Tuesday, May 19, 2015

Make Homemade Mirrors

Wooden frames are clean and classic, and can accent any photo or illustration.


Moulding your own picture frames can be good and accessible, and requires onliest minimal intimacy with woodworking. If you gain a photo or quota of artwork that has appropriate amount, or you simply necessity to match the artwork with a particular frame glimpse, forging your own frame may be the boss alternative for the experimental crafter.


Instructions


1. Chop and sand a stretched quota of desired wooden frame facts. Be firm that you annex deliberate your measurement and arrangement so that you be acquainted you Testament annex Sufficiently to chop all four sides from this parcel.


2. Glue wood edging along the inside wrinkle of the frame wood to compose a overhang for the photo to rest on. Clamp and let dry.


3. Apply a miter maxim to chop the frame wood at a 45-degree angle at one side, then degree the desired length of the frame and create another 45-degree angle in the contrapositive direction, making sure the glued wood ledge is on the inside at all times. Repeat these two cuts so that you have a triangular piece of scrap wood. Measure and mark the length of the short sides of the frame and repeat the cuts in a similar fashion, yielding the same triangular scrap wood.


4. Match up angles of cut pieces and glue, making sure the ledge of the wood is in the inside of all the pieces. Clamp together in a frame shape and drill a 45-degree hole lengthwise through both wooden pieces at each corner of the frame. Insert a dowel and apply glue by moving the dowel back and forth through the hole and applying glue at both ends. Keep the frame clamped to dry, and stretch rubber bands between the corner dowels to the frame together.


Attach a hook or other fixture to hang or stand the frame.


Measure the distance both ways from the inside of the frame ledge and cut the sheet acrylic accordingly. Insert a photo or artwork and cut a thin piece of wood or heavy cardboard that fits on the back of the frame and is the same size as the acrylic sheet.


7. Cut three small wooden pieces (1/2 by 1/4 inches) and screw them at the bottom and two sides of the frame to hold the photo and backboard in place.5. When dry, carefully cut the edges of the dowels off so that the ends of the dowels are flush with the wood of the frame. Sand the ends.6.