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Posts with tag metal

Avant Yard: Bust rust! Spring cleaning rusty exterior pipes

Closeup photo by Diane Rixon of rusted gas meter pipe
Rust never sleeps, they say. The longer you leave exposed, rusting pipes untreated in your yard...well, you are ruining your pipes as they are eaten away by the elements. Rusty pipes, such as those leading to a gas meter, also make a house look a bit shabby and unloved. Let's take a look at how to deal with rusty pipes on your home's exterior. Spring is the perfect time to tackle this project!

Step 1. Select your paint
Go with a good brand like Rust-Oleum. By the way, Rust-Oleum has a fabulous website with lots of helpful advice for beginners. The company even has a special section on best products for really rusty surfaces. I recommend you check it out before heading to the paint store.

You will want to use an oil-based enamel paint. Oil-based paints are sticky and are not water-soluble. This makes application and cleanup a little tougher, but it's so worth it because oil-based paints are made to last. You have a choice between brush-on paint or spray paint. Personally, I prefer the traditional brush-on kind. On the other hand, spray paints mean no messy brushes to clean up when you're done!

Gallery: Bust Rust!

SOS!Tools you will needTrim the wire brushBrush vigorouslyReady to paint

Continue reading Avant Yard: Bust rust! Spring cleaning rusty exterior pipes

Valentine's Day gifts for your DIY'er

Could it be that the DIY'er/gardener you love so much might prefer something handy and practical this Valentine's Day? Afraid he/she'll be mad because you chose functionality over sentimentality? Never fear! Your gift can be practical and romantic. You see, the secret is all in the presentation.

Consider putting together a gift basket of DIY-type goodies, all wrapped up in colorful paper or cellophane, and topped with a red ribbon. The basket should contain some sort of mouth-watering Valentine's-themed candy, just for the sake of tradition. As for the rest of the contents, let your sweetheart's interests be your guide. For a gardener, how about seeds, a new pair of secateurs (pruning scissors), or new gardening gloves? For a handyman/woman, how about a hardware store gift card, a screwdriver or a new tool belt?

Selected your gifts? Now comes the fun part: making it look all nice and pretty. The gift basket is always a great choice. Here are some tips on how to assemble a Valentine's Day gift basket for a gardener, for example. However, if this gift is for a real manly man-DIY'er, baskets and cellophane aren't such a good choice. How about using a metal canister, like the one pictured above? Looks a little more manly, a little less frou-frou.

Visit our fabulous sister site, Holidash, to see all our Valentine's Day ideas!

Create an embossed Hanukkah card

Hanukkah cardsDo you have a few Hanukkah cards to get out? If you do, and you're feeling crafty, then these embossed cards are the perfect project for you. The images are stenciled in metal or vellum. You could choose one method, or do the front of the card in metal and a velum overlay inside.

Hanukkah themed stencils are plentiful and there are some beautiful designs to choose from. The Star of David and Menorah are some traditional symbols, but you could choose a 'Happy Hanukkah' stencil or a floral print too.

This great craft from HGTV has all the instructions with illustrated steps and helpful tips. These cards will sit on mantels for months after Hanukkah. You might not have much time, but if you can make a few moments for this, your friends and family are sure to be impressed.

Radio+tape+calculator=metal detector



This homemade metal detector is one of the easiest projects I've seen. All you need is an AM radio, tape, and a calculator. You don't have to take anything apart or follow any complicated directions, all you do is tune the radio, stick them together and let the reaction happen. As your device moves close to the metal object the radio waves from the calculator reflect off the metal and are heard as a loud beeping on the radio. The beep is intensified as you move closer to the metal object just as it would on a commercial metal detector.

Hack together one of these next time you're searching for a hidden treasure, or just give it a try for fun. The video results are impressive and it uses materials you have, takes little time, and is super simple.

Silver: cleaning tips and surprising facts


Several of my silver jewelry pieces have been looking less than stellar of late. So I've added: "Necklaces -- clean them!!" to my ever-growing things-to-do list. Being a bit of a Web nerd, I got to thinking about what tips and warnings on silver care might be floating around in cyberspace. So I took a look. The best guide I found was wikiHow's "How to Clean Silver." Here are some highlights:




Continue reading Silver: cleaning tips and surprising facts

Make a banjo

The strung pegs of a handmade, bed-post and cookie-tin banjo, by Instructables user TimAnderson.If you're not stretching rubber bands across a cardboard cigar box, it's not all that easy to make your own guitar-type instruments. You have only to watch a video of someone making a guitar to notice that it involves some advanced and specialized wood-working. The body must be built up and finished, and the whole process can take months. However, if you're talking about a banjo, you don't necessarily need to build up the body: they usually have more in common with the body of a drum than the body of a guitar anyway.

Instructables user TimAnderson has created an awesome tutorial for a cookie tin banjo. You won't get out of wood-working: you'll be making the rest of the banjo out of an old bed-post, and creating your own tuning pegs. But it's still much easier than building the body of a guitar.

You can use Anderson's previous tutorials on the subject, linked from the project page, to build other components of the banjo, like the tuning pegs. And when you've finished creating your own banjo, you can visit the Banjo Hangout. They'll give you some ideas for what to do with it.

Which glue should you use?

Bottles of Elmer's glue, by Flickr user Imelda.Have you ever tried to glue two things together, and for some reason, they just wouldn't stick? Oh, you made sure the surfaces were clean. You even sanded them slightly where you wanted them to bond! But nothing seemed to work: you were using the wrong glue for the job.

Enter This To That. This website exists entirely to tell you which glue is a good product to use to stick one specific thing to another specific thing. If it has limitations, it's that there are only eleven substances on the "this" and "that" lists, but those combinations should get you through most applications. And it's nice to know that the editors of the site consider the toxicity of a glue before they recommend it.

If you can't find the information you need by using the site the regular way, check the This To That FAQ; they might have the answer there. This should get you up and running for your home repair and craft projects, but it'll probably be just as helpful the next time your kid has to build a log cabin out of popsicle sticks.

Build your own BBQ pit

Extremely hot flame pit by Flickr's GenkiGenki.Every summer, I look forward to cooking outdoors. Lots of people have propane grills, which make outdoor cooking fast and convenient, but I use a small charcoal model similar to a Weber Kettle Grill. I don't think I'd move up to a propane grill, partly because the food cooked on it can have a "gassy" off-flavor (also possible with charcoal, if you use too much starter). On the other hand, I'd love to have a backyard large enough for a barbeque pit, like the one I remember my late grandparents having.

The Arizona BBQ Association has assembled a page of links that will show you how to build your own backyard smokers and grills. The projects are of two basic types: those based on masonry and those based on metal barrels, which usually require welding. The BBQ Lodge pit project is probably the simplest, but still, the designer had to cut some concrete blocks to shape.

None of these is exactly an "easy" project, but if you get started now, you'll have something to show off on Labor Day Weekend... and some really great meals for the rest of the season!

Making tree branch earrings

Crafty Ginger has a great tutorial for making "Tree Branch earrings" with just wire, pliers, and a few beads and findings.

"Elegant" and "personal" are not words that always go with "easy" and "last-minute gift," but this jewelry project is an exception. Even a beginner should be able to create something they and the recipient will love. The technique itself is applicable to larger projects, like necklaces and garlands.

If made in sterling silver wire, these earrings would also be perfect gifts for bridal attendants. Try making a pair or two in cheaper craft wire, first, to get the feel of the process.

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