Someone on the internet posted their re-purposed magnetic knife rack as a pipe stand. Theirs was pretty fancy, which was cool, but I wanted to do one for under $75. Really I wanted to do one for under $50, but you know how that goes. I found the rack on Amazon for $35. You can pick real, solid, walnut, maple, or oak, and they are well-built here in the USA. I didn't like the color of the waxed natural walnut when sitting on my pipe cabinet, so in a nutshell, I stripped the wax with Palmolive and a scrub brush, knocked down the standing grain with sandpaper, hit it with brown Fieblings alcohol dye, washed it again briefly with Palmolive and a tooth brush to clear the grain of excess dye, and then sealed it with Minwax spray urethane. The grain is pretty open so you can see some crevices, but it is all laid-down and sealed. Then I put some thin rubber pads on the bottom, and some 3/4" medium-duty felt pads on top. Finally I bought some 1/2" spherical neodymium magnets on ebay, 2 four-packs for $20 shipped, and set to work arranging some pipes on my new knife rack. Er, pipe-stand. I put this together a while ago, but I just got rid of the 3/4" pads and went to 1" medium-duty (not heavy duty, they are too thick) felt pads, as the additional adhesive on these should be less likely to lift around the edges due to the pressure in the center, while the additional felt should also provide a little more friction on the bottom of the pipe. (The pipes like to "steer" a little, like a compass needle, if the magnets and the pipes are not positioned right where they need to be on the pads.)
These pics are pretty crappy. Flash-on, you can see the felt under the pipes, and the "no-slip" rubber pads under the bottom of the stand. These are not really visible in reality, which is nice because the pipes appear to be floating above the stand, and the stand appears to be floating above the surface beneath it.
Flash off. This is closer to how it appears in reality.
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These pics are pretty crappy. Flash-on, you can see the felt under the pipes, and the "no-slip" rubber pads under the bottom of the stand. These are not really visible in reality, which is nice because the pipes appear to be floating above the stand, and the stand appears to be floating above the surface beneath it.
Flash off. This is closer to how it appears in reality.
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