My shop is still swamped with Walnut, and I've been fooling around with coopered designs.  This storage stool  is about 18" tall, and can double as a seat, if needed. 
This one is much taller, and I'm still working on the lid for it.
What's a coopered design, you asked? Here's a pretty good explanation, click here. But like I said - I'm awash in walnut, and a shop visitor asked me to turn some stool legs for him. As always - challenge accepted. 
Those legs were easy enough to make, but it's been a while since I cut a wedge slot. So I did a little research, and found this: 
Cutting the slot in the leg spindle can be a little tricky - I made a jig that the leg sits in perfectly.
Then I ran the jig through the saw, thus cutting a perfect 1/8" slot in each leg. I still need to drill a relief hole at the bottom of each slot. 
But each slot is perfect!
 I cut a few wedges, and glued the legs in place. After drying overnight, the extra tenon needed a trim.
My wedged leg was proud of the seat by a quarter-inch, and required trimming. I've always felt this step is pretty tricky - in the past,  I've trimmed them with a router, but that's tricky.
And when you see people just sawing away on a tenon, I cringe.  Let's say the chance for chipout is high. So I applied some duct tape around the tenon, which not only protects the seat top, but allows me to trim the tenon just a hair above the seat. 
Here's the important part - as I was sawing, I rotated the saw around the outside of the tenon, so I was always cutting toward the center. This way, you eliminate tear-out or chipping around the tenon edge. 
Viola~ no chip out! 
A little sanding makes this looks amazing. 
I turned a few more legs while listening to a podcast - and I'm getting pretty damn quick about it. 
When this seat gets oiled, it's going to be ridiculous!
Sooner or later, I'll be running out of walnut, but for now - you can find me at the lathe, making more legs. I have a few thoughts about some future stools I'd like to make, and I might as well use up those Walnut thin rips.
 
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