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Tae

Stitching horse and pony

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Six months ago, I was motivated to build a stitching horse. I liked Dale Grabowski's Sit 'N Stitch and the only requirement I had was that I'd use my old motorcycle brake pedal for something.

I made a small version first and scaled it up. After a gazillion trips to Home Depot and OSH, it's done.

Check it out! I'm stitching/lacing everything I see!

Tae

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nice work! i really like the way you did it with the brake pedal really creative!----sheridanman

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Just moved into our new house! Building my workshop now! A Stitching Horse & Pony are two things that are definately going into the shop! Any chance you have a blueprint and parts list you'd like to share? Nearest Home Depot is 20 miles away! hahaha That is awesome!

:You_Rock_Emoticon:

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Just moved into our new house! Building my workshop now! A Stitching Horse & Pony are two things that are definately going into the shop! Any chance you have a blueprint and parts list you'd like to share? Nearest Home Depot is 20 miles away! hahaha That is awesome!

:You_Rock_Emoticon:

Thanks! Here is the orig. plan, but I've made changes along the way. In the beginning, I made all pieces out of pine, but the square base piece cracked and the surface of the 2' base piece was warped. So I did surgery and replaced the square piece with oak and added a circular base. Also, I planed and sanded the 2' base piece and added a 1" oak board for flatness. In addition:

  • Jaws: I made them out of pine, but in retrospect, I should have made it all out of oak. The left over wobble is the bend in the pine jaws that I have to live with.

  • The intermediate piece is out of two (not one as in the diagram) glued square pieces of 1" oak

  • I added a circular base below that (see photo)

  • The 2' base piece was initially out of pine, but it wasn't flat enough, so I glued an oak piece, cut it at 75 degrees with my circular saw and sanded down the edges. In fact, I like that it's 2.5" thick. Th swivel idea was good on paper, but doesn't work too well, so I tighten the nut all the way.

  • In the future I will not use chrome acorn nuts. They cost me like $20 for what you see!

  • I use a leather strap. It's nice because the friction makes it stay, but in the same regard, it doesn't spring open as easily. I have to help it open by loosening the strap in the middle with my fingers. I kinda like this setup because then I don't need a racket scheme

  • I added wooden cabinet handles. It makes moving it easier and it's handy since I can stick my stitching awl in there when I stitch

  • I added rubber feet so they don't slip around carpet or scratch wooden floors.

  • I added and modded U-bolts for the strap by cutting them shorter with my dremel tool with cut-off discs.

  • I added a wingnut (with leather handles!) just in case I really want to hold it shut without my foot pressing the pedal.

In retrospect, I probably spent more than $125 that buys a stitching horse from Mr. Grabowski, but it was fun!

For materials I've bought everything at home depot (except chrome acorn nuts, avail at osh)

  • one 2"x10"x8' piece of pine

  • one 1"x10"x6' piece of oak

  • 4 U bolts with chrome acorn nuts

  • 1 3/4"x8" carriage bolt with wing nut and chrome acorn nut and 3 washers

  • 3 1/2"x3" carriage bolts with nuts and washers

  • wood glue

  • one stainless steel door hinge

  • one set of L brace (I think 2"x2") that I bent slightly using a vise and hammer to match the tilt of the pony

  • one 6"x6" bracket that I cut short fit in the circular base

  • two 6" mending brace

  • compression spring

  • one left-over leather strap that was tapered slightly from 3/4" to 1/2" along the way

  • set of screw on rubber feet

  • 4 screws

  • 2 wooden handles

  • cherry pecan stain

  • semi-gloss polyurethane

  • leather to cover the jaws -- I used contact cement

For tools, I used

  • circular saw

  • jig saw

  • hand plane

  • corded drill with sanding attachment

  • various drill bits

  • dremel tool with cut off disc

  • angle grinder (to round the edges of the cut-off bolts) -- kinda unnecessary

Have fun!

Tae

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Edited by Tae

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Thanks! Here is the orig. plan, but I've made changes along the way. In the beginning, I made all pieces out of pine, but the square base piece cracked and the surface of the 2' base piece was warped. So I did surgery and replaced the square piece with oak and added a circular base. Also, I planed and sanded the 2' base piece and added a 1" oak board for flatness. In addition:
  • Jaws: I made them out of pine, but in retrospect, I should have made it all out of oak. The left over wobble is the bend in the pine jaws that I have to live with.

  • The intermediate piece is out of two (not one as in the diagram) glued square pieces of 1" oak

  • I added a circular base below that (see photo)

  • The 2' base piece was initially out of pine, but it wasn't flat enough, so I glued an oak piece, cut and sanded it down. In fact, I like that it's 2.5" thick. Th swivel idea was good on paper, but doesn't work too well, so I tighten the nut all the way.

  • In the future I will not use chrome acorn nuts. They cost me like $20 for what you see!

  • I use a leather strap. It's nice because the friction makes it stay, but in the same regard, it doesn't spring open as easily. I have to help it open by loosening the strap in the middle with my fingers. I kinda like this setup because then I don't need a racket scheme

  • I added wooden cabinet handles. It makes moving it easier and it's handy since I can stick my stitching awl in there when I stitch

  • I added rubber feet so they don't slip around carpet or scratch wooden floors.

  • I added and modded U-bolts for the strap by cutting them shorter with my dremel tool with cut-off discs.

  • I added a wingnut (with leather handles!) just in case I really want to hold it shut without my foot pressing the pedal.

In retrospect, I probably spent more than $125 that buys a stitching horse from Mr. Grabowski, but it was fun!

Tae

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:cheers::clapping:

FINE LOOKING WORKMANSHIP.............

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