Woodworking in the Lone Star State
…a saw that was made by Henry Disston in 1848 and a Stanley #4 plane with not retrofitted thick irons. I used a Veritas small plow plane for the grooves…
…a saw that was made by Henry Disston in 1848 and a Stanley #4 plane with not retrofitted thick irons. I used a Veritas small plow plane for the grooves…
…once. I just felt like I had to do just one so that I could say I had done it, but then I used a router after that.” He, as…
…a demo and before long I find myself yawning watching a router and jig cut dovetails and other different joints. It’s the extremes surrounding dovetail cutting that creates the greatest…
…left by hand planes really. Machines especially always leave the telltale marks of the rotary cut on the surface of woods worked by machines such as routers, planers, jointers and…
…router and you cooked your goose before you start. Show them art work and description about your product that reflects the chosen lifestyle of a crafting artisan and things can…
…machining spoons gives much deeper insight into the complex structure found throughout all types of wood grain. Using routers and bandsaws, belt sanders remove most skill and does not require…
…ploughed the grooves by hand and the steps give perfect results without screaming routers and tablesaws. The box itself is as always fully dovetailed and split by hand saw. A…
…you will need are square, knife, pencil, mortise gauge, 1/4”*, 3/8” and 1” chisel, chisel hammer, tenon saw, plane, spokeshave, hand ripsaw, hand router*, rasp. *Denotes non-essential tools. 1: To…
…became more ornate and more decorative through the centuries. Today, they are produced mostly by commercial CNC routers and look just like that. No feeling in the racks of gift…
…else or a definite copy of a period piece. No, the tenons are not routed on a router or shaped on a shaper, just a Stanley #4 achieved this and…