Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Mittens Are Warm

Wandering the mountains in the winter will convince any sober individual of the need for keeping your digits in working order.  Snowboarding, snowshoeing, skiing and winter fishing worked on my hands in a most uncomfortable fashion until I discovered the mitten.  It was on a particularly cold winter day while snowboarding that I lost a glove on the lift.  My good friend's father was ski patrol and had gotten us on the mountain half day for free and I had a few dollars in my rather sad looking wallet.  Into the skin-you-alive shop also known as the gear shop I went.  On the rack were a sexy new pair of gloves complete with leathery palm bits all at a minor cost of way more than I had or the clearance bin mittens in XL which felt thinner than my long johns on insulation.  So I am on my way up the lift with my new mittens when I notice something strange.  My hands are warmer than I can recall them ever having been in my gloves.  Converted I was.

Fast forward two decades and several pairs of fingerless rag wools and mitten shells later.  Today my obsession lies firmly in the aquatic realm of sea kayaking, or more specifically Greenland style sea kayaking.  Having completed a Tuilik and a pair of mittens to go with them I decided to improve on the design.  Pair one consisted 4 bits of neoprene sewed to produce a mitten.  Pair two consisted of the same basic design as pair one but with sleeker lines and a better cinch cord.  Pair three have taken a new road. 

Wandering on the qajaq influenced web I stumbled across some images of mittens made and used in the arctic.  With what I gather is a rather chilly climate it was simple enough to reckon that these gloves must be rather well designed.  A far better understanding of gear and its both inherent vulnerabilities and those which can be mitigated started to take shape.  A sewn garment is at its weakest at the seam.  This is especially true for waterproof items.  It became clear to me.  The next phase in my mitten quest would involve an attempt at significantly reducing seamed lengths.

The perfect guinea pig in any case is a monkey.  But since all I have handy is my 19 month old daughter Lili she'll have to do.  With Lili's hand placed ever so cutely on a clipboard her hand and forearm were traced.  Then a general silhouette was produced of her hand.  This with some seam allowance added was copied three times onto another piece of paper.  Modifications were made to provide fabric for the thumb and voila, glove.

My dear little girl put them on with a bit of help and proceeded to wear them from the living room to the bathtub and then after some wringing out with a towel, to bed.  The next step will be to take this general pattern idea and produce some paddling mittens which will hopefully fit well, be comfortable on the paddle, have minimal seams as well as good seam placement and provide a watertight seal along the seams and at the wrist cinch cord.

Thursday, December 13, 2012

Tuilik



Creating a tuilik has been a journey of procrastination.  Shawn Baker's pattern was invaluable  Qajaq USA Patter.  However some clarification on the process of joinery would have been helpful.  It is my goal to provide this insight to you reader whoever you may be.
I chose to join the neoprene (2mm smooth/jersey, from http://hookloopoutlet.com/neoprene-sheets--nylon---smooth-skin.html with hand sewing and aquaseal (I bought scads of Aquaseal from ebay as the price annihilated the dive shop price).  I received the rubber and promptly played on it with my 19 month old daughter Lili.  Lili is an excellent judge of all things kayak so her approval was very much appreciated.



The lines were drawn, cuts were made and procrastinator-y confusion ensued.  After begging a friend to sew it for me, attempting a glue only joint (I slept through the part where the glue was ready to join) and fiddling with my dear spouses sewing machine, it was determined that hand stitching would be the ticket.

Much to my surprise this process went fairly quickly and in two evenings a tuilik took shape.  In conjunction with heckling John and Paul while they worked away on Abby (John's new boat), glue was spread or rather glopped onto the tuilik seams.  I had my doubts as to how effective this approach would be, but as evidenced by my paddling this afternoon in the jacket success was had!  Soonish, when the poor thing is given the time to dry out..., a seam sealing coat will be added to the inside as well.


The perfect compliment to this tuilik and the opportunity granted by having adequate neoprene left over for such an enterprise, a pair of mittens were crafted as well.  They came together quite simply with some paper pattern play, stitching,  and a little Aquaseal sealant.

The final touch will be the addition of a bungee cinch strap to seal them to my wrists and then voila, finito, I'm done.


It is my wish that some web drifter searching for tuilik demystification will alight upon this page and be emboldened to see it through.  Good luck and pleasant paddling.
Dawn is complete.  She is 18' 4"  and beautiful.  Abby and Charlotte are in the mix.  Abby has ribs.  Charlotte possesses two sequoia wood beams, very cool.  John has taught us the behind the neck roll and is dangling his spine roll in plain view for Paul and I to match.  Kayaking is great fun.


We had a wonderful day at Morro Bay in California.  Otters, very large seals and some amazing fish tacos.  Life is so sweet.

Saturday, November 24, 2012

Laminate the Masik

Slam your knees into it enough times and it could prove troublesome.  The masik in one of my boats broke.  This was somewhat remedied with a wrap of leather and some copper nails.  A far better solution is to craft a more suitable masik in the first place. 

Laminated Masik
A lengthy search resulted in many many approaches to executing this task.  By far the one I like the most is that of Indiana Adventure Dad (This link details his method).  His laminating press worked perfectly.

Step 1: Rip a dozen 3" x 1/8" x 3'. On a table saw these may come out a bit wonky.  Fear not my wonky bits still produced a fine masik and curved deck beam.  Perfectionist I am not!

Step 2: Fasten together two 2" x 12" x 3' boards.

Step 3:  Draw the masik on the boards.

Step 4: Jigsaw the masik opening into the press assembly.

Step 5: Apply masking tape to the press faces. 

Step 6: Load it with a oak and glue sandwich and then use either pipe clamps, ratchet straps or windlasses to form the masik.

Step 7: Allow to dry for a day.

Step 8: Plane, sand and otherwise disguise the wonkyness out of the masik and beam.

Skinboat Cockpit Coaming


Skinboat Cockpit Coaming Having just completed a coaming and wrestled with the details I thought it nice to share the process as I muddled through it.

I use 7' lengths of oak ripped to 1/8" by 1 1/4" and 1/8" by 1/2" which has sat in my soak trough for at least a couple of weeks (a month is perfect)

First: Cut out a cockpit hole shape from some cheap ply. I like this to be at least an inch thick. At a few spots cut notches out of the edge of the form to allow the wood to be clamped.

Second: Load the steam box (or in my case kettle and dryer vent tube) with 3 or 4 pieces of each cut. Make a pot of coffee or tea, whichever you fancy.

Third: Find the waterproof wood glue and 1" ring shank nails...

Fourth: Pull the first hot bit of oak from the box. Curse the fact that you forgot to put gloves on again and then proceed to clamp one end to the form and wrap the other end around until they overlap. clamp this in place while you grab the glue. Slather a bit on the overlap and re-clamp.

Fifth: Slather the now clamped piece with glue. Take special care to get a sufficient quantity on your hands which will act as gloves for the next step.

6th: Pull a piece of oak out, apply glue to its soon to be entombed side and then but it to the previous piece, clamp it, wrap around and clamp again.

7th: (Enter the ratchet strap stage left) wrap the current assemblage with a ratchet strap, you'll know if you have it on the right direction when you begin to tighten. When you are certain it is on in the wrong direction correct this and tighten again. Now that you are proudly viewing your growing coaming, remove the strap once more and slide it so that the hole in the strap lines up with about 4 inches shy of the tag end. You will do this so that you can either peg or nail it and thus hold the tension in place.

8th: Peg or nail to hold the tension in place.

9th: Repeat until the 1 1/4" has grown to 2 layers all the way around. Cut to length, preferably on a flatish portion and peg or nail as you see fit.

10th: At the upper edge, or middle as your preference dictates, slather glue and begin wrapping the 1/2" in the same manner. Consider putting a nail or peg a few inches from the start point.

11th: Add 1/2" strips until a thickness of 1/2" to 5/8" inch is reached, either will work fine.

12th: When all the strips have been placed and pegged or nailed consider nailing the entire circumference of the lip at intervals of about 2 finger widths. I do this by first nailing at opposite points across the coaming to even out any slack wood. Ring shank nails have an amazing effect on tightening up your lamination.

13th: If it looks a bit wide or not wide enough simply use a metal blade on your jigsaw to cut the coaming free from the plywood and then apply pipe clamps to correct the shape. Consider an inch of over-correction when clamping as the wood will likely have some memory from the bending.

14th: Clamp it up and set it somewhere to dry for a day.


Forming and finishing:
1st: A day has passed and you can now remove all the clamps and view your mess or coaming in process. Dig out a rasp and plane and a file for the nails and get to work truing up the edges and adding some slope to the back and sides to soften the feel during your rolling sessions.

2nd: Fill any gaps with a mixture of sawdust and waterproof wood glue. Set the coaming aside for a day.

3rd: Sand until she's pretty.

4th: Drill 1/8" or so holes at 2 finger intervals just below the coaming lip.

5th: Apply a coat of varnish or oil to combing and set aside to dry.

6th: Sew it onto your skin taking care to fold the excess skin over so that it is hidden underneath the coaming.

7th: Varnish a couple more coats and your done.

Brew another pot of coffee, place it in a suitable thermos and go paddling!


(Originally Posted at http://www.kayakforum.com/cgi-bin/Building/index.cgi/page/1/md/read/id/220701/sbj/skin-on-frame-one-piece-coaming/)

Genesis

In the beginning there was a pile of wood.  As we all know 'wood is good.'  Frugality, time watching the little one and a random encounter with crazed mid-westerner have resulted in the following.  Waste your time well.