If you’ve got 18 minutes or so, the time will be well spent.
E.B. White is known to most folks as the guy who wrote Charlotte’s Web. Ink-stained wretches know him as the White in Strunk and White, authors of the bible of recipes for sentences, The Elements of Style. I know him as an essayist about Maine, where he is unexcelled — so far.
He lived in Down East Maine. He knew and respected the men and women he describes in blasts of interest like this one. Unlike today’s writers, he doesn’t rely solely on describing objects to achieve verisimilitude. He tries to understand the motive force behind the populations, traditions, and the landscape he’s surveying. Others skim over an ocean of meaning without dipping into it. E.B. dropped his traps, and hauled the good stuff up, just like Eugene Eaton.
This video is all before my time, of course, but I’ve met plenty of stalwart people like Eugene when they were a lot older, and I was a lot younger. They were taciturn fellows. Chatty guys don’t stand in a wheelhouse alone for very long before they find a job elsewhere. The laconic Maine lobsterman was the real deal. Calvin Coolidge was a gadfly compared to them. E.B. doesn’t have the right accent, but he’s close. He has Maine stapled over New York City. Eugene’s is the real deal.
I’m always sort of in awe of people like Eugene. If you watch him pull on his oars when commuting out to his working boat, you can see how much force he’s putting on each stroke, with how little effort. He could do it all day and not get tired. He’d wear out an Olympic oarsman, if he could be bothered to race, which he couldn’t. He rolls his wrists perfectly as the oars leave the water and again as they enter it, never showing a splash of water, coming or going. There’s no wasted effort in his whole day. Plenty of effort, mind you, just none wasted. When he pulls alongside his working boat, he ships his right oar effortlessly without looking at it. It’s a small thing, but his life is made from such small things. Just stuff I can’t help but notice, because I’ve thrashed oars and banged into boats and lost oars overboard and wrenched oarlocks out of the gunwhales and sprayed water on everyone and everything within hand-grenade distance while doing these things. And I dare you not to get seasick with the boat rolling in that chop, next to a barrel of reeking bait, with the stink of the diesel exhaust. I couldn’t.
I’ve knocked together lobster traps like Eugene is using. They’re fun to make. No one uses them anymore. They’re all brutish steel cages, pre-made now. Something lost, something gained, I guess. I love Eugene’s no-nonsense clothing, too. It was from back when LL Bean made more than men’s pinstriped button-down shirts for WASP ladies to vacuum the house in.
Out on that ocean in a 34′ boat with nothing but a hinky compass and tide chart. They should have left Michael Collins at home, and brought Eugene along instead. He’d get them back from the moon with a hand on Apollo’s tiller and an astrology column from the Bangor Daily News. No Tang for me, fellows. I brought my lunch with me.
I’m reminded of the Breton Fisherman’s Prayer. A snippet of it was on JFK’s desk, a present from Hyman Rickover, who could order battleships around and all, but I doubt he could row as well as Eugene.
Now I’m going to ask you to round up some weird stuff if you want to follow along with grain-painting a door. The stuff is actually mundane, not weird, but I’ll call it weird because you’re probably not used to seeing it on the shelf at a home center, or used in the way I’m using it. But it won’t bite you or anything. Never fear.
First, we’re using Kilz primer, the alkyd-based kind, to coat the door. Then we’re getting a pint of raw sienna colorant. It’s the same stuff you see them squirt into your paint cans when you have them mixed at the hardware store. You can buy it in little tubes if you prefer, but we’re not painting doll houses here. Get big pints and slop it around and keep it on the shelf to inspire awe in visitors to your shop. Whoah, this guy buys ink by the barrel, and pigment by the pint. Best not mess with him.
So, how much colorant do you put in there, Sippican? Beats me. I squirt some in until it looks like the desert, and I’m done. Let’s paint (prime) the door with it.
Well, now. That’s sort of a garish color, isn’t it? This is where the meek falter, generally. I’ve ruined my door! Trust me, we’ve not yet begun to ruin the door! The background color for grain painting is supposed to be a kind of blah yellowish tone. If you took all the finish off a piece of woodwork, and removed the grain, this is more or less what it would look like.
The reason we used Kilz primer is because it dries super-quick. You can work on it the same day, just hours apart, if you like. We like. Now we get some glazing liquid. I used to use alkyd glazing liquid for this sort of work, because it had a longer “open” time, but we’re not looking for photographic realism on this job (just looking for grainy photographs lost in seventeen folders scattered all over my computer desktop). I think Brits call it scumble, but any water-based glaze made for decorative finishes will do. You’ll need a second pint of pigment, raw umber. It makes a rich, dark brown, with a vaguely greenish tint in there somewhere.
We start with the muntin bars. If you look at the brush in the paint pot, you can see that it’s suffering from bristles interruptus. It’s a faux finish brush that has every other 1/4″-worth of bristles missing. Officially, it’s called a strie brush. I have boxes filled with arcane brushes like that, in all sizes, because I used to do wild finishes in mansion-y places. You can use a crummy chip brush and not worry too much about it, but a strie brush makes it easier to mimic wood grain because it naturally segments the glaze into something resembling the railroad-track lines of wood grain. You can also flog the glaze while it’s wet. Flogging is simply taking a brush with flexible bristles and beating it up and down on the wet glaze to make what looks like check grains, the little disconnected dashes you see in the grain of woods like oak. We don’ t need to flog the surface, because we’re going to use combs.
You can buy a set of metal combs for graining for short money. You drag them through the wet glaze at oblique angles to the lines made by the strie brush. They very quickly and efficiently make oak-looking grain in the glaze, like in the last picture.
Once the muntin bars are glazed and combed, we’ll work on stiles and rails. Use painter’s tape to cordon off areas where the grain changes directions. The primer is vaguely absorbent, and it’s hard to wipe excess glaze off completely. First you lay on the glaze with the strie brush if you have it, following the direction that the wood would be oriented in. I liked typing “wood would” an inordinate amount. I’ll bet it would give an editor a seizure, if I had one.
Now we’re going deep into the “quick and dirty” portion of our project. You see that piece of cardboard? That’s what we’re using to make grain lines in the glaze. Of course my cardboard is dark brown and covered with lines from a failed grain-painting experiment from decades ago, but you can use any kind of cardboard. Me, when I get my hands on a good piece of cardboard, I hold on to it like grim death. Cut a series of random notches in the edge of the cardboard, wrap a scrap of old T-shirt over the edge, and drag it through the glaze. You vary the angle of the cardboard from perpendicular to the grain to change the spacing of the lines. Wood is seldom completely straight grained, but don’t overdo the squigglyness of it if you want it to look like real wood.
Now we get out the big combs. There’s two bigger ones on display next to the work. Drag them at slight angles to the direction of the grain, and use two different comb spacings to get the broken grain effect of oak.
The grain gets a little harder to mimic on the long side stiles. Those boards on a door usually have what it called heart grain, not just wiggly railroad tracks. Heart grain is what is revealed as wood is cut straight across the width of a tree. You get a kind of sawtooth, or swirling effect in the center. Back in the day, we used to draw the heart grain in with paint brush, like an artist would. Another method was to glaze the panel solid, and then remove the glaze from around the sawtooth lines with your thumb wrapped in cotton cloth. They’re both too much work. We’ll dig out an old graining roller (the black cylinder in the photo), and drag that through the glaze down the center of the panel. You sort of rock it back and forth while you drag it to make the sawtooth shapes you see. You can do it over and over until you get a pattern you like. Just repaint with glaze and start over if you muck it up the first time.
Now is where people usually screw this up. The center of the board is sawtoothed, but the edges shouldn’t be, if you want it to look real. After you fiddle with the graining roller in the center, drag the left and right sides with your notched cardboard scraper to get the wavy parallel line look. Drag the combs through the lines when you’re satisfied with the look of the grain.
OK, now the graining is done. As you can see, the bright yellow background is more subdued at this point. It almost looks like unfinished wood. Now we’ll give it an overglaze, to give the impression that the grain isn’t right on the surface, and to give the door the right shade to match what we have in the house.
I mixed this glaze myself, using TransTint dyes. They’re great stuff. You can put them in any sort of finish. But knowing how to color match from dye, and putting in the right amount, is challenging. If you’re not feeling experimental, you can buy any number of varnish stain products at the home center, and coat your work with one you select, pre-made from a color chart.
So we put the door back in its hole, and the grain looks about right compared to the ropy oak doorframes that surround it. We flipped a coin to choose whether we’d try to match the woodwork in the living room or the hall, and the hall won. Here’s the hallway side.
Not great, but good enough. Hey, maybe that should be our motto around here. It certainly was good enough for that doorway, because we demolished that wall a few years later. More about that in another episode.
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I’m short on pictures of stuff I’m doing. I’m usually going too quickly and sloppily to allow time for snaps. My wife, who I adore, can’t take a picture to save her life. Her doctor told her that even her x-rays come out fuzzy. My children are too busy being morose while they help me to add documenting their morosity to their workload. I generally take bad pictures myself, and I’m too busy thinking about important things like is morosity a word? Dammit, it should be, to take photos of what I’m doing while I’m doing it. I never carry a cellphone on my person if I can avoid it, and that adds to the vast interregnums in the visual feast. So you’re stuck with me describing things, and telling hoary old stories. Sorry.
Hey, do you want to grain-paint a door? I have a few pictures of that. This door was about the worst job I ever did using the technique, but I have several fuzzy pictures of it. I could regale you with stories of my time in the faux bois milieu, the faux marbre scene, man, or my time in the trompe l’oeil salt mines, chained to a scaffold. I will testify that I was pretty good at it — as long as there’s nobody around who’s actually seen my work. I dabbled in it. You have to work at it for a long time to get really good.
But one aspect of it I did master was how to do a slapdash job going really fast. That I can show you. Let’s grain a door in less time than it takes to paint it properly, and see how it turns out.
Here’s our victim. It’s a salvage door, stuck in one of the 723 empty door frames we found in our house. The former occupants seemed to have spent most of their waking hours removing doors and losing them somewhere, in between bouts of adding ceiling fans. These pictures are from years back. That’s the foyer beyond the door, and the office where I’m typing this further on. It got colder than a tax assessor’s heart right there between the front door and the staircase. We got tired of having cold fronts moving through the living room, and stratocumulus clouds forming around the light fixture, so I rammed a salvage door in the opening. There were problems, of course, because I breed trouble like minks. I wrap myself in problems to keep warm with fixing them. Well, warm-ish.
The doors in my house are were a full 7′ tall. It’s a big Victorian with high ceilings, and millwork to match. The knobs are lower than the more modern arrangement, because people back then were raised on a diet of suet, gruel, and cigars, and it stunted their growth, I gather. I couldn’t afford a new door for the opening, or even a salvage door from a vendor. But I saved this glass door from a dumpster years back, and figured I could use that. I glued a couple of strips on the edges to make it wide enough for the opening, and a block on the top to make it tall enough. I screwed a piece of shingle over the bored hole for the knob, to keep the interior weather from passing through.
You might wonder why I didn’t flip the door and keep the knob hole where it was. Well, this is where I admit embarrassing things. The doorframe was solid oak, and if you think I’m going to chisel out two new hinge mortises and a striker plate mortise out of solid oak, when I can keep them and chisel them out of a soft pine door, you don’t know me very well.
OK, take the door down and remove the patch over the borehole. As you can see, even if I wasn’t too lazy to chisel out the oak door frames, the knob hole is in the wrong place anyway (it’s too far from the edge of the newly widened door. It’s a pain in the arse to fill something like that in solid, and then bore a neat hole right next to where it was, right through your patch. So I was smart to give up and do a lousy job, see? This is how I live with myself, by convincing myself I’m smart, not lazy. But I am beset by doubts.
So we make two blocks (one for each side of the door) from the fat end of a shingle (you heard me). It doesn’t matter how big it is, it’s just got to be larger than the hole you’re covering.
There’s that straight router bit again. There are all sorts of fancy router bits and jigs for cutting the inside and outside of a patch like this. I think I own some, actually, but where they might be is a mystery. I wouldn’t use them if I could find them. We’re not setting up the tools over and over, and worrying about how marvelous this job turns out. Quick and dirty, remember? You never measure anything if you don’t have to. Lay the patch on the router base, adjust the router so its depth is slightly less than the patch (we don’t want a square swimming pool in the door. We prefer a lump, thanks). Rout it out freehand, and finish it off with a chisel and mallet. The router makes a nice, flat surface to glue on.
Glue the block in, and then flip the door over and do it again. Remind yourself not to take pictures with an atrocious knot on display. No one will suspect that you cut a 2 x 4 in half to make the new door edges, so don’t leave evidence like that to put them on the scent.
Sand the block flush with a belt sander if you have one. This is why you use a shingle for the block. If the block is softer than the door, you’ll sand it flush and the patch will disappear. If the block is harder wood than the door, you’ll gouge the door around the block trying to get it flat, and end up with a valley with a mesa in the middle. When it’s painted it won’t matter what it’s made of, really.
There’s the door, ready to go. If you’re smart (lazy) like me, you’ll tape out the glass with painter’s tape. I can paint straight lines against glass panes all day long without missing, but I doubt you can, and we’re not going to be painting straight lines anyway. We’re going to be slopping and mooshing and generally making a mess, and it’s easier to peel tape than get coatings off of glass.
[To be continued. If you’d like to support Sippican Cottage, keep reading, leave a comment, tell a friend about us, buy a book, or dump some toll change in the tip jar. Thanks!]
If you told me you could draw a Venn Diagram with Ed Sullivan and The Band, and there was any overlap, I’d think you were hallucinating. But there it is, larger than life. One of the jolliest songs ever written, delivered live on TV.
Don’t get me wrong. Ed was very lower-case “C “catholic in his tastes, but he tended to glom onto the next big thing, not guys twenty or thirty slots down on the charts. But the quickest way to stardom for entertainers used to be a slot on his show, or Carson’s. Instant notoriety, if you can keep it.
Hmm. “One of the jolliest songs ever written.” There are worse things you could mention about a fellow after he passed away.
This is the point where I admit embarrassing things. I don’t have a lot of router bits. I have a lot of routers, for some reason, but not a lot of router bits. It’s one of life’s great mysteries, like who’s still watching House of Cards. I need a big rabbeting bit, and I don’t have one. I do have a big straight bit. For some reason, I have a router fence. It came with one of the many routers, I suppose. So we want to make a 3/4″ x 3/4″ rabbet along the inside edges of the stiles and rails. If there was a bearing on the end of the bit, we could just run it around the insides and be done with it. But we can set the fence for the width of the stiles and rails, less the 3/4″ we’re hogging out, and run it around from the outside edges. Like this:
It’s quick work in the spruce/pine/fir framing lumber. We’ll have to square off the corners with a chisel and mallet, but that’s pretty easy. It ain’t oak. Then we come to the curved rail. Dammit.
My evil plan has come a cropper. We’ll have to improvise further. We fish around in the waste pile for the cut-off piece from the top stile. It’s the mirror shape of the top curve. We attach it to a nasty scrap of pine, and sit that on top of two blocks of wood. If you take the fence off the router, and measure correctly (the second time, generally), the base of the router will butt against the edge of the cut-off scrap and you can make the rabbet on the curved stile lickety split. Then you burn the scraps and cut-offs for heat, because you’re never going to make another one of these things again.
Now we’re going to salvage all the beaded tongue and groove lumber from the wreck of the Edmund Fitzbarndoor. You’ll be disappointed to hear that this reminds me of an old story.
A fellow has a big walnut tree in his yard. He reads in the newspaper that a walnut tree is worth big money as lumber. He calls the local, very Yankee, old-timey sawmill dude and asks him to come over and make him what he assumes will be an offer with many zeros at the end of it.
The sawyer rolls out of his battered pickup truck, and stands in the fellow’s yard, looking at his suburban home and yard. He’s not even looking at the tree. The homeowner speaks first.
“That tree is a beauty, isn’t it? I bet it’s worth a fortune.”
“It’s not.”
“What do you mean? It’s fifty feet tall, at least. It’s straight as an arrow. You can get all sorts of expensive lumber out of it.”
“Nope.”
“Why the hell not?
“Meddle linnet summers.”
“What the hell does that mean? Trees don’t meddle. It’s just standing there. There are birds in it, but they’re not linnets, and that shouldn’t matter anyway. And You can cut it down in the fall, if the summer is a problem.”
“No thanks. Meddle linnet summers.”
“Can’t you explain yourself better than that? What does that mean?”
“Tree’s the same age as the house, ayuh. Grew up with it. You, or the guy you bought it from, has been pounding nails, and screwing hooks, and generally using that tree for your own private corkboard for half a century. Can’t have it in my mill. Meddle linnet summers.”
The sawyer climbs in his truck, and drives away, leaving the homeowner scratching his head, and chanting the mysterious words, until he finally figures it out. There’s metal in it somewhere.
So I’m salvaging 110-year old millwork, that was made from 300-year-old-trees, I’ll bet. I know damn well there’s meddle linnet summers. So I pick the lumber over pretty well, and pull out any number of things I’d rather not hit me in the face at the table saw, or dull the blade in the chop saw. I cut out the rotten parts, and use the short ones on the bottom of the door, and save the longer ones for the top. I lay them in and fit them as I go.
It turned out OK, all in all. There was just enough lumber to finish the door.
You may have noticed that two center stiles have mysteriously appeared. This is where I admit additional embarrassing things. It’s a pain in the ass to assemble a four-panel cruciform door. I cheated and made two big horizontal panels, and then nailed 3/4″-thick stiles to the panels in the center. It’s one of the reasons I left a 3/4″ reveal on the front, and skipped making the chamfers you saw on the plans.
We painted it in the shop. The fluorescent light makes the color look ghastly. It’s a subdued, tawny brick color called Mayflower Red.
We put an old thumb latch on the beast, and hung it on gate hinges with bearings, so it won’t sag and swings smoothly.
A big hook and eye holds the door from banging around while you’re in the shed, where you’re no longer looking for the shed stick.
Every time we open that shed door, I mumble “Ahhh.” Doors that open and shut and close properly and that don’t need a stick are a pleasure to operate, every time. You should make yourself one. It’s not that hard. But buy a rabbeting bit. I’m a cautionary tale, not an example, people.
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Month: August 2023
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A Man Who Has Nothing In Particular To Recommend Him Discusses All Sorts of Subjects at Random as Though He Knew Everything.
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