This is my personal website, filled with whatever projects I feel like bragging about. If you want to see my professional qualifications, you're in the wrong place and should check out thomasluppi.com.
Renovated our one and only full bathroom in the house! Not having a shower for a month was painful, however it all turned out well.
Built 200ft of fence in my bark yard. I only built the front and the right side, the left side already had a stone wall and the back we opted for a wire fence for now. I will complete the back next year.
Renovated the powder room in my house. This was really intended to cut my teeth in tile work so I can tackle our one-and-only full bath, in the hopes of making that project much quicker (so we don't need to shower in the backyard for long).
There was a musty smelling room in the house I bought, the only finished room in the basement. Turned out it was built poorly and had mold issues, gutted the whole thing and rebuilt it.
Work has a laser cutter, so I must use it. One of the more fun projects was to cut out nameplates for me and my co-workers. This is done by cutting their names out of both a colored and white sheet of acrylic. I used a sheet of adhesive-backed nylon to put the white letters in the colored sheet, and vice versa. One plate goes on the door, the other on the desk.
Decided to build a home theater in my basement, and got tired of looking at cables under the projection screen. Build a long "bench" to go under it and hold all the electronics, clean it all up. After I moved out, I split up the two sides and they're benches around my house.
Quick-n-dirty picnic table for my office. Whole thing is built out of stud-grade 2x4s, ignoring the expensive and way over-sized bolts (I liked how chunky they are) the whole thing clocked in at ~$60.
Playing with more complex joints, I built this nightstand out of pine. While structurally it's a failure (it wiggles, despite my best attempts to shore it up), I'm a fan of it's looks and the stain turned out well. Half the castle joints broke when assembling it, not sure if that's due to the softness of the wood, or if I needed to reinforce it. Someday I'll rebuild it in oak.
Can't believe I don't have a picture of the finished product, but this is my first real piece of furniture. Designed to fit between the kegorator and a door, it uses star treads as a countertop (don't recommend), and holds all my coffee stuff.