I decided to build an enclosed insulated shop in the back of our garage so I can work in the shop year round. It was a bigger project than I thought but the investment will be worth it during temperature extremes. It is no fun to work when you can see your breath. 100 degree temperatures are no fun either. With the insulation, I hope to only have to use an oil filled radiant heater to get it to 50 degrees or so in there for comfort. I still have to put a door on it. For now, I may just hang a quilt for the doorway. It does not have to be secure. I can build a door later. Too many other things to build now.
Thursday, January 21, 2016
Tom Hill Canoe Project Update
Here is an update of the canoe project I am building for a friend at work. I hope to get it ready for paint when it warms up in a few months. The truss pattern method worked great for getting accurate lapstrake planks for the sides. It came out perfect for me.
Paul Sellers Woodworking
Sometimes things just all of a sudden come up in life that
are truly amazing. They are like
wonderful gifts that can change your perspective in an instant. One such thing happened to me a few weeks
back when I discovered a master woodworker, Paul Sellers on YouTube. After watching about 30 hours so far of his videos
and Woodworking Masterclass project instructions, he has by far become my
favorite woodworker. No other woodworker
I have experienced comes close. He truly
loves working in wood and does so with mainly hand tools. He is not just using hand tools for the
novelty of it, but shows that they are superior to machines in a variety of
ways. He says, “I keep old tools to work with because they
work; not because they look nice”. He
is one of the few remaining woodworking artisans that apprenticed under the 70-80
year old master craftsman that starting woodworking pre-1900’s. These masters were working with tools older
than they were and in some cases, tools they crafted themselves. He dispels many myths about sharpening which
is a subject that has grown so inconsistent in the past 20 years that there is
a mass confusion which keeps hobby woodworkers constantly searching and buying the
next great sharpening machine, stone or method.
None of the master craftsman had flat sharpening stones for instance. He also focuses on hand planning all surfaces
during project construction where sanding then becomes a way to “roughen” up
the surface prior to apply finish. Think
of that! This is completely opposite to
the way most hobbyists, including me, work.
Normally, sanding is a process that takes more time than building and no
woodworker likes doing it. With Paul’s
way of working, you basically only need a quarter sheet of 180 and 240 grit
sandpaper to rough up the glass smooth surface so the finish has something to
adhere to. On top of all this, his
gentle way of teaching while clearly explaining each step is indeed a rare
combination of skills.
Also, the hand tools you buy will last a lifetime when
properly cared for and sharpened.
Contrast this to the disposable cheap products we have been trained to
consume so quickly in the name of advanced technology. There are not many new things today you can
purchase or build yourself that can still be used by your great grandchildren.
I am sorry that I did not find out about Paul Sellers
sooner, but I am just thankful I found out about him now so I can learn
woodworking the right way and pass that knowledge to others who are interested
in this hobby or vocation. Paul has a
blog that is a wonderful collections of his writings. This collection of information is so thorough
that any question I’ve had, I can just search his blog and find an article that
addresses that question.
I was on the “conveyor” with many other woodworkers that get
taken in by salesman, machines and contraptions that are expensive and leave
you far away from actually “working” the wood.
They also leave you with a bulk sandpaper supply that requires you to
build a special rack just to hold all the grits from 60 to 400. Woodworking is now fun again. I will be posting woodworking projects this
year that will be built by hand tools and some newly practiced skills. These will be pieces that will still be
around for the next 150 years or more which is exciting!
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