

Textiles and shoes (placed on top of your burgundy bin in a clear plastic bag)ĭo not put these items the Burgundy Bin - No thanks.Batteries, placed on top of the bin lid in a clear plastic bag: (please don’t tie to bin handle).Paper, magazines, junk mail, white envelopes.You can put the following in the caddy bag/black caddy box:
Video of how to make photo frame from recycled materials free#
Large flattened cardboard boxes may also be placed at the side of your burgundy bin but please make sure all boxes are empty and free of plastic film and polystyrene packaging. This includes recyclable and biodegradable bags - they cannot be recycled.Įxtra recycling that won't fit in your burgundy bin can be presented in a cardboard box / clear bag at the side of the burgundy bin on collection day. Do not put plastic bags and bin liners in your burgundy bin or it will not being emptied. Please place recycling in your bin loose. Lots of items may say that they are recyclable on the packaging but this does not mean we accept them. You must only put the items listed below in your burgundy bin. Interested to find out what happens to your recycling after it goes into the bin lorry? This video shows you the whole recycling process! Top tip - are you confused about what goes in your bin and is recycling helpful? Derbyshire County Council have a great page on waste and recycling myth busting!


Make sure you’re keeping the rabbeted side to the inside of the frame.Īssemble the four pieces into a rectangular shape, remembering always to position the rabbet groove to the inside. On the two leftover pieces, repeat the process of measuring, marking, and cutting, this time using as a guide the shorter side of the picture to be framed. Mark the second board, then cut it so that you have a pair of identical pieces. Next, place the second board over the one into which you’ve just now cut a second angle. Here, cut a 45-degree angle, this time in the direction opposite to the initial angled cut. Then choose one of the two boards and transfer that total measurement to its rabbeted side, marking the distance. Measure the longer side of the picture you are going to frame add 1/16″ to that measurement. In other words, once you have finished cutting an angle into each board, the rabbeted edges should be opposite the longer (and pointier) side. Use a miter saw to cut one end of both boards at a 45-degree angle, being careful to make sure that the rabbet runs along what is to become the inside of the frame.

The picture is going to lie against the rabbet, so if you expect to frame an item (or to use a mat) of considerable thickness, accommodate it by creating a more generous rabbet. With a router, cut a 1/2″ x 1/2″ rabbet-that is, a rectilinear groove-along one of the long sides of each of the two pieces. (Of course, if you’d wanted the frame wider or narrower, you would have set the table saw accordingly.) Step 2 These must be exactly the same width, so pass the wider of the two through the table saw a second time. Setting the table saw at 1-1/2″ (from the blade to the fence), rip the wood board into two 4-foot-long pieces.
