In just a couple of hours. Making spoons out of wood you cut down yourself is about as close to instant gratification as you find in a woodworking project.
2015-01-11
Spoons in January
In just a couple of hours. Making spoons out of wood you cut down yourself is about as close to instant gratification as you find in a woodworking project.
2014-12-14
Stocking Stuffers for Woodworkers
Once
in a while someone asks me for advice on what to give their
woodworking loved one for Christmas. In the past, my standard advice
has been to get a nice honing jig, or better yet, a class on sharpening. Those remain very good gifts, because sharpening is
fundamental to enjoyable working, and neglected by a large percentage
of us working at all levels.
About
a year ago, though, I decided that one of these might help
2014-11-16
A Handplane Jig for Ladderback Chair Leg Tapering
Here's
another hand tool jig. This one is more specific than the dovetail
paring jig I showed in the last entry, because it's built to help
with one particular step in one particular project. I use it to turn
tapered square chair leg blanks into tapered octagons when I make the
ladderback chair developed by J. Alexander and Drew Langsner. The
dovetail jig can be used for joints of different thicknesses and
widths, and I can even picture myself using it to fair up tenon
shoulders. But this leg-tapering jig is so specific that I doubt it
will ever be used for anything but this project.
First
I'll show about making and using the jig, and then I'll explain my
thinking a little bit.
2014-11-09
Robert Ingham's Dovetail Paring Jig
I've
been thinking lately about hand tool jigs for very specific
operations. If you've used hand tools much, you've learned about the
value of jigs for often-performed, generalized operations like making
a square end on a board with a bench hook and/or shooting board. I'm
thinking about more specialized jigs that don't get used for every
single project, but come in handy for guiding a tool along a
carefully limited path to produce consistent, accurate results. This
baseline paring jig for dovetails is a perfect example.
2014-10-05
Buying an Old Unisaw
If
you're getting into woodworking because you want to build cabinets
and built-ins for your house, your version of the thousand-dollar
shop could be centered around the tablesaw. I have danced around this
topic for a while because although I do have a tablesaw, it isn't one
I would recommend for cabinet work: it's underpowered and has a very
small table which tilts to make angled cuts, so is not safe for
breaking down big sheets of plywood.
![]() |
The
saw as I found it when I visited the pre-auction inspection. There
was no play in the arbor bearings, no major rust, and the inside was
not caked with old sawdust: all good signs.
|
Recently that changed, when I had the chance to get an old Delta Unisaw for an excellent price.
2014-09-01
Make a Chopping Block for Green Woodworking
If you
want to get started in woodworking on the lowest possible budget, I
recommend what's called “green woodworking” or sometimes
“greenwoodworking”. I've talked a little about this already, in
this entry about the chairmaking class I took at Country Workshops
last summer, and this entry about gathering some ash for my next
chair.
One
thing you will find handy if you want to start carving spoons and/or
bowls from green wood is a chopping block, so you'll have a stable
surface for shaping with an axe.
2014-04-08
Hock Kitchen Knife Kits
I just put the first coat of finish on this guy:
If you've done much messing around with hand planes, you'll probably recognize the logo. If not, finish reading this and I'll try to start you down the path to enlightenment.
If you've done much messing around with hand planes, you'll probably recognize the logo. If not, finish reading this and I'll try to start you down the path to enlightenment.
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