Showing posts with label woodworking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label woodworking. Show all posts

Black & Decker Outdoor Wood Furnishings: Step-by-Step Instructions for Over 30 Projects Review

Black and Decker Outdoor Wood Furnishings: Step-by-Step Instructions for Over 30 Projects
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This book is excellent in many ways, but there are some errors in measurement and some unclear directions and omissions.

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A collection of woodworking projects for outdoor furnishings and accessories that readers can build using ordinary power tools and basic hand tools. Projects include: furniture, such as tables, chairs and benches; storage projects; and decorative projects like bird feeders.

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Cabinets & Built-Ins: 26 Custom Storage Projects Review

Cabinets and Built-Ins: 26 Custom Storage Projects
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This book has little in it. The first large section covers very basic information, including nail sizes. If you need beginer information, that's fine, but there are better books for that than this one.
Most of the projects in this book are simple, and illustrated with cheesy computer drawn images. If you want to build cabinets or built-ins there are much better books than this.

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Readers can enhance every room in their home with the twenty-six practical and beautiful storage projects they will find in Cabinets & Built-Ins.They will find space-saving ideas, such as shelves to mount to the inside of the kitchen cabinet doors, and ambitious projects, such as the entertainment center.Yet no matter how large the project, none are difficult.All of the projects have been designed with simple, sturdy joinery that can be easily accomplished in a home workshop.Cabinets & Built-Ins opens with a thoroughly illustrated techniques chapter that explains every method needed to construct all the projects.Renowned wood-finishing expert Bob Flexner teaches how to keep projects looking great for generations to come.

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Make a Windsor Chair (A Fine Woodworking Book) Review

Make a Windsor Chair (A Fine Woodworking Book)
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I not only have this book, I have made a chair in Mike's workshop in New Hampshire. Mike has been instrumental both through his writings and teachings in the recent revival of interest in the making of Windsor chairs by hand much as they were made hundreds of years ago. His book is my definitive resource for questions about Windsor chair construction when I am working in my shop. In this day and age where most of our furniture is mass produced by machines using wood composites and other man made materials it is refreshing to see how fine furniture was once (and in certain places still is) crafted directly from the forest with nothing but hand tools and the skilled hands of the chairwright

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With its turned legs, spindled back and angled, contoured seat, the Windsor chair has been a favourite for years. Now you can make your own with the help of this guide.

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Chairmaking & Design Review

Chairmaking and Design
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Right from the opening sentence you will know that you have purchased a well written book by a very experienced chairmaker. Jeff Miller's book is not just filled with terrific plans, instead an emphasis is placed on design. Design decisions, pitfalls, and compromises are all covered in detail. Great for the intermediate or advanced woodworker.

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The often-intimidating art of chairmaking is explained in this book of expert patterns and tips for creating seven elegant chairs. Through each project, craftspeople learn increasingly complex skills that build upon each other, making the manual a complete education in all of the basic chairmaking techniques. The straightforward plans and methods make the designs-such as a child's ladderback chair and even armchairs-accessible for home woodworkers. Illuminating discussions of construction and design fundamentals, along with an appendix on oils and waxes to give projects the finishing touch, round out this exploration of the art of building comfortable chairs.

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Chairmaking Simplified: 24 Projects Using Shop-Made Jigs (Popular Woodworking) Review

Chairmaking Simplified: 24 Projects Using Shop-Made Jigs (Popular Woodworking)
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I bought this book because I was interested in learning how to make shaker chairs, and wanted a thorough, comprehensive treatment of the details. This book comes very close to achieving all I had hoped for it, but it has a fatal flaw. First, let me explain the good points. The book does provide a comprehensive and thorough treatment of building shaker chairs from turning legs and rungs on the lathe through mortising the legs, shaping arms, rockers, and weaving the seat with shaker chair tape as well as rushes. The book is well organized and the author's approach seems quite appealing. The author does a terrific job of explaining nearly every phase of shaker chair building. Now for the fatal flaw. The author's approach relies completely upon two clever jigs: a front mortise rung jig (FMRJ) and a side mortise rung jig (SMRJ). The book provides (on page 67) drawings for the two jigs as well as some photographs of them on other pages. Unfortunately, the jigs cannot be built with the information provided in the drawings. In the SMRJ, for example, there is a trapezoidal shaped piece. The drawing provides the height of the longer leg of the trapezoid, but not the height of the shorter leg. Since the relative dimensions of these two legs determine the critical angle at which mortises are drilled, you really need this information to build the jig. This dimension cannot be determined by other information in the drawing nor can it be determined from information given in the text. Furthermore, the critical angle is discussed in general terms in the text, but nowhere specified (had it been, the dimension needed could have been worked out with elementary trigonometry).
The situation with the FMRJ is not any better. One of the dimensions in the drawing is missing. Furthermore, the photographs of the jig in the book do NOT correspond to the drawing. Thus it is pretty well impossible to determine exactly how to build this jig. The only thing that alleviates this situation is that, in this case, the jig is used to drill mortises at a 90 degree angle. Thus, one can see exactly what is intended and, I believe it would be pretty straightforward to design a jig to accomplish the intended task.
One final caveat. The section on turning and sharpening may be a questionable inclusion. Other books dealing solely with turning (Darlow's books, for example) provide a much more comprehensive (and better) treatment of turning and sharpening. I suppose its inclusion can be justified on the basis of providing a complete reference under one cover.
Without the two jigs, however, the author's approach cannot be carried out. While some experimentation (involving wasted time, material, and money on the reader's part) may resolve the dimensioning problems with the jig drawings, it irks me to have to spend my time and money doing so when a competent editing job could have obviated the necessity of doing so.
The author came very close to having a true classic here (one which would have rated 5 stars easily, and was prevented from doing so only by a careless editor. My advice to the author: find a way to get an addendum to the book out on the web correcting these errors.


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"Chairmaking Simplified" offers the complete chair experience for woodworkers by providing not only step-by-step instructions for an in-depth education on chairmaking but also a history of chair design and a section on how to design a comfortable chair.Other titles have covered very specific chairs such as Windsor or Shaker, but this is the first title to break the chairmaking process into simple steps with jigs that can be used to create a variety of chair styles and configurations (with many never before published). At least one favourite for every woodworker is guaranteed. Kerry's jigs simplify the process of chairmaking, and his voice offers clear, easy instruction.

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