COLLEGIATE GLASS INLAY SIDE TABLE
Having seen some impressive projects with glass inlays, I decided I wanted to give it a try. I had done some epoxy work before and figured I could set a "sea glass" inlay rather easily. It was around the time of my sister's birthday so I decided that she would be the beneficiary/victim of my experimentation. I chose to make a round side table for next to her couch, with a walnut and sea glass/epoxy inlay of an emblem inspired by her (an my) alma mater. Due to missteps on my part, this project was one of the most time consuming projects I've ever undertaken (sanding down 1/8" of glass isn't as nearly as easy as I thought it might be.) However, the end result was certainly unique among my portfolio of projects. It got the positive reaction from my sister that I was hoping for.
Required Resources: 20 hours, $100
Size: 21" x 21" x 21" Tall
Materials: 6/4 Hard Maple, 6/4 Walnut, 2 Part Casting Epoxy, Tumbled Glass, 20" Hairpin Stainless Steel Table Legs
Finish: Minwax Natural Stain, 3 Coats Minwax Spray Semi-Gloss Polyurethane
Tools: Planer, Jointer, Omax Water Jet, Belt Sander, 10 X 60 Grit Sanding Belt, Bar Clamps, Orbital Sander
New techniques: Glass Inlay
Cutting out the Blank
Since I had a bunch of it laying around, I decided to make the substrate part of the table out of hard maple. Maple is a relatively cheap and durable wood, so I tend to keep an extra 20 board feet around the shop. Additionally, maple is a species that often exhibits figure, or grain pattern irregularities that give it a shimmery/ opalescent look. While you can pay extra to buy figured maple, like the Bird's eye or Curly varietals, on occasion you can find a nice figured vein in a common maple plank. It's a little like playing scratch off lottery tickets to me. I'll buy a bunch of cheap hard maple with that hopes that when I consume it, I'll expose some type of rare figure pattern with a rip cut or a pass of the planer.
The Inlays
I ambitiously decided to try two types of inlays on this project; A solid walnut inlay for the founding date. And, an epoxy and sea glass inlay for The Lone Pine.
Glamour Shots
Lessons Learned:
Triple Check the Seal of Your Tape: As mentioned above, perhaps the biggest error I made in the whole build was not ensuring that tape mask I made to seal the epoxy in, was "water" tight. The leaking epoxy flooded and then set on the decorative face of the board. The 1/4" of epoxy that had to be removed would have been time consuming enough, but adding insult to injury, the epoxy pulled with it some of the tumbled glass. I now had to sand away 1/4" thick slab of epoxy and glass. I tried for some time with the orbital, but made very little head way. Eventually, I broke down and bought a belt sander and some very aggressive coarse grit sanding belts from Home Depot. This definitely was an improvement, but its still took me an additional 5 hours to get the table looking how I intended it to look. And to think, those 8 hours of arduous grinding could have been avoided if I had just used a stickier tape to keep the epoxy in the right place.