FOG Log Birdhouses

I have been busy over the last week breaking down logs into boards for birdhouses. It is quite satisfying to scavenge logs “found on ground” to use on projects. It is pretty easy to find oak around my neighborhood but I always have my eyes peeled while driving for roadside finds. I had enough semi-dry oak laying around to whip out these two rustic houses. The wood was both spalted and buggy with some really intense grain. All boards were sawn to 3/4 inch thick so the finished product is very beefy. I used the laser to etch the birds and plants and spent a few hours painting them. Screw and glue construction. Boiled linseed oil finish on all exterior surfaces, no finish on the inside.

Meet the Heads

Long ago the aliens came down (or the Indians traveled up) and taught the Indians about fashion. I design these dolls in my sleep which it turns out is cheaper than therapy. Here is a group shot of the last 2 weeks work. Each piece is 15×8 inches. I use old redwood fence boards run through a planer. I draw the golems in Corel Draw (no haters please) as vector files and use a Trotec laser to engrave the outlines. Each piece takes 3-4 hours to paint/detail using Posca pens alcohol inks and fine markers for nose hairs, pimples etc. Finally 3 coats of poly before framing in poplar. Vote for the one you like best!

Resawn Birdhaus

I finally bought a real bandsaw (Rikon 14″) and it has been a revelation. I can take raw chunks of lumber/logs and make my own usable boards! I cannot drive down a country road now without constantly scanning for downed trees from which to snipe material. THis birdhouse is from a moldy rotten chunk of Sycamore (maybe). There was a lot of figuring in this wood that really pops.

The roof is reclaimed fence board with a nice algae patina
Intense figuring
Mahogany window frame and yellow acrylic pane

Multiple coats of spar varnish should hold together for a couple of seasons.

BirdHaus 3

This is the third birdhouse build I have done in the last month.

This project combined laser cutting for the acrylic rings, and table saw/miter saw cutting for the slats.

I used cedar here for the slats with stain and a tung oil finish. Not a big fan of cedar so far. Crazy the way it sucks up finish. I find finishing work to be quite tedious but is a necessary evil I suppose. Will birds be OK with a clear roof?

Should I swap out the brass screws/caps for stainless or black oxide finish?

The inner sleeve is a 6 inch diameter galvanized duct connector so the house should be snug. There are drain holes in the bottom.

I found the perfect gasket to cover the edges of the sheet metal I cut for the opening. I enjoyed designing and building this and have a couple of more roundy concepts already designed and in the pipeline.