Thank YOU world!
…likely bought from Highland Woodworking and of course the similarly famed aproned workbench with the vise protruding past the apron. I remember a few short months ago the critics in…
…likely bought from Highland Woodworking and of course the similarly famed aproned workbench with the vise protruding past the apron. I remember a few short months ago the critics in…
I felt troubled that anyone would consider buying what can readily be made from real wood. Especially for real woodworkers. I can understand someone buying their initial workbench in certain…
…them off and start from scratch? I’m currently attempting to make your workbench using some old 3″x9″ timbers we reclaimed from an old cowshed in Dumfries. I’m trying to do…
…enthusiasts long into the future. It was a reference manual that has never been written and the drawings were made with my own pencils at the workbench where I have…
…than wheel-throwing. Hand building opens the craft up to a massively diverse range of functional and creative work and here again the workbench or the wheel anchor the worker to…
…was that it doesn’t have a domestic maker beyond the lower-grade tools made by Kuntz. It’s the same with workbenches these days. Hard to imagine Swedish benches go around the…
…help, I helped them. Usually, my answer galvanised them to do something necessary and they never balked at this kind of encouragement. They made the tool they needed, the workbench,…
…yet another workbench from recycled wood; as a guide for others to get their workbench. I bought enough wood for three benches, two saw trestles and a shelving unit for…
1: The poor man’s beading and marking tool went up on YouTube 2: My next ‘aged’ workbench nears completion 3: We launch yet another video series on…
…me at the opposite far corner to his 10-foot long workbench by a monstrous vise the size of which I’d never seen before. The bench was never called a workbench;…
Want a roundup of Paul’s latest posts each week? We’ve got you covered.