Now that the layout for the dovetails has been done, it’s time to start cutting! I am using a Moxon vise to hold the boards in place for two reasons, one it gets it up to a more comfortable cutting height and two, it supports it nicely across the entire width. I start by […]
Archive | October, 2014
Houston Woodworking Show and Pop Wood Webinar Download Update
We were at the Woodworking Show in Houston last week and had a great time meeting old and new friends, admiring other master woodworker’s work, and demonstrating a whole variety of woodworking techniques: half-blind dovetails, dovetail markers (see our blog post on making one in the 7 drawer dresser project), inlay, and a small box. Thank you to everyone we met who’s […]
Woodworking Show This Weekend in Conroe, Texas
Come join us this weekend for the Big Woodworking Show, Friday through Sunday, October 24-26 in Conroe, Texas. Some of you may have noticed that the normal woodworking show that was usually in the spring in Houston got canceled. Well, apparently there was some problem with the venue right at the last minute. But […]
Making a Dovetail Marker
Read all about Frank’s dresser project progress. As I mentioned in my last blog, I had to make myself another dovetail marker because I left mine at the school shop. Making a dovetail marker is not too hard, but I have chosen to make it a little harder by using a tapered sliding dovetail to […]
Dresser Drawers Started – 7 Drawer Dresser Project, Continued
Read all about Frank’s dresser project progress. It’s time to begin building the dresser drawers. I have spent a fair amount of time choosing the wood for the drawer fronts. In fact I was very pleased with the wood for the lower drawers: the grain runs all the way through and the lower 4 drawer […]
Tapered Sliding Dovetails – 7 Drawer Dresser Project Continued
Read all about Frank’s dresser project progress. Now that I have the whole dresser glued up, which by the way was a challenge! I glued up most of it with the help of my 9-year-old and then just in time, Jonathan Schwennesen came by the shop and offered me a hand to put some of […]
“Handwork in Wood” – Wood Hand Tools, Part Ten: Wood Braces and Squares
The following comes from William Noyes’s 1910 classic, Handwork in Wood. See our previous Handwork in Wood posts here. B. Tools for holding other tools: Wood Braces The brace or bit-stock, Fig. 185, holds all sorts of boring tools as well as screwdrivers, dowel-pointers, etc. The simple brace or bit-stock consists of a chuck, a handle, and a knob, and is sufficient for […]
“Handwork in Wood” – Wood Hand Tools, Part Nine: Pounding and Holding Tools
The following comes from William Noyes’s 1910 classic, Handwork in Wood. See the whole Handwork in Wood series (so far) here. More to come. Pounding Tools The hammer consists of two distinct parts, the head and the handle. The head is made of steel, so hard that it will not be indented by hitting against nails or the butt of nailsets, punches, […]
Hand Tools Rule! Fitting the Interior Drawer Frames
Some of you may have been worried in the last few dresser building posts that I may have rejected the use of hand tools. Well, this is definitely not so. Hand tools rule in this part of the dresser build. I don’t know how I would do without them. In fact this part would […]
“Handwork in Wood” – Wood Hand Tools, Part Eight: Chopping and Scraping Tools
The following comes from William Noyes’s 1910 classic, Handwork in Wood. See the whole Handwork in Wood series (so far) here. More to come. Chopping Tools The primitive “chopping tool”, which was hardly more than a wedge, has been differentiated into three modern hand tools, the chisel…the ax, Fig. 139, and the adze, Fig. 141. The ax has also been differentiated into the hatchet, with a […]