Photos tagged 2737

2,881 photos

  • Red turntable
  • Craig rubbing in his win
  • Craig's victory dance
  • Back to the foosball
  • Look at that form
  • Playin in the back yard
  • Telephone
  • Tossin the softball around
  • Nap time
  • Shirts off foosball
  • Time for skins
  • Dance off time
  • Knucks, bro
  • Flynn joins in with the shit talkin
  • Foos time
  • Talkin shit
  • Party on
  • Relaxin
  • Loungin dude
  • Hangin in the back yard
  • Whoops.
  • It wouldn't be a kbroox party without a bloody mary bar
  • Our realtors, Arnie and Phyllis make an appearance!
  • Gettin food
  • Terronez peeps hangin out
  • It's nice havin helpers for these kind of parties
  • Thome runnin the grill
  • Lawn darts
  • hangin around the patio and garden
  • Hangin in the lawn
  • Back to our house
  • Bout to walk with this girl
  • Mini network closet phase 2: added a shelf for the modem, router, nuc, and smarthome bridges
  • Mini network closet phase 1: mounted patches panel, switch, and surge protector
  • The dry hops mostly just hung out on top...
  • The before photo. The driveway was super narrow, really buckled, and didn't flow well to the front door.
  • Hung a birdhouse that my aunt made me
  • Lil gardener
  • Planting her first garden
  • It didn't take Kari long to load it up with stuff.
  • The grain around the live edge is really interesting.
  • I probably could've shaved another 1/2" off of the thickness, but overall I think it turned out pretty well. It really helps frame the sink, cleans up the tile line, and balances out the wall. As a bonus, we later realized that the shadow cast by the live edge, kind of looks like the state of Iowa.
  • Or maybe some pink accent lights?
  • How about some blue accent lights...
  • The underside with the lights off
  • Shelf: mounted. Sink: lit.
  • Lights mounted... it looks bad from this angle, but the frosted diffuser really helped a ton.
  • To clean up the light strip and distribute the light a bit more uniformly, I also added some aluminum channel with a frosted diffuser.
  • When I was almost done with everything, I did the dumbest thing ever and dropped the shelf on it's corner... I yelled. But then I just had to cut 3/8" off and re-sanded the end.
  • The top cracks and knots all cleaned up
  • The front knot sanded down.
  • Filling a big knot in the front of the shelf... this whole process was new to me and felt so sketchy.
  • Filling these big cracks really felt like I was ruining everything
  • Scraped and sanded down the first layer of epoxy... it needed another layer after this.
  • Filling some knots and holes with the dyed epoxy.
  • I immediately spilled dye everywhere. It took a long time for this to come off of my hand.
  • I bought some epoxy and dark walnut dye for filling the knots and cracks
  • oooo, prettty lights.
  • Got the low voltage wire extensions shrink wrapped and ran through the wall...
  • I later realized that the slightly older versions of hue light strips had a coupler that wasn't hard wired into the light strip. I happened to have 2 of the older ones, so, I found a company that made extensions for them and went that route. This way, if my hue ever dies, I still just have simple wires running through my wall and can easily switch things out.
  • Brekkie
  • settling wort
  • Yeast in
  • Wort racked
  • Rackin time
  • Syrup
  • Tying off the grain
  • Grain in
  • light strip channel routed...
  • I bored a little container to conceal the annoying hardwired lightstrip coupler ... but I wound up not even needing to do this.
  • Routing out a channel to conceal some strip lighting
  • Hangin at home
  • Kari puts up with a lot...
  • Ripping down a 3.25" thick, 50lb hunk of walnut on a contractor saw by myself felt a little sketchy...
  • Side view of the mockup with the live edge
  • A quick mockup to see how the size felt... Maybe a little thick.
  • Squaring this up with the palm router wasn't fast, but it worked!
  • My jointer wasn't quite big enough, so I made a little sled for my palm router to square things up
  • The transition down the stairs
  • Finished product