Showing posts with label eighth grade end table. Show all posts
Showing posts with label eighth grade end table. Show all posts

Thursday, March 5, 2009

Waxing and Buffing the End Table

Mr. Wiemers demonstrates to a shop class the final step in finishing the oak mission style end table. The four coats of polyurethane on the tables will be wet sanded with 400 sandpaper, dried with a towel, coated with wax and buffed to hand finished shine. At least 4 or 5 coats of wax should be applied to the table tops. The former class record was 28 coats of wax.

Mr. Wiemers
http://mrwiemersshop.com

Friday, February 27, 2009

Staining the Oak Tables

We are rapidly approaching the end of the quarter but we are still right on schedule to complete the last set of oak end tables for this school year. The tables in this video bring our total eight year 8th grade production to 1,000 tables. We have a completion rate of 99.5%. Or, simply put, 995 students of the 1,000 students who began the table have completed the table during the last eight years. I bet you would like to know the stories behind the five that didn't make it? Watch the video and remember the importance of knowing where your can of stain is at all the time!

Mr. Wiemers
http://mrwiemersshop.com

Monday, February 23, 2009

Spilled Stain

During the second quarter a few months ago a couple of students combined efforts to accidently dump a quart of dark walnut stain on the shop floor. Below is a blog I posted last December concerning this unforgetable event that left an unremovable stain:

Yesterday in my 8th grade shop classes the students were staining their oak end tables. We spent three days staining 100 of these tables. Finally on the third day the inevitable happened. As one student was repositioning his end table he knocked another student's one quart can of dark walnut wood stain on the floor. The stain splattered everywhere and on everything in a 10 foot radius.

If this ever happens to you the first response is to prevent the students from walking away from ground zero which would result in stain being tracked through out the shop. The student whose stain was spilled quickly escaped ground zero to get something to begin cleaning up the mess before the wrath of Mr. Wiemers was released. After having left walnut foot prints all the way to the sink and back, she returned to ground zero with two paper towels.

It was at this point I realized I was observing a future lecture illustration. This poor student was going to try to hold off my anger, disappointment and frustration by bringing two inadequate paper towels to clean up a quart of walnut stain pooled up on the floor and splattered in every direction. Not to mention, in her attempt to help, she had tracked the stain across the shop and back and others were preparing to follow her.

The usefulness of this illustration is enormous and its application will surely be used at some point.

It did remind me of the time a friend of mine cut his thumb off on the table saw in high school. With the student's thumb laying on the table saw the teacher that day said, "I'll go get a band-aid," and then left to locate a bandaid!? Both paper towels and band-aids are useful but not when we are dealing with a quart of walnut stain and a severed thumb.

Mr. Wiemers
http://mrwiemersshop.com/

Friday, February 13, 2009

1000 Eighth Grade End Tables

This quarter will mark the construction of the 1,000th end table by 8th graders in the last eight years at the Dallas Center-Grimes Middle School. Watch the video below to see how three students explain the process and show you their tables made in Mr. Wiemers' shop.



Mr. Wiemers
http://mrwiemersshop.com