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ILLUSTRATIONS: WILL SHELTON
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Mother's Woodship
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June/July 2000
Issue...
You may have more fun making it than the kids will playing with it.
By Will Shelton
My father had a small workshop in the basement for as long as I can remember. He loved to putter and make things. He built a lot of the furniture in the house and was always making things for the kitchen to help mother. For us kids, he made toys for Christmas and birthdays. If the door to the basement was locked, we knew he was working on something for us.
My children still play with some of the toys my father made. Handmade to me means made with love. My favorite toy to this day is the model-pond yacht; my sister has the six-car circus train on her mantle. What could be more exciting to a child than a steam locomotive? Well, maybe a circus. And the combination of the two? Well, that's got to be some powerful magic. I know our childhood imaginations went on a lot of train trips.
The building of the engine, tender (coal-car), and circus cars is pretty straightforward. Cut out the individual pieces and glue them together!
There are only a few assembly hints I'd like to pass along.
1. Glue all the pieces together with a good quality carpenter's adhesive using brads (small finish nails) to hold everything in place until the glue sets.
2. Cut the cowcatcher to its round shape and finish sharpening it with a wood rasp (file) or rough sandpaper.
3. When drilling the holes for the cage bars, clamp (or temporarily nail) the top and bottom together and drill both holes at the same time. Put a piece of tape around the drill bit 5/8" from the tip to serve as a drilling depth gauge. This way all the holes will line up and be the same depth. Cut all of the bars (3/16" dowels) to the same length (4 inches). When you assemble everything, you'll get a perpendicular, aligned fit.