Chris: I was looking at your stand and wondering just how the knife stays vertical in the first photo, without stabbing the wood shown in the second photo. Is there a magnet in the branch?I've been wanting to make one of these stands for awhile. The base is a piece of feather crotch oak (found in backyard) and the vertical is a piece of Manzanita (also from backyard)
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Chris: I was looking at your stand and wondering just how the knife stays vertical in the first photo, without stabbing the wood shown in the second photo. Is there a magnet in the branch?
Can you clarify on the magnet positions?
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My first foray into stainless steel. A couple of small kitchen choppers in 440C.
That's going to look good Dennis, what's that handle material?Working on a final fit up before epoxy.
Ebony and ivory.That's going to look good Dennis, what's that handle material?
Chris, that is the slickest stand I've ever seen. Very creative - and the woodwork on the stand looks really good. Color me IMPRESSED!Sure, the top magnet is inside the branch in the lower half. I had to cut it off, hollow out an area and then put the magnets insde. Then glue that section of the branch back on. The base I just drilled up from the bottom about 2/3rds of the way through the board, put the magnets in and then glued them in place. You can balance the knife either way, tip up or tip down.
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Chris: That is brilliant! I love that kind of creative innovation.I've been wanting to make one of these stands for awhile. The base is a piece of feather crotch oak (found in backyard) and the vertical is a piece of Manzanita (also from backyard)
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