Nice and sturdy bench and clamp set-up. From an article in Work magazine July 22, 1889.
Category: woodworking
Butcher block counter top.
Wise and thoughtful words for Makers. It’s the thoughtfulness that a hand-craftsman puts into his project, not the speed or even cost that makes something worth making in the first place.
“If you remain insensitive to the individual characteristics of the material you are working with and cut regardless to a predetermined, exact measurement, then the finished piece will lack a certain wholeness and be little better than something you could have bought from a factory.” – Graham Blackburn
Table Saw 1889
A circular saw is a tool which no workman who has once seen it at work would care to be without, for it is a labour-saving tool of the first importance, and enables its owner to do many things with an amount of ease, exactness, precision, and rapidity that cannot be attained with saws actuated by the hand and arm. When an amateur becomes the possessor of a lathe, one of the first things he will do is to have it fitted with a circular saw and the necessary appliances in the shape of table, fence, etc., to enable him to use it
conveniently and with due effect. The professional workman, on the other hand, although he will not be without a circular saw to be worked on and by his lathe, wants something stronger and heavier that will save him the labour of using the rip saw, which has made many a man’s arm and shoulder ache when the absence of suitable machinery in the workshop has compelled him to keep at this kind of work for many successive hours, perhaps, if not through the entire day; and every man who seeks to save time and labour, and therefore money, either for himself or for those in his employ, will, or ought to, take care to have a thoroughly efficient machine well suited to the requirements of his business in his workshop.
From: “Our Guide to Good Things,” in Work– March 30, 1889
Vintage Handsaw Advertisement
Know your tools; planes circa 1912
Interesting Saw
Another Workbench
A Woodcarver’s Bench
Tool Cabinet Extrordinaire
Another way to create an elliptical 1/2 (or 1/4) plan
Interesting to learn more of the sacred geometry all the time. Compass and rule work was my favorite bits in high school geometry class. I can’t wait to add this to my layout repertoire!
A true ellipsis is, in my opinion, is one of the most beautiful shapes in the universe. Unlike an oval that is drawn with two mirrored radii (or three in the case of a true “egg” shape), the radii of the ellipsis continually change. It’s incredibly strong shape in structural terms and it’s one of the best shapes for table tops. There are many ways to draw an ellipsis. But here’s an old method that you don’t often see referred to these days. It’s simple and can be extraordinarily precise. This method can also be very helpful if you’re creating domed framing for any type of construction.
First, establish a horizontal base line then raise a vertical line.
Swing a semi-circle with a diameter based on the minor axis of the ellipsis.
Next, open the compass to the length of the major axis and strike a point to the base…
View original post 206 more words








