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Executive Summary for thekiltedwoodworker.com

1502 Response Time (ms)
200 HTTP Status
33 Scripts
69 Images
21 Links
HTTP/1.1 Protocol

SEO & Content Analysis

Basic Information
Page Title
thekiltedwoodworker | One man's journey into the freeing of his creative mind… while wearing a kilt.
Meta Description
One man's journey into the freeing of his creative mind... while wearing a kilt.
HTML Language
en
Robots.txt Present
Sitemap Present
total_urls: 119
SEO Meta Tags
content-type: text/html; charset=UTF-8
Page Content
One man's journey into the freeing of his creative mind… while wearing a kilt.With the tops properly thicknessed, jointed, and cut to size, I began work on the butterflies. The first task was to make more butterflies. I began doing so with the remains of a small plank of bog oak I had left over from another project (a commission I have Caleb James, Planemaker working on). As I made some cuts to free butterflies from their matrix, I paused to admire how great a job my old bandsaw was doing.Nice, clean cuts!Apparently Karma thought I was getting cocky, because not two minutes later my blade broke. The blade breaking was not in itself such a problem. It happens. It was an old blade and it broke at a patched weld. No, it was a problem because I had absolutely no idea where my other bandsaw blades were. At some point during my move into the condo, they were boxed up… and that’s all I knew.I spent three hours looking through all of my boxes with woodworking equipment and tools for my other bandsaw blades – multiple times, actually – all to no avail. I growled in frustration and begrudgingly drove to Woodcraft to pick up a new blade.An hour after installing the new blade, I found my other blades, in a box I’d checked three times but apparently hadn’t fully opened to see the blades quietly sitting on the top at the other end of the box.Masters of ‘Hide and Seek’…*sigh* Regardless, I was back in business and quickly made a kaleidoscope of butterflies…A kaleidoscope of butterflies… (and some scrap off-cuts I probably won’t throw away)After cutting them on the bandsaw, I use a bench hook and a sharp chisel to pare the sides smooth and add just the slightest chamfer towards the bottom of the butterfly on all sides. This chamfer is usually not more than one or two thousandths of an inch.With butterflies all in order, I laid out some butterfly options to stabilize the split knot in the hall table. Everyone has their own methods for figuring out where to put these inlays – mine is to lay them out in various ways and take pictures, then examine and compare the pictures to see what looks best while also stabilizing the intended area.In this case, I decided on two butterflies. Sticking them down in place with double-sided tape, I traced the bottom edges of the butterflies with my large Blue Spruce marking knife and then removed the inlays.In order to properly delineate the edges of the mortises I needed to make, I chiseled out a wedge of wood along the entire border of each butterfly and used white pencil to highlight the wood to remain.In preparation for removing the bulk of the waste with a (corded) router, I drilled a series of holes in each end of the butterfly. Chopping out the waste between the three holes leaves me a place to drop in my router bit. I have to do this because I’d rather use my smaller palm router, a Bosch 1608 edge trimmer, which does not have plunge capabilities, than my larger Bosch 1617.After removing most of the waste with the palm router, I’m left with the smallest amount of wood along each edge.This remaining waste is easily removed with a sharp chisel.Once I have the waste removed, I fitted the butterflies in place and tapped them in about 1/8” or so to make sure they fit. They did, so I pulled them back out, added glue to all of the walls of the holes, and cautioned them to fall into place without a fight by showing them my joiner’s mallet. That didn’t work, so I had to resort to seating them with the mallet and a scrap of wood. They didn’t put up much of a fight and I could tell they were a very tight and pleasing fit.They seated so well, in fact, that I didn’t wait but a minute to begin cutting them flush with my Veritas flush-cutting saw.After a little bit of work with a block plane and some sandpaper, I’m left with this.Not bad. I had a paper-thick gap on the end of the top butterfly and a tiny corner chip out on the near one; these things are easily fixed with a minor bit of epoxy later on.Now to start on the smaller end table…TKW;

Network & Infrastructure

DNS & Hosting
IP Address
192.0.78.25
Reverse DNS
Not detected
SSL/TLS Certificate
Issuer
CN=E7, O=Let's Encrypt, C=US
Protocol Tls13
Expires In 68 days
HSTS Enabled

Technology Stack

Content Management Systems
Squarespace WordPress WordPress (robots.txt)
Server Technologies
Generator: WordPress.com PHP (inferred from WordPress)

Services & Integrations

Analytics & Tracking
Google Analytics GA4
E-commerce Platforms
Magento PrestaShop
Payment Gateways
Square

CDN & Media Providers

Dynamic Analysis & Security

Dynamic JavaScript Analysis
Angular (Data Attributes) Bootstrap (CSS Classes) ES6+ JavaScript Features Single Page Application (SPA) - Suspected Web Server: nginx
Security Headers
HSTS
Server Headers
nginx

Resource Analysis

External Resource Hosts
0.gravatar.com
c.statcounter.com
i0.wp.com
pixel.wp.com
polldaddy.com
s0.wp.com
s1.wp.com
s2.wp.com
secure.gravatar.com
stats.wp.com
thekiltedwoodworker.com
thekiltedwoodworker.wordpress.com
wp.me
UI Frameworks & Libraries
Angular Material (Class Names) Bootstrap (Class Names) D3.js Ionic (Class Names) Slate Swiper

Analysis Errors

Analysis Warnings & Errors
The following issues occurred during analysis:
  • Reverse DNS failed: No such host is known.
Analysis Complete

Analyzed thekiltedwoodworker.com with 5 technologies detected across 5 categories

Analysis completed in 1502 ms • 2026-03-23 07:48:40 UTC