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Re: Woodworking the easy way
Over 16,000 Plans and Blueprints

I have had many people ask me to help them build a coffee table or a dining room hutch. I never realized that so many had no idea how to start woodworking project (small or large).

So what I did was I spent the last two years putting together over 50 categories with all my blueprints and plans. I had the beginner in mind when I made these. Making sure to include extra details making it very hard to mess up, even for beginners.

All-Projects Available Here Until Friday


Simple Wood Craft Ideas to Try This Weekend:
1 hour projects for children:
http://teds.wood/working.projects

New Plans:
• Desks
• Cabinets
• Toys
• Hutch
• Shed
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Eli Nieland | 4221 Roxbury Dr Valdosta Ga 65498-1258



Mma Makutsi thought this very wise. But they must not be too slippery, she said. Some of these modern tiles She shook her head, as might one who had only too frequently been wrongfooted on unsuitable tiles. In reality, for Mma Makutsi the thought of any tiles at all was almost intoxicating in its implications; her floors, until now, had beenat bestredpainted concrete, and not all that long ago, in Bobonong, the traditional option of packed mud.

They had spent a further half hour discussing cupboardsthese were to be plentiful and deep enough to accommodate a vacuum cleaner as well as a full set of brooms and brushes. They also discussed the bedroom dows; these had to be of a sufficient size to let in enough light but not so large as to invite passersby on the road to stare in at the occupants. I cannot stand people staring in through your dows, said Mma Makutsi. What happens in a house is none of the business of people outside that house. Inside is inside; outside is outside. That is what I always say. It was true that she did not like to be looked in on from outside, but what she did not mention was the fact that she herself frequently yielded to the temptation to glance through anothers dow if the opportunity presented itself. But she was a private detective, and such glances were not prompted by mere idle curiosity, or even nosiness; they were a professional matter, an assessmentakin perhaps to the surreptitious clinical glance a doctor cannot help himself but give at a manifestly unhealthy person he passes on the street.

Armed with these requirements, Phuti met the builder at the headquarters of the This Way Up Building Company. He had stipulated that the meeting should be there, turning down Mr. Putumelos offer to come to the furniture shop, so that he could cast an eye over the builders office before he signed the contract. In doing this he was follog advice imparted to him by his father, who had always recommended doing business on the home ground of the other side. If they are no good, he had said, you will be able to tell that immediately. Look at their furniture. A man who has a rickety chair is a rickety businessman. A man whose table is not straight is himself not straight. These signs will never let you down, Phuti. It was an experienced furnituresellers view of the world, but it had proved an accurate guide and had on more than one occasion prevented the signing of contracts that would have led to trouble and loss.

Mr. Clarkson Putumelos office passed the Radiphuti test with no difficulty at all. The company had an impressive office on its own lot, not far from a cluster of prosperous shops off the old Francistown Road. There was an office building on which the company name was painted in large lettering, a garage in which several vehicles, working and otherwise, were parked, and a large yard in which piles of brick and timber were neatly stored under tarpaulins or standing corrugatediron covers. There was nothing sloppy about the scene, and Phuti was immediately reassured.