More work on the galley doors. The exceptional hot and humid weather continued all this past week too, really taxing my desire to continue with a project with real problems. However, the panels and frames are at least together. Yes, the brads went through to the work table, but let the glue dry with the panels staying flat without my concrete block gravity clamps scraping them up. I used left-over bits of luan but too late realized that the hinge screws would stick through the front, so got inset hinges and glued 3/8" scraps under them. The close-up flash photo of the mock-up of that did not come out and will have to wait for daylight.
The knobs are the cheapest wood jobs, mounted on their screws and dipped in polyurethane. I'm pleased with the thrown-together drying rack, two bits of angle, one already made into a mount for an electric trolling motor for a long-gone sailboat, counterbalanced with half-bricks.
Like so much that I've done on the TTT, this was all new to me, so the first ones were terrible and the last ones not so bad, so I made the far bottom ones first and the eye-level ones last, just as I made the back wall first and the curb side last.
At last, at last, properly cool (and DRY!) weather today with more due for at least a week. I expect to get in plenty of full days for the first time in way too long, getting the doors finished and installed and the exterior finish done. I ran up on most of a quart of matching stain at a yard sale (for 50 cents!), which suggested what to do with much of the interior wood. More fun.