Lazy Kate for drop spindles

I finally made a wooden Lazy Kate. I had grand schemes to make something fancy and practice making dovetails, but alas I need more practice and on something smaller and softer than the 1” cupped oak plank I tried! Still, I managed to salvage the wood, which is nice and heavy, to make a functional tool. A Lazy Kate is used to hold spindles full of single ply yarn so the spinner can ply easily. It really should be a Genius Kate, or a Work Smarter Not Harder Kate. Poor Kate. She and Susan probably have some grievances. Anyway, I cut notches in sides of the top and bottom pieces and then cut pegs that fit in the notches for the sides. The holes for the spindle shafts are at a 5 degree angle because I saw another design that tilted the spindles. I used the largest section of wood for the base for stability, and glued the whole thing together.

Testing the Lazy Kate

When the glue was dry, I did apply some wood filler to the gaps, and when that was dry sanded the whole thing first with an orbital sander, then by hand with 120 grit sandpaper. Before applying finish, I tested plying with it. I have seen another style with a loop to feed the threads through, so I tried that. Turns out it is easier not to use a loop. I also put a rubber mat under the base to keep it from sliding, which isn’t a bad idea, but the weight of the wood did a good job keeping it steady.

Plied yarn using the Lazy Kate

This is the best Lazy Kate I’ve made so far. It made plying easier as I didn’t have to fight the tool the whole time. The angle of the holes worked great, letting the spindles spin, but not spin out of control (I’ve seen other designs that use elastic or wrapped string to provide tension). Since it passed its test, I’ll give it a nice polyurethane clear finish!

Squirrel swing

We converted an old mini tire that my eldest found into a squirrel feeder. It looks like a little tire swing! It took about a week for the squirrels to find the nuts we put in, and we didn’t actually see the squirrel until our cat was meowing at us, desperate to go outside. We did not let her out!

Munchings and crunchings in here somewhere

The swing has been great entertainment for everyone.

My dog and cat watching the squirrel
Young squirrel figuring out the feeder

I did mange one video, but it was with my phone from a distance, so blurry. Still funny though!

Lucets

Laying out two styles of lucets

Here is another ancient craft I haven’t tried: lucet cords! It has been on my bucket list, but it wasn’t until my Mom was working on making elastic lucet cords for masks and hinted that a smooth wooden lucet would be nice, that I decided to finally make a lucet. Honestly, a lucet isn’t necessary to make a lucet cord; a forked stick would work, or even two fingers, but having nice tools is such a pleasure! I made up some designs in Illustrator, printed them out, and transferred the design to some scrap flame maple and padauk. I used almost every standing tool in the garage! Joy! I used a scroll saw to cut the shapes, a band saw to split the flame maple lengthwise, a band sander to rough out the shaping, an oscillating spindle sander to refine the shape some more, and the drill press to drill the holes. I hand sanded after all that, because nothing mechanical comes close to a hand sanded finish.

Sanded, unfinished lucets

I sanded the lucets down to 400 grit, did two rounds of water treatment, then before finishing, I just had to test them to make sure there were no final tweaks to the shape. They worked well! I like the handleless lucet best. I’m going to send the handled lucet and the owlish lucet to my Mom for testing. (Mom likes owls, and the handleless lucet is reminiscent of a great horned owl, so I drilled “eyes” instead of a single hole.)

Testing the owl lucet

I finished the lucets with four coats of tung oil. Oh how the flame maple shines! The padauk has a nice color too.

Finished lucets

I’z brought present

Sophie and the spiny lizard

Sophie the indoor/outdoor cat, who is leaning more toward indoor everyday, brought me a present. I remembered to take a picture before I investigated, which is the only reason I am posting about it. The lizard was playing dead for the cat, and when I reached for it, it took off like a shot and disappeared. I think this lizard has done this before. With any luck, the lizard will go off and make more cat and human foiling baby lizards.

Did you wash your hands?

I have had a little paper tent with the hand written words “Did you wash your hands?” on our table for four months to remind us all to wash frequently and especially before eating. I thought it was past time to make something more lasting! I decided to use my 3Doodler, since the plastic is washable, it is light, and it wouldn’t take me too long to doodle up. I laid out the words in Adobe Illustrator, then put a clear work mat over the print out to trace the letters.

Making the sign with my 3doodle pen

I made two copies of “wash”, then used a book to space them apart so I could lay down the connecting lines and make the word 3D. I made the other words separately then “glued” them on with more molten plastic.

Useful 3D table decoration

I think it came out rather well! And certainly has a more decorative element than a folded slip of paper.