Making a Memento Plaque

Photo of author
Matt Hagens

This project was built and designed by Billy from Newton Makes.

Billy repurposed a thick piece of cherry into a commemorative wall plaque to mark a deeply personal moment: a father taking his son to their first game at Neyland Stadium and preserving that memory in wood and engraving.

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Design

The plaque centers on a simple, honest aesthetic: matched cherry grain, an engraved layout of Neyland Stadium, and a recessed window for a commemorative ticket.

Engraving focused on key visual elements—stadium seating sections, the football field, and the checkerboard end zone—while the date and final score personalize the piece for the family.

Lumber Prep and Acclimation

Billy began by milling a thick piece of cherry and then letting the boards acclimate before final milling to avoid later movement like cupping or twisting.

He milled in stages, removing only what was necessary, and checked flatness after each rest period so the final plaque would remain stable over time.

Edge Preparation and Glue-Up

Grain matching was a priority, so the two boards were oriented to flow together visually before being glued into a single panel for the plaque.

To get a near-perfect joint, both mating edges were run across the jointer at the same time so each face matched the other, producing a tight seam after glue-up and sanding with a drum sander to final thickness.

Routing, Ticket Recess, and Hanging

The plaque incorporated a shallow recess for a printed, commemorative ticket that sits on a black felt backing and is protected beneath a piece of acrylic secured with small screws.

A keyhole slot was routed for wall mounting, and pilot holes were used to ensure the hanging hardware sits flush and secure; these routing operations were kept shallow and precise to preserve the plaque’s profile.

Shaping and Final Surface Prep

Edges were softened and the panel sanded through progressive grits to remove tool marks and refine the engraved details before finishing.

Attention to the engraving included cleaning out finish from the cut lines so the detail stayed crisp rather than filled with finish residue.

Finishing

Billy applied a hard wax finish, worked in with a pad and wiped off excess to avoid sticky buildup and to maintain a tactile, natural surface on the cherry.

After curing, light buffing and additional thin coats brought depth to the grain while preserving the engraved contrast and the visual separation around the ticket recess.

Why This Memento Matters

The project is an example of using maker skills to give a memory physical form, turning a shared experience into an heirloom that can be hung and revisited over time.

Technically, it reinforces useful shop habits—acclimation, edge matching, careful routing and finish cleanup—while emotionally it highlights how a simple object can hold a large personal meaning.

Please support Billy by visiting his website here: https://www.newtonmakes.com/shop.

 

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