Monday, December 18, 2023

Sunday, December 17, 2023

In the Beginning

I was indeed on my own and I felt it. The isolation of being different and living your beliefs is by its very nature usually, mostly, isolating. People, others, don’t feel like you do. Not really. It’s just a job. Nothing more. You work for pay and not for craft and yet I see craft...

Source



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Saturday, December 16, 2023

Educating Lazy Owners . . .

. . . or more likely those whose lives are simply super-busy ones. Owning handmade furniture is not to just buy the piece we make but to educate owners as to the best way to treat it when it arrives so that they own it well. Our work is not mass-made for masses to own...

Source



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Monday, December 11, 2023

Finding Yourself

I just read a book written by someone trying to establish a sense of belonging. Throughout the book, the writer strove to establish the reality of being isolated in communities by the communities in which the writer was “born and bred.” There was a cruelness to it as is mostly the case with bigotry and...

Source



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Saturday, December 9, 2023

You Never Know

Assumptions often mislead us; our own and others. In a world more and more devoid of crafting artisans, men and women making to live by, working as I have and in some measure still do, it seems logical that, as with my using the term new-genre woodworkers, we see emerging a micro-mass of new-genre artisans...

Source



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Wednesday, December 6, 2023

Remarkable Invention

As I walk through the streets of Oxford before the lunchtime food providers open their doors, I am always fascinated by the lines of upturned exposure of the undersides of chairs and stools used for cafe seating, In this case, it’s the ingenious multi-grooved spindle moulder cuts in the backs of chair rails just to...

Source



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Tuesday, December 5, 2023

Saddle’s Still Warm

That’s to say I am doing well, great, better than I thought I would be by now, my hands have been fixed by the surgeon and staff at Pulvertaft Hand Centre and so I thank them and thank you for all of the support and well-wishing over the past few weeks. The Dupuytren’s contracture on...

Source



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Thursday, November 30, 2023

Handling More

It’s my seventh day since my hand surgery and the advice sheet from the Pulvertaft Hand Cebtre in Derby and Burton NHS Hospital said, ‘Plan to avoid activities which involve strong grip for one to two weeks after the procedure as the hand [s] may be a little tender. However, you will not do yourself...

Source



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Saturday, November 25, 2023

Being Real With Each Other

I wrote recently on beech wood and spoke of what I might see and describe as more soulless methods of making in the sense and mix of it giving very little if any sensory feedback. It wasn’t to open a conversation so much as to try to explain why we hand-tool woodworkers handle our materials...

Source



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Friday, November 24, 2023

More Than Cool Enough

It’s still dark now as it’s just 6 a.m. I still do not feel nervous and that is because for several days I did and that’s over. I booked my taxi to the hospital for 6.30. It’s a 20-minute drive and I wanted a hedge as a margin for traffic or something else going wrong....

Source



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Thursday, November 23, 2023

I’m Cool Enough . . .

. . . . at least on the outside! Confronting doubts and fears can be for outward appearances when inside something is churning away and you’re not altogether sure why. I slept well, opened my eyes at my usual; 5.15 A.M. start to my day, but it wasn’t to be in my usual direction for...

Source



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Wednesday, November 22, 2023

Saturday, November 18, 2023

Understanding Joints – How Best To Combine Them

I think sometimes, often, we fail to see the unionising of different joints, failing to devise our own types but then how best to combine them in projects. My research spanning six decades has taught me many things and especially with joinery. Principally, I always wanted to see inside furniture to understand, yes, how something...

Source



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Friday, November 17, 2023

When the Gift Box IS the Gift! | Wine Box

*AD* Save $15 off your Duluth Trading Co. purchase of $50 or more in stores or online with code TWW15

There’s really nothing like a handmade gift for the holidays. Nicole and I teamed up to make a few beautiful wine boxes featuring a finger joints and a lasered image, all in the style of a Japanese tool box.

Download the FREE Plans:

Stuff I Used in the Video:

The post When the Gift Box IS the Gift! | Wine Box appeared first on The Wood Whisperer.



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Monday, November 13, 2023

Making Wood Work

Throughout history, making tools of all types has always been a part of many a woodworker’s life. The ones that were skilled enough to produce levels of excellence surpassing other woodworkers became tool makers. they established patterns of work and design that exemplified levels of refinement other woodworkers wanted. Instead of being just carpenters they...

Source



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Friday, November 10, 2023

My Hands Need Work

It’s pouring with rain this morning but I rode my bike anyway. The forecast seems to me to be rarely very accurate and I am glad that this is something the scientists can only confirm what is mostly taking place and cannot influence future weather more than they think they can predict it. My cycling...

Source



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Thursday, November 9, 2023

Drying Down or Drying Up

There really is no one measure-fits-all all wood types when it comes to its moisture content. Green wood in the tree at the point of severance from its root can vary between around 30 to 300 per cent depending on the wood or tree type, the location of moisture in the stem and the season...

Source



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Sunday, November 5, 2023

You Can’t Judge Some Woods . . .

. . . by their cover. My wood stacks come from long planks that needed straightening for joints before joints could be made. The joints rely on straight edges to two adjacent faces trued first by hand planes and opposite faces sawn parallel by saw and planed smooth too. This has been my way for...

Source



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Wednesday, November 1, 2023

Tolerances In Wood

I’m working, planing and thinking or is it the other way around? Attention in two tasks is always an alternating process and never truly bipartisan in that usually the ability to concentrate on two or more high-demand tasks soon obviates deferment one to other in measured exchanges according to priority. I switch between three planes...

Source



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Friday, October 27, 2023

Making a Few Tools

Some tools are just plain simple. The very simplest looking of all and the most misunderstood in its complexities is the plate steel card scraper. This single-piece tool is misunderstood just as much by professional woodworkers who rarely ever use them even as long-term woodworkers as it is by those just being introduced to the...

Source



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Saturday, October 21, 2023

Today’s Making

My corner desk is completely finished with all the protective coats needed to keep it smooth through the decades ahead. This spalted beech came from a friend who sold it knowing he would never be able to use it. I’ve had it now for four years and confess I had no way of knowing what...

Source



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Sunday, October 15, 2023

Plane Away

I think planing wood is quite a troublesome and complex aspect of our working of wood but the good thing is that for every fibre-tearing, grain-ripping stroke of negative pain there are a hundred and many more really good ones. One thing that’s certain is the unpredictability of wood when it comes to planing with...

Source



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Sunday, October 8, 2023

Accept No Substitutes

I am sometimes told by this owner of a bevel-up plane or that owner of a bevel-downer, the york-pitch advocate and the scraper plane expert that this or that plane takes care of this and that grain, wood type and so it goes. There are moderate differences between planes but the range of plane type...

Source



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Saturday, October 7, 2023

Lone Woodworking

In my choice of individuality, I mostly engage in lone woodworking. There aren’t too many of us out there. My work includes writing, drawing, designing and photography too, but the bulk of my day is still making at the workbench in non-commercial, non-industrial ways. I took myself off of the conveyor belt almost before the...

Source



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Saturday, September 30, 2023

Editor?

I’ve been writing down my life’s work working as an artisan from childhood in school woodworking to today. It’s a book yet to be but it’s well on its way. I may be getting ahead of myself but it’s planning. I will need an editor who will edit my work and life writing without editing...

Read the full post Editor? on Paul Sellers' Blog.



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Wednesday, September 27, 2023

Opinions Matter…

…sometimes. We are all entitled to them but are we really? As we should have learned from my introducing a screw to a dovetail joint hidden beneath a tabletop never to be seen in an oak piece I made. A gazillion comments showed hundreds of erroneous opinions that have been passed down for decades via...

Read the full post Opinions Matter… on Paul Sellers' Blog.



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Monday, September 25, 2023

C-Channel is Overrated!

Looking for my Backside…Sandnaper? Go here!

In my nearly 20 years of woodworking, I have never used C-channel for anything. That’s primarily due to the fact that I rarely work with live edge slabs, which are really one of the few instances where I think C-channel makes sense. In the last few years I’ve noticed a lot of people using C-channel in situations that don’t call for it, such as when making standard table tops from a series of glued-up boards. I’m guessing folks have seen so many live edge projects being made with C-channel that they assume the extra reinforcement is also necessary when  making regular table tops. Don’t get me wrong, if you want to use c-channel as something of an insurance policy, all the power to you, but don’t do it under the illusion that it’s actually necessary. In this video I’ll show you just a few of the many examples of table tops I’ve made that are still flat, but without any more reinforcement than what’s provided by the base structure.

Now before anyone starts sending finger farts in my direction, I understand that wood is a natural product and there’s always a chance a table top will misbehave. It happens. But if the wood is properly dried, stored, milled, constructed, and attached to a solid base structure, there’s an incredibly high probability that the top will remain flat for generations. So think long and hard before you plunk down the cash and invest the extra trim involved in assaulting your table top with C-channel.

For tips and tricks on making panels that stay flat, check out this video! 

The post C-Channel is Overrated! appeared first on The Wood Whisperer.



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Friday, September 22, 2023

Tell us about your home!

It’s Katrina (Paul’s daughter in law). Paul is making all the furniture for his Oxfordshire home. The next area he will be making furniture for is not a room, but a little mezzanine on the landing in the upstairs hall. It’s not a large space but just big enough for a home office. A space...

Read the full post Tell us about your home! on Paul Sellers' Blog.



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Tuesday, September 19, 2023

Two Workshop Tools . . .

. . . no one should be without. And it was you who said it, not me! But I somehow can’t help but agree. Some things craftsmen did as a rule never got written down and I gained from these mostly unwritten gems throughout my life as a full-time joiner and furniture maker. These things,...

Read the full post Two Workshop Tools . . . on Paul Sellers' Blog.



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I’m First There

I cycle along the cycle paths surrounding town, houses one side, fields the other. Each contradicts the other for a few miles – fast cars towards me on my left and pedestrians on my right. In a year or two the fields I have known will soon be a thousand new houses. I take a...

Read the full post I’m First There on Paul Sellers' Blog.



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Tuesday, September 12, 2023

I Could Do That Too If I Had Those Tools! | Shop Tours

Don’t miss the pre-order price for the Schwarz Stick Chair Course: https://thewoodwhispererguild.com/product/american-welsh-stick-chair/

This time in our Community Shop Tour series we’re looking at some envy-inducing shops, either due to the number/quality of tools or the amount of space available. These folks put a lot of time and resources into the design and organization of their shop space, and it really shows! So grab a paper towel for the drool and enjoy.

Special thanks to the folks who took the time to submit these tours:

  • Erick Ridout in Utah
  • Scott Timmins in Tennessee
  • Mike Gervais in Utah
  • Bob Cooper in S. Carolina

Looking for more shop inspiration? Check out our HUGE library of Shop Tours!

The post I Could Do That Too If I Had Those Tools! | Shop Tours appeared first on The Wood Whisperer.



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Friday, September 8, 2023

What’s It Worth?

A few weeks ago I posted a blog on the pieces I had made over the last two years. So other woodworkers, you know, the professional ones, the ones who say you cannot make a living working with your hands using hand tools and just a bandsaw, could see what can be done if you...

Read the full post What’s It Worth? on Paul Sellers' Blog.



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Sunday, August 27, 2023

My Vice-Held End-grain Planing Guide

My vertical vise-held, end-grain planing guide for planing the ends of wood dead square with ease works better than a shooting board especially if you have lots to do. Why do I say that? Because I have used a regular shooting board for almost six decades and at best they are really quite awkward, hog...

Read the full post My Vice-Held End-grain Planing Guide on Paul Sellers' Blog.



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Wednesday, August 23, 2023

So, Who’s a Luddite?

I’ve learned that woodworking is much more than merely working wood or just, well, processing it: that’s for a percentage of people that is. More those who enjoy touching working the material I suppose. You know, taking material from a tree and making something substantive from it and recognising its background in its growing vibrancy...

Read the full post So, Who’s a Luddite? on Paul Sellers' Blog.



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Monday, August 21, 2023

Her Clothes Fell Off the Wall | Dream Closet Part 1

Nicole’s clothes literally fell off the wall when the builder grade wire shelving collapsed. I decided to be the hero and build her the closet of her dreams, or at least as close as I could get. This is the first part of a 2-part series where I install the main large closet units including hangers and shelves.

Stuff Used in the Video:

The post Her Clothes Fell Off the Wall | Dream Closet Part 1 appeared first on The Wood Whisperer.



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Monday, August 7, 2023

Organize Your Kitchen Drawers!

There’s nothing worse than a disorganized kitchen drawer. Alleviate the frustration with a simple organizational grid made from shop scraps.

Stuff I Used:

The post Organize Your Kitchen Drawers! appeared first on The Wood Whisperer.



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Sunday, August 6, 2023

It’s the Subtle Things

Part 1 I often think that woodworking by hand delivers results that surprise those extolling the virtues of machine methods and the accuracy machines deliver. I doubt that the accuracy I achieve is as good as they might think, but my end result is for me most likely what I want rather than that which...

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Sunday, July 30, 2023

You’ll Thank Me For This One

Let me get one thing out of the way first. Some will say why not just use a shooting board? I’m not interested in this argument but I outline my reasons a couple of paras down. This guide will knock your socks off, no messin’. Most end-grain planing is square ended for me, and I’m...

Read the full post You’ll Thank Me For This One on Paul Sellers' Blog.



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Friday, July 28, 2023

A Different Day?

I’m driving to work but taking a five mile detour to get my haircut and a couple of necessary errands to pick up a mirror plate for the project and look at wood. I try to combine trips all the more these days, conscious of the need to save all kinds of things. I always...

Read the full post A Different Day? on Paul Sellers' Blog.



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Sunday, July 16, 2023

I’m On It!

On the 19th of June this year I picked up a few extra lengths of very nice European oak for my upcoming project which was a chest of drawers. Thank you, Europe. So glad we are a part of you still; no matter the Eurocrats and politics of it, the eye cannot say to the...

Read the full post I’m On It! on Paul Sellers' Blog.



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Saturday, July 15, 2023

Relaxing Gets You There . . .

. . . better, more comfortably and more steadily! The beefy, muscled arms bulb up into massive balloons and the knuckles whiten the more stroke on stroke. The rest of the body as a whole locks on and tightens up, tuning in to the intent of a forced compliance to power through with the strokes...

Read the full post Relaxing Gets You There . . . on Paul Sellers' Blog.



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Monday, July 10, 2023

I Made the PERFECT Bench for Our Criss-Cross Table

I recently made a large Criss-Cross Dining Table featuring an experimental base design. Once the table was complete, I decided to extend the design to a matching sitting bench. Of course I had to change a few angles and scale things down, but in the end the bench was just a smaller version of the table. I also took this opportunity to try a couple variations in tools and techniques for its construction.

If you want to try your hand at this project, take a look at the full course in the Wood Whisperer Guild: Criss-Cross Dining Table & Bench

The finish I used is Bumblechutes, a natural tung oil finish. You can save 10% using the code TWW10 at Bumblechutes.com

The post I Made the PERFECT Bench for Our Criss-Cross Table appeared first on The Wood Whisperer.



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Sunday, July 9, 2023

Just a Dovetail Joint

If I can cut a gap-free six-dovetail corner to a drawer in 20 minutes it’s because I am not rushing it. It’s also because of the practised structure of my making, the sharpness of my tools that are sharpened before they become in any way consciously dull and because the tools I use are customised...

Read the full post Just a Dovetail Joint on Paul Sellers' Blog.



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Friday, July 7, 2023

At a Price

It was setting up the plough plane to cut the grooves that really struck me the most. I had timed myself in cutting the four corner dovetails and realised how quickly they came off the saw. I made two eight-inch deep drawers with dovetailed top to bottom to each of the corners in less than...

Read the full post At a Price on Paul Sellers' Blog.



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Saturday, July 1, 2023

Peer Reviews . . .

. . . Or Peer Pressures? Some time ago I went to the trouble of creating a short and creative video to show (prove) that taking a couple of simple steps could upgrade an inexpensive but well-made saw to parallel that of premium saws costing six to seven times more. Buying some saws, even from...

Read the full post Peer Reviews . . . on Paul Sellers' Blog.



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Wednesday, June 28, 2023

A Quick Truing Strategy

With so much of my work being planed and trued by hand I use something of a simple strategy that really works well and especially with the short lengths we generally use in furniture making. Though of course we have long lengths for bedsides, head boards, tabletops and wardrobes but the rails and stiles, frames...

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Monday, June 26, 2023

A Good Blade

In building our latest project in the Sellers’ Home bedroom series I relied on my bandsaw for many of the long and often heavy rip cuts. I expect many of those building the same projects might well decide to do the same. Mostly, this was to do with the type of different and often random...

Read the full post A Good Blade on Paul Sellers' Blog.



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Friday, June 16, 2023

Essential Woodworking Hand Tools

Essential Woodworking Hand Tools

When I wrote Essential Woodworking Hand Tools it was less about the tools and more about what was missing from books I read and saw through the decades in books often entitled something like ‘The Woodworker’s Bible‘, usually commissioned by publishers known for their educational books, people like that. What mainly was missing was the...

Read the full post Essential Woodworking Hand Tools on Paul Sellers' Blog.



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Tuesday, June 6, 2023

The Lure of Unpredictable . . .

. . . or the lure of a mechanised performance! The most predictable thing about wood is its unpredictability. I would say that that is the case in most natural materials used in most crafts and that is why we have such a predominance of man-made alternative materials; for any type of mass-making the materials...

Read the full post The Lure of Unpredictable . . . on Paul Sellers' Blog.



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Friday, June 2, 2023

Yesterday

I’m still grateful for the workshop I work in: it’s the one I close the door on at night and then open at first light. I reach inside for the light switch and light floods what was left the night before. There’s always the certainty of gratitude that so too floods my mind for the...

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Saturday, May 27, 2023

It Was A Humbling Thing

I don’t follow but two others online. One is a cafe I haven’t been able to go back to because I no longer live near to it and the other is a support for those with a disability. But I clicked on an Instagram account of someone following me and saw something I had not...

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Monday, May 22, 2023

Harbor Freight Bremen Parallel Clamp 4-Month Review

I’ve seen (and read) a lot of clamp reviews over the years. Most of them cobble together a series of pseudo-scientific testing parameters and torture tests that seem important, but actually do very little to tell you how the clamps will perform over the course of years in your shop. So when I decided to conduct a review of the Harbor Freight Bremen Parallel Clamps, I knew I had to approach this with a common sense frame of mind. We won’t be testing the flatness of panels, the squareness of the heads, or the clamping force available (watch this video to see why – The Truth about Parallel Clamps). Instead, we’re going to do something incredibly ground-breaking: we’re going to use the clamps for a few months. I purchased four clamps directly from my local Harbor Freight and used the clamps in numerous glueups. In between glueups, the clamps were exposed to daily stress via mock glueups. One of the clamps was designated as the “abuse clamp” and received a little more rough treatment than the other three, which included some rough handling as well as repeated dragging of the head over the serrated bar.

TLDR Conclusion

The video goes into a lot of detail so be sure to watch it if you want the full story, but here’s a quick summary. Out of the four clamps, one failed after a few months of use as evidenced by constant slipping under pressure. After dissecting the clamp, it appeared that the malleable head material was ground smooth, which lead to the premature smoothing of the serrated teeth on the bar.  As a result, the head could no longer grip the bar.  Oddly enough, the clamp that failed was NOT the clamp that received the additional abuse. We tested the Lifetime Guarantee by returning the clamp to our local Harbor Freight and the clamp was exchanged for a new one with no questions asked.

Overall, I was pleasantly surprised by the quality and performance of the Harbor Freight Bremen Parallel Clamps. In spite of the premature failure I experienced, I think many woodworkers would be well-served by these clamps especially given the cost savings and the peace of mind provided by the lifetime guarantee. But if you put a lot of hours on these clamps, I suspect you’ll be testing that return policy sooner than later.

The post Harbor Freight Bremen Parallel Clamp 4-Month Review appeared first on The Wood Whisperer.



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Sunday, May 21, 2023

Lifestyle

I have called myself a lifestyle woodworker for a decade on a public level but two when I include talking of it in more isolated pockets as in my woodworking classes and courses. In reality, though, I have practised it for much longer than that it’s just that the term lifestyle really didn’t exist before...

Read the full post Lifestyle on Paul Sellers' Blog.



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Saturday, May 20, 2023

It’s Easy to Think . . .

. . . that the work is always easy for me as Paul Sellers. It’s not, not at all. The flow seems fine in the reviews I check before videos go out, but getting there takes structure through planning, micro- and macro-adjustment, attitude changes and other such things too many to list. In the making...

Read the full post It’s Easy to Think . . . on Paul Sellers' Blog.



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Sunday, May 14, 2023

Planing

It looks excessive and might be for some but it’s not in the life of a productive maker. Woodworking with hand tools in the life of a productive worker must be strategised throughout. Strategic planing soon becomes a way of life when you are a full-time maker but anyone can adopt the practice to make...

Read the full post Planing on Paul Sellers' Blog.



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Thursday, May 11, 2023

Torsion Boxes Overrated? – My New BIG Assembly Table

This is my new assembly table. Made from construction grade 2×4’s, 2×6’s, plywood, and laminate. If you want to save some extra money, you can make the top from a sheet of melamine and end up with he same spill-proof surface. The table features a bunch of storage with the option to customize it however you like.

While I played a big role in popularizing torsion boxes with my early videos, I’ve come to the conclusion that they’re overkill for woodworkers. So I’m keeping mine simple.

Links:

Free Plans:

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Friday, April 28, 2023

More For My Router Plane Kit

I am hoping that most of you have made the upgrade to the Paul Sellers’ Router Plane because once you have made your own from the kit and used it just once you will most likely never go back to an all-metal version. The router plane kit comes with a Sheffield-made, 3/8″ (10mm) ready-hardened tool...

Read the full post More For My Router Plane Kit on Paul Sellers' Blog.



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Monday, April 24, 2023

Planing veneers

Planing wood along its long axis, from the bottom to the top of the tree, is generally straightforward enough; wood grain dips and dives in places, but most of the time a simple flip around of the plane to the opposite direction cures the recalcitrant and tames the fibres with a skew here and a...

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Monday, April 17, 2023

Hold On, It’s a Bench

I receive questions from woodworkers who start out with, “What’s your opinion of . . . ?” It might be a tool, a vise, a workbench type I have never used or used or never even heard of. Opinions are funny things in the same way assumptions very often are. When you find something that...

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Why are we destroying a perfectly good table?!

Several years ago Jason and I made a dining table. Original Mid-Century Modern Table.
While there’s technically nothing wrong with the original design, the mid-century modern styling brings with it a few challenges for a busy family of four. Because the legs spread out, it limits the overall seating capacity and anyone sitting near the end of the long side will occasionally bang their knee. So we set out to alleviate these problems with a slight re-design, using as much of the original table as possible. The new version of the table is much more functional for Jason’s family and aside from two new rails, features all original materials. We also took the time to change the finish from Rubio to Sherwin Williams Pre-Catalyzed Lacquer.

Stuff shown in the video:

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Saturday, April 15, 2023

Full Stop or Period

Just a tiny dot finalising a statement, often with the closing emphasis that there is nothing more to be said on a matter. I designed the turned work as parts for two cabinets made for the Cabinet Room of the White House and kept three, or part of one of them, as mementoes: one was...

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Sunday, April 9, 2023

It’s Swell

I made different versions of my latest mirror and picture frame designs. My first types went well to get from idea to finished frame and I quickly ended up with five new frames and made some decisions along the way to improve methods of making. I also grew in confidence but my confidence failed me...

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