To the left is the horn press I finished up not too long ago. I got the plans for it from the HCH website here:
https://www.hornguild.org/a-simple-horn-press-by-rex-reddick/I added the two boards that run just inside the side columns to increase the stability of the top plate. The press screw is 18" and was a misjudgment on my end. The plans doesn't name the part exactly, just gives an obsolete part number which no longer exists and the company that made them sold out to Pony. You have the option of either a 9", 12", or 18" from the manufacturer. I determined it was a 12" press screw which was sold out entirely along with the 18" for the foreseeable future because of reasons. I then deduced, incorrectly, that a 9" press screw would not work. Fortunately Lowes had the 18" ones mislabeled in their inventory and was able to order one. It's a bit ungainly, but not the worst thing in the world to operate, plus if I ever strip it then I can just lop it off and start fresh. I spilled my can of shellac being a klutz finishing it so everything in my shop got an emergency coat of shellac. When life hands you lemons, ask it for a bag.
The kiln was a combination of John's example and my one friend Phil who told me about them in the first place. I screwed the legs on to the top by mistake building it up so the intake is coming in from the right. I opted to use the same heat deflector as what Phil used to save room on the inside, cutting a ᗡ D pattern in the lid and bending it in. The only problem is I neatly drew out my Ds, got the cutoff wheel on my dremel and realized I had cut them out entirely sometime just before the second ding of the second part hitting my bench. I knew I had to cut out only the outer curve, but I saw the line and just turned my brain off and cut out the whole thing. So I took a coke can, cut off the top and bottom, flattened it, bent it in half, formed a couple copper rivets and riveted it to the intake hole. It worked. I could have sworn you used a sliding bolt latch, the reason I selected mine, strange. There's a pretty decent sized gap around the door, if that's an issue then I'll just rivet on more coke cans probably, but I'm hoping it isn't. Also, Phil insisted I put a wooden shelf in it for the horn to rest on so I did.
Thank you again for your guys' help!