Today’s picture is of something that could be the result of thoughtful design, from a group of marketers and engineers who care about their product and want it to be well received. It could represent paranoia from those same marketers and engineers who feel their target audience can’t figure this out for themselves.
But most likely, it’s the result of a lawsuit because there really ARE several people out there who are too dumb to be able to figure out how to get a microwave oven out of a box without damaging it or themselves.
Author: doug
June 30
June 29
June 28
Between the BBQ yesterday and our neighborhood block party today, I didn’t get a lot done this weekend. But I did rip up the carpet on the first few steps to try to figure out what to do with them.
The good news is there is real wood under there, and it has a lot of potential. The bad news is it’s gonna take considerable work to get it right. I put some linseed oil on the treads to protect & clean them, and will paint the risers relatively soon.
June 27
June 26
I was very excited today to see something I have not seen in a long time:
The sky. There seemed to be a free-running thermonuclear fusion reaction in a portion of it, though I’d estimate it’s about 8 light-minutes distant, and was last seen receding toward the horizon, so I don’t suppose it poses an immediate threat.
June 25
June 24
My trusty old Swift binoculars broke near the end of last season… one objective lens sheared right off at the threads, probably as a result of being dropped, or banged against a rock, or something. I tried a few different approaches to repair them, but ultimately I think they’d need a new barrel.
I spent the remainder of my REI rebate this year on a new pair of binoculars. These are of a different optical design (roof prism rather than porro prism) that allows them to be smaller, more damage-resistant, and waterproof. But other than that, their specs and performance are remarkably similar.
June 23
June 22
In addition to the window rebuilding project, I am also undertaking a refurbishing project at the other end of the scale — stripping the years of paint off our door hardware and refinishing it to something like what it would have looked like new.
I’m using a mild chemical stripper to remove years of paint, just soaking the parts (except the porcelain knobs) in it overnight. Underneath it all is iron castings. Rather than using the glossy jet black that was the original paint color, I am using a “hammered bronze” spray paint that is both forgiving and attractive. And yes, I’m painting the screw heads.