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After the glue dries, Cory cut out the
general shape.
Now comes the fun part, sanding. We started with a genuinely barbaric
grinding sander with #50 paper, which if you're not careful can remove huge
chucks unintentionally, or worse, almost cut your board in half. But it's
one fast way to even out and continue shaping the board. (Hand rasps and
planers work better, but that's not quite as exciting for a young boy.)
This is the only area where I actually helped him because the reinforced
nose takes a little work. |

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After the grinding sander comes a hand rotor
sander which can bring you down to a pretty smooth product. We began with
#100 paper, and then did it again with #180, and finally #220. Cory then
spent a decent amount of time hand sanding with #220.
He was very proud at how smooth he got it.
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Then the board gets dusted, and 2 coats of a
quick dry wood sealer gets laid on. When the sealer was dry, we put on 2
coats of a quick dry polyurethane but not before Cory put his personal
sticker on. (Below)
The board at this point is only a "wall board" and should not go
in the water. We sent Cory home with enough Marine Varnish to give it 6 to
10 coats. Problem is you need at least 24 hours between coats. So in about a
week to 10 days Cory should be in the water with it. |

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Proudly - Handmade by Cory |
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