Second outdoor cedar sign

Well here is my first cedar sign that I have made to sell (first one was a gift) I bought a piece of 2x6x16’ cedar deck board, I cut them into 28" pieces, then I ripped those into 1 1/2" strips, and edge glued the panels up. I wanted a 28"x18" panel but my planer isn’t that big so I glued them into two 9" panels, then planed them to the same thickness then glued the two halves together.

So I set it up and started carving and got about 20 min into the carve and the x-axis lost some steps and started carving in the wrong spot essentially ruining the piece. Turns out I had a loose belt. I had checked everything beforehand. Everything but the belts (facepalm)

Glued up another sign and made sure to check the machine over (all of it) also a great tip I got from you guys, was before I started carving the second piece I gave the face a coat of sanding sealer and let me tell you, what a difference. I also so a shallow outline of my letters before doing the roughing pass and I had barely any chip out.

I did the sign in a few different stages, so I was able to check the machine in between passes. Customer was happy and I was happy to finally finish this one, but I did learn a lot on this one which I will carry forward on my future projects.


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I like it.

What font did you use and is that done with vcarving or just a pocket?

Very nice, it is a learning experience every day. Great job, love the panel idea ill have to eyeball some of that decking I found a solid 12" wide Oak plank is not ideal better to do a glue up.

The font was called lighthouse I believe, had to tweak the font a bit, and I just used end Mills, no v-bit, I really should get some bits though because I’ve seen some awesome v-bit carvings

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if you want to buy one, buy it once and best. it is a little pricey but one time solution.

India ink or paint for the pockets?
paint and sand surface?

The pockets were painted with exterior acrylic paint, then the surface was sanded and stained with exterior stain.