use a piece of heavy cardstock and I'll cut a strip andthat strip will give me the extra little distance and it's not much here we golet's see here 20 mm some a CH but that gives me alittle bit of the tolerance wiggle room that I seek because I've screwed it upso many times all right I forgot to mark it so let mejust give a little bit of a mark so I have something kind of compared to okay now I add some more glue do the topin the bottom listen always just glue the wholesurface seriously this is one of the biggest lessons I've gotten fromhundreds of hours of watching YouTube carpenters ply their beautiful tradethey just make sure they have 100% coverage between glue joints and franklyit's just made me a better carpenter to follow the same practice oh love a pressfit come on in come oh that's a little tight I betthat's from the other side oh that's it okay all my tolerances yep excellent andthe last one coming at ya oh that's why it's a little off because I had thethickness of the paper well I just screwed it up hold on so I just shattered my glue joint thereI didn't shatter it but I busted it because I hadn't accounted for thethickness of the paper so let me get a little bit of oh yeah I could just getanother oh look at that I somehow know maybe you were watchingand you didn't see I didn't staple the whole second part in apparently I didn'tso let me get some some nails in there as far as these guys I I feel prettygood about that that is um it's just a little bit to fix I'm just gonna put acouple of nails in here I'll have to cut them and sand them down but they'll justmechanically hold this thing in place and if you watch here you'll see themcome through nice thing about these is a simple flush cutter makes it go away as always you wear eye protection tokeep the little flying pieces of wire from finding the soft flesh of youraqueous humor I know there's no flush in the aqueous humorthere's one little fitment problem left which is that while I use the paper tooffset on the inside my my lip here that also necessitated the the top of thisactually coming in a little bit so I need to do a tiny bit of chisel workhere right there that bit is proud so I just want to and I take it down just alittle bit you can do this with a chisel you can doit with a saw you can do it with a hell you can do with a sanding stick Oh Ohscrewed up okay let's use a sanding stick shall we alright we're gonna do atest-fit here that's my a side this is my a side and we bring these to eachother there we are that's lovely that's a nice positive fit without a tonof movement twenty thousand on a slop to give yourself in carpentry projects thatworked out really really nicely so now the question is let's see what's next Ithink I want to do big structural stuff before I do small detail stuff so thenext thing is the stand for the gloves on the stand for the gloves and holdthem about like this and I could like screw in some dowels to hold them uphere but well if you read my book you know I like mechanical connectionsrather than glue so I'm not gonna glue them in I'm just gonna make a platformthat sits in the bottom of this that holds them and then I can change itlater if I so desire so that piece that I will lay into the bottom of this isprecisely 8 inches by 12 and a half now what I'm about to do is cut a piece ofthis semi crappy ply which I'll cover over and hide the crimes that slipsinside this and holds the gloves upright and the critical dimensions here are 8inches by 12 and a half but I'm not gonna cut my piece of wood to that I'mgonna cut it just a tiny bit under each of those measurements so that it slidesin and they don't have to force it so I'm just gonna go about something lessthan 1/16 of an inch probably about no that's not the cut I want to makefirst I want to do the 12 inch cut first and the 8 inch cut second so I'm gonnago to 12 and 1/2 I'm going to go it but it's about 50 thousandths just slightlyless than 1/16 under now for the 8 inch cut same thing coming under by justslightly less than one of the sixteenth inch markers and we'll see how I didoh yeah look at that now you'd call that an exact freakingfit but the fact is it's under by about fifty thousand that means that it canslide back out again I like this tell this will be great onethere one there all right I figured out how I want thisto look and I'm gonna do it out of one-inch Delrin now I know this is a woodworking videobut I want to just say one thing about using Forstner bits on Delrin in yourlathe your lathe isn't gonna like it and I don't mean that it's problematic Ijust mean that it's a tremendous amount of force that gets put on it and thatmeans it's often gonna push the work into your jaw so when you're using aForstner bit on Delrin on your lathe or on anything honestly you want to makesure it's really clamped down well excellent let's say about there yeah it's true the sled is fabulous forirregular shapes as well it kind of negates the need for a chop saw here andthat's why you'll notice we don't have one I mean I I have one I think I ownthree but I don't need them permanently set up here all rightwood screws good yep I didn't hear it go put up either but that's fine it'll dofine for this build all right there we go I've got the glove part done let'sput this on the lid that goes in there and one glove goes here one glove goesthere that's really nice and sits on top of that okay we're good I'm very happywith that so let's put in some hardware so now it's time to put on my hardwareand to do that do a bit of this business great there's that and then there's thatand nice it's very happy with that okay great now on to the other side right there we go that is a box now it's notquite done but sorry I positioned it for me not for you there you go like thatand close it up now this is the point in the build there's still a lot left to doto turn this into the kind of vessel that I like storing my favorite thingsin but this is the point at which for me creatively I would sort of sit back andlive with this for a while I had the handle set out for this I didn't likethat handle I want to find a different one I may end up I'm probably gonna endup painting this whole thing white I don't know what the insides gonna looklike I might even cut a window at this stage with a box build I usually don'thave a clear path forward and I just sort of live with it for a little whilesee what I like I may go print up some NASA stickers and think about puttingthem in different places I may do some sketches this box while I'm on a planetrip but as far as a lovely vessel and a simple wooden box to hold a beautifulobject in I think it is an excellent Thanks.