The_Fort_Wayne_News_Tue__Oct_26__1915_ –
Share this: Print Email Facebook Tumblr Pinterest Twitter Like this: Like Loading…
Share this: Print Email Facebook Tumblr Pinterest Twitter Like this: Like Loading…
The best recommendation a carpenter can possess is a good kit of tools, well worn and in fine condition. A chest full of brand-new tools, however nice they may look, is of no use as a recommendation, for it is evident that the man has never used them. When the tools are half worn out,…
Share this: Print Email Facebook Tumblr Pinterest Twitter Like this: Like Loading…
A finished black-over-red Windsor chair, by Peter Galbert Peter Galbert (author of “Chairmaker’s Notebook”) has just released the first of his two-part video series: “Peter Galbert Teaches Milk Paint.” (The second part, which will go in-depth on using more colors, will be available in May and is included in the purchase price). I just finished…
Share this: Print Email Facebook Tumblr Pinterest Twitter Like this: Like Loading…
Share this: Print Email Facebook Tumblr Pinterest Twitter Like this: Like Loading…
The carpenters at the Heinzelmännchenbrunner in Köln. While you work feverishly to finish a commission for a customer or gifts for family and friends do you sometimes find yourself giving the side eye to those acquiring gifts with the mere click of a button? Perhaps you are feeling a bit Heinzelmännchen-ish? Let me explain. Although…
Can you help us Find a WINNER? Go here. I have just been fitting the handles to my own new tool chest. Near the end of the job, fitting components with screws is satisfying and tricky. One slip and the surface is scarred. Overtighten and the screw head is burred or worse it snaps off….
These last couple weeks I have been participating in a (personally) exciting experiment with furniture maker David Savage. Last week I taught a class at his school on making a traveling tool chest very similar to the one on the cover of the August 2015 issue of Popular Woodworking Magazine. David was a student in…
The goals for the first day of the “Hand Tool Immersion 101” class at the Marc Adams School of Woodworking were simple: Sharpen a 1/2” chisel to perfection. Sharpen and set up a block plane so it could take fine, fine shavings. Grind, sharpen and set up a jack plane. Of the three goals, I…