Showing posts with label Fine Woodworking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fine Woodworking. Show all posts

Saturday, June 8, 2024

blog to print ... a woodworker's photo journal

                                  ok, i got a notice recently from the company that translates
my online blog into printed books saying
that they would be ceasing production soon, and if
i wanted anything printed out, i better get on it.

i did, and last week, i received two books, one from 2015 that i had not
previously printed, and one new one with posts from 2019 through 2024 so far.
when placed with my other blog books already printed ,
it makes for quite a stack ... 
about 150 pages per half inch ... 5.5" x 150 ... 1850 pages?  really? 
the Shaker Design book is 228 pages

  so, there you have it, 17 years of blogging

     957 posts. 2,276,730 page views

       one more post coming soon!

a few  of our favorite blog posts at this link
 
and a not so brief history of Dorset
Custom Furniture at this link 
below from john mcphee, tabula rasa, in the new yorker
click the photos to enlarge them ...
 

Wednesday, February 1, 2023

a vermont sap spout maple console table

 
ok ... this is a fun one!  
last week and some of this week we have been waiting for 
a big load of reclaimed chestnut to arrive from west virginia .. 
we got word yesterday that it will be here by friday ..
in the meantime we made some pieces for sale 
out of wood that has been 'hanging around'.   
these three boards i know i have owned for since at least 2015 ..

 
anyway,  this table is 18 x 58 x 30" high and would look great in your
entryway, behind your couch, or as a compact work desk.
ready to ship or deliver immediately.
vermont maple at its finest
at the top of the home page on my blog ..
a few more ready to go in the previous blog post.
click the pictures for a closer look ...

Sunday, November 29, 2009

The 'Force' of Fine Woodworking Magazine


I started the blog post below in July of 2008, for some reason, leaving it then in 'draft' form. As I was categorizing some of my back posts so that they appear in the 'category' index to the left, I I stumbled across it. Since the original below was, in a way, a 'thanks' to the Taunton Press folks, I thought it might be appropriate to finish it up for the Thanksgiving weekend. I feel even more strongly about it now for a number of reasons. Since that time, their website has grown to be an amazing thing. From the readers gallery where you can post photos of your completed projects, to 'ask the experts', (which I've done with great success), to the general woodworking community and the 'This Woodworking Life Blog (I'm a contributor) it has really grown. Recently, an editor used photos from one of my blog posts to start a discussion on dovetails that has generated 102 comments since November 19th and sent hundreds of new readers to my blog. They are building a community there and a valuable resource for the future of our craft. My original words, pretty much unedited, appear below ... Enjoy ... Become a Fine Woodworking member, contribute .. comment ...

7/25/2008 the 'original' blog post ...
'I was having a conversation yesterday with a friend I hadn't seen for a while and he asked me what 'new stuff' I was doing in my business. He was particularly curious how the CNC router we bought 3 years ago was working out and 'What were we doing with it?'. Which led me to think, what were we doing with it? Coincidentally, as you can see in the posts below, along with our own work, we were doing work for other woodworkers. (See Trevor's CNC projects).
I started making custom furniture for a living full time Jaunary 1st, 1980. Seems like a long time ago and at the time there weren't many other people I knew making a living that way. There was, however, Fine Woodworking Magazine, a reader written magazine that showed the few of us there were in the area that there was a larger community of people like us out there, struggling and succeeding at what we were trying to do. And not only were they succeeding, but they were also sharing their hard earned knowledge with the rest of us (and, getting a little cash and recognition to do it). Amazing. From the Fine Woodworking Design Book Series, to the Techniques series and the Reader's Gallery the magazine has continuously raised the design and execution bar and encouraged dialog and cooperation among it's many readers. I am a member of the Guild of Vermont Furniture Makers, an association of 28 master furniture makers, and know of many other organizations both national and regional that have sprung up in recent years to unite and encourage woodworkers to share their resources and knowledge. Through their coverage of the various groups' meetings and conferences, I know Fine Woodworking has been a force in that process as well. While many other woodworking magazines have arrived on the scene in recent years, Fine Woodworking is now (once again) leading the way in widening the woodworking community through their extensive website and online searchable articles database, blog list and Knots Forum to encourage dialog, discussion and progress. I commend Paul Roman and his family and the editors and staff that have worked throughout the years to make custom woodworking (and home building and sewing and gardening) a viable, enjoyable and deeply satisfying career choice. I'm not sure we all would have made it without them. I leave you with a mission quote from their website, thank them for their efforts and encourage them ever onward.


"If you're a Taunton reader, you have a passion for creative activities that enrich your life. You search enthusiastically for information that will help you pursue your interests at a deeper level. For more than 30 years, we at The Taunton Press have made it our mission to provide such information and insight. We recognize that our greatest value is as an inspiration and a resource. For that reason, the ideas, skills, and techniques we present are communicated clearly, in an environment that is both accessible and credible."


8/4/17 ... and i have also recently been asked to become part of the 'top reveal' community, a product research and home improvement tip source ... you can find lots and lots of interesting DIY information shared there too like these simple woodworking projects you can do with a little enthusiasm and some very basic tools.

live creatively!

Sunday, April 20, 2008

An Article I Wrote in Fine Woodworking in 1980

I recently received a request for a copy of an out of print article I wrote for Fine Woodworking in 1980. It took a minute, but I scared up a copy of it reprinted in 'Fine Woodworking Techniques 4' published by Taunton Press in 1982. Fine Woodworking, I would credit with getting a lot of us started on the trail of woodworking for a living. At the time it first came out, I was working as a carpenter and there was one guy about 20 miles away who was rumored to make furniture for people. Now there are 4 people like myself, within two miles of my shop, who have employees and make furniture or cabinets for a living. Quite a change.
http://lumberjocks.com/projects/3370
Above is the link that started the discussion and below I have posted a scan of the book page. If you want a printable pdf, let me know and I'll email you one. This project looks trickier then I remember it and, if I wanted to make one now, I'm not totally sure I could figure it out easily without the article. Good luck if you're making one. Comment below please and click to enlarge the pictures.


It took me almost as long to find one of the boxes
as it did to find the article ...