woodworking in an apartment

Necessity versus Generosity, or Why I Make Things

A Venn Diagram of my woodworking motivations would consist of two, significantly overlapping circles: necessity and generosity.  It turns out (unsurprisingly) my joy is in the making and I don’t form great attachment to the finished piece.  So unless there is a concrete need on my end, odds are high the final product is going right out the door (usually to someone who has a concrete need on their end) and I will move on to the next project.  Some examples may help.

Necessity:

When I vacated my previous apartment for my leave of absence, I gave away almost all of my furniture, including my living room set (which I had acquired prior to taking up apartment woodworking).  I did this on purpose, so I would have to build myself a coffee table, side table and media console while I was on my leave of absence. They had to be ready for when I moved back down full time to Connecticut because, otherwise, I would have an unfurnished living room, which is no fun at all.

Be it an original design or a reverse-engineering from a high end furniture retailer (I subscribe to all the catalogues), each piece is custom fit to my needs. As soon as my needs change, the piece goes out the door.

Generosity:

I enjoy making footstools.  They’re really just tiny tables (usually for tiny people, like my niece and nephew).  The stock preparation is manageable (the biggest piece is usually 14″ x 11″ or so, at most) and the joinery is straightforward (dovetails and/or mortise/tenon).  As an added bonus, they are meant to be literally stepped on and are usually stored on the floor (probably in the bathroom) for their entire working life, so a stray tool mark or other aesthetic imperfection is (relatively) meaningless.  As a result, footstools make excellent scale test models for design elements in future projects.

I’ve made other pieces as gifts (benches, side tables, storage containers, other things), but footstools continue to be the most popular.

In the end, though, be it necessity or generosity, I don’t think the reasons matter.  Like I said, it is the making I enjoy most, not the having of the thing that I made.

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Shavings Piled Like Snowdrifts

Sawdust, wood shavings, waste wood. Hand tools or not, going from rough-sawn lumber to finished furniture makes a mess.

The main benefit of hand tool woodworking is the significant reduction in breathable particulate matter (i.e., wood dust) in comparison to power tools. Not a total elimination, of course, but with hand tools you don’t need breathing protection just to cut a joint. Ditto for hearing protection (although chopping mortises in hardwood in an apartment sometimes calls for earmuffs and sound dampening technology [more on that in a few months]).

That having been said, whether by scrub plane or power jointer, by tenon saw or table saw, by mortise chisel or plunge router, you’re still removing stock and the waste has to go somewhere. And that somewhere tends to be the floor around the workbench.

In my shop, I never let the shavings pile like snowdrifts (as romantic as the image may be). After each task, the waste is swept and sorted. Chips in the trash, shavings in the drum liner [seen in the background of most pictures], dust in the shop vacuum. Shavings and wood dust are slippery and there are few things worse than extricating embedded splinters from my living room rug because I tracked chips all around the house.

A clean shop is a safe, happy shop. When your shop is also your home, that is doubly true.

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Usually not a fan of Brooklyn…

Just received a pair of Gramercy holdfasts from https://www.toolsforworkingwood.com/store/dept/CGT

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I guess not everything from Brooklyn is terrible hipsters…

Two is probably a bit much for a 30″ workbench, but the price was just so I right for the pair, so I was more than happy to replace the cast iron holdfast on my sawbench.  Shipping was fast and the included issue of The Comely Advertiser was good for some smiles.

Much better

Much better

All in all, I am glad to know I probably never have to buy holdfasts again.

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A Dovetailed Box

Over the last couple weekends (in what little free time there was), I have been making a simple dovetailed storage container for my car.

Not winning any awards, but definitely sturdy enough to hold a pair of aquasocks, a multi-tool, a portable air compressor, an emergency water bottle and some miscellaneous supplies.

Not winning any awards, but definitely sturdy enough to hold a pair of aquasocks, a multi-tool, a portable air compressor, an emergency water bottle and some miscellaneous supplies.

I’ve been meaning to replace with something more permanent the heavy duty cardboard file box I use in my car to maintain organization of odds and ends. Finding myself with some leftover 3/4 birch plywood, I decided it was time to dovetail a box.  I don’t cut dovetails often and I like these little, non-critical projects to keep my skills up.  Mostly, though, this project was good opportunity to test the capabilities of the Milkman’s Workbench in a situation where perfection is non-essential. Spoiler alert: it performed admirably, as advertised.

Just to be clear, I’m not here to teach you how to dovetail.  If you are looking for instructional videos, there are wonderful dovetailing tutorials all over teh interwebs (I highly recommend Paul Sellers or Rob Cosman).

Dimensioning:

I want to say from the get-go that plywood is not ideal for dovetailing (I rarely use the stuff anyway) and dimensioning sheet goods with hand tools is almost more trouble than it’s worth.

I typically rough cut sheet goods with a jigsaw and use a flush trim bit and a straightedge clamp to clean up and square the edges, but I am inside again and plywood dust is gross.  Instead, I rough cut four pieces by hand (2 sides and 2 ends) and planed straight and square with a #4 bench plane one end piece and one side piece to use as patterns.  I then lined up the factory edges and used double-sided tape to attach the pattern piece to the second rough cut piece (show-side to show-side, which will be important later).  Using the affixed pattern piece as a guide, I planed down most of the overhang on the rough piece to approximately 1/32″ (to have as little waste as possible) and cleaned up the final edge all around with a flush trim router bit.

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Less waste to remove means less gross dust to clean up.

The bottom piece, which is 1/4″ plywood from the craft store, floats in housing joints in the assembled box and is just hand ripped reasonably square and straight and fine tuned with a block plane.

Joinery:

There shouldn’t ever be a ton of stress on the glued up joints, so at a little under 12 inches high overall, I went with three tails per corner.  I’m a “tails first” kind of guy and typically I prefer to hog out most of the recess waste with a coping saw (then chisel down to the line), but go with what works for you.

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Layout is simple with a decent dovetail marking guide. I use the Veritas version.

I did not separate the now-identical side pieces prior to sawing the tails.  I had a good reason, however: supporting the show-side to prevent blowout is critical when dovetailing plywood.  By leaving the pieces affixed, the show-side of each piece acts as a backer board for the show-side of the other.  As an added bonus, the tails you saw are (hopefully) identical.   Plus, I find working on the wider stock makes sawing perpendicular easier (on plywood, you should also eyeball perpendicular against the layer lines).  All in all, it saved some time and, again, not a museum piece here.  I note that this trick does not work for cutting pins when you cut the tails first; you will need to separate the pin boards.  It may work if you cut pins first (I think the pins may be asymmetrical, which may be a neat design element), but I haven’t tried it.

Tails first.

Tails first.

A coping saw and a chisel made quick work of the first set of recesses between the tails.  All of a sudden, just after I finished sawing the second set of tails, the double sided tape gave way and I had to finish up the tail boards individually.  I also decided to put down the coping saw and chiseled out the remaining pin recesses (more on that later).  Beware cracking the veneer when chopping out the waste with a chisel.

I then scribed and sawed the pins in the usual way, also using a chisel to cut the tail recesses.

Not bad for plywood

Not bad for plywood and being out of practice.

I routed the 3/8″ deep housing joints for the bottom piece with a 1/4″ up-spiral bit and a fence (dust extraction works much better in this router orientation) and tweaked the fit of the bottom piece with a block plane.

Assembly, Gluing and Finish:

A backer board also comes in handy when seating the joints during final gluing.  I always use a piece of wood to cushion against the mallet blows when seating joints and the support for the tails guards against chipping and blowout if/when the joint is a little on the tight side.  Unlike solid wood, plywood de-laminates and cracks instead of compressing, even when lubricated with glue, so the extra support goes a long way.  There is a chance the box might get wet, so I opted for overkill with Titebond III.

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Mechanical joints mean single-direction clamping pressure.

After the glue had dried, I flushed any protruding pins or tails and trued the base of the box.  Then I softened all corners with a radius plane and plugged any large gaps in the exposed plywood “end grain” with some water-based wood filler.  No finish required.  It’s not pretty, but it’s not meant to be pretty.  Everything then got a quick 220-grit orbital sanding to remove the pencil marks.

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Sitting on my saw bench, “clamping” the work with my feet.

I had the idea of threading some 7/16″ nylon line from the boating supply store to make a rope handle.  I tested a couple different lengths and finally settled on a single strap that I could sling over my shoulder (as opposed to individual handles on the ends).  I hope I don’t regret the shortcut.

Conclusions:

I’m pretty satisfied with the box; it is solid and it holds stuff.  Truth be told, it’s been done for about a week.  I am just staggering posts.

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There are gaps. It happens. I’m not looking for a critique of my dovetailing.

Next time I dovetail plywood (I still owe my father some marine plywood drawers for his Frers 33), I am definitely skipping the coping saw. It works fine for solid wood, but is tough to control in plywood (with the multi-directional grain of the layers and all) and the veneer can tear easily.  Not to mention the awful screeching sound.

The Milkman’s Workbench worked quite well for this project.  Early on, it became clear the grip of the front vise screws wasn’t great until turned so tightly they mar the work, so I added leather pads to the ends of the front screws.  This improved holding power at much softer clamping pressures and work slippage nearly disappeared (although with increased grip, the work rotates a bit when the screw is engaged).  Front vise flex decreased dramatically as a by-product of lower clamping pressures as well, and I recommend anyone using a Milkman’s workbench take the time for this easy upgrade.  After a few more months of use, I will do a full retrospective on the bench’s total functionality.

Much gripper.

Much gripper.

As I was working, though, I started fantasizing about making a significantly larger version of the Milkman’s workbench.  Something with at at least 36″ of maximum clearance between the widest dog and the wagon vise and not less than 30″ of front vise inside clearance.  This would mean 40″ plus of total workbench (and probably a third screw in the front vise); my workshop table is slightly over 50″ long and should easily handle a clamp-on bench of this size. I would probably make the main bench deeper too (for a larger chopping surface) and maybe abandon current front vise configuration for something more like a moxon vise…

Several hours with pencil and graph paper later, it became abundantly apparent that what I really need is not a larger Milkman’s Workbench, but rather a planing slab (like a Japanese workbench, maybe with some dog holes and a Veritas inset vise). Something around 18″ x 60″, made of laminated pine framing timbers.  I guess I know what my next project will be after I finish those footstools for my brother’s new house.

Also, I can’t say it enough: plywood dust is gross.

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Because sometimes what we really mean is “unplugged”

Hand tool woodworking is great.  It’s relatively quiet, can be done with minimal shop space, and the results are often better than anything produced solely or mostly by machine.  I consider myself a hand tool woodworker, although I admit sometimes I reach for a plunge router, cordless drill or an orbital sander.  I also own, and frequently use, a thickness planer to surface the remaining two faces of a board that I’ve hand straightened and squared.

Net net, if I’m deviating from my basic set of saws, chisels and planes, there are meaningful efficiencies at work.

That having been said, I have a new addition to the shop. The Nobex Champion 180 miter box, with Ikeda blade.

Perpetually on backorder at  www.leevalley.com for a reason.

Perpetually on back-order at http://www.leevalley.com for a reason.

I know it’s technically not a power tool, but it is also not an essential tool for hand tool woodworking.  I can mark a knifewall and saw/shoot down to the line. I get it.

I wanted the convenience and the speed of a precision miter box.  Accurate saw cuts mean less time at the shooting board, so I can get back to the fun part, cutting joints.  Plus, I miss my 14″ double bevel compound miter saw and this should be a pretty solid replacement.

I have only cut a few pieces of wood so far, but I have some initial reactions.  First, the unit was much easier to assemble than expected (although there were a few extra pieces [two random hex nuts], which is distressing).  Second, the unit feels sturdy and the Ikeda blade is super sharp (already cut myself).  Third, the blade should definitely be lubricated prior to use.

My brother and sister-in-law requested that I make some footstools for their new house (they left the last footstool, which matched a vanity sink I also made, at their old house), so I will have an opportunity to further the miter box.  I have also been thinking about making some picture frames; not out of necessity, but as practice for cutting mitered halflap joints by hand (which is a favorite design element in exposed joinery).

Edit: After a couple days of use, I am very happy with the saw. I still have to shoot the ends of each board (the blade is ever so slightly canted to the left, which is probably user error), but it is always a slight cleanup, not a major straightening.

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What hand tools should a beginner woodworker buy first?

For the last few weeks, in what little spare time I’ve had, I have agonized over one question: “What hand tools should a beginner woodworker buy first?”  I tried (and hopefully succeeded) in answering that question over the last few “Bare Essentials” posts.  In response to a question from a colleague, though, and for the TL;DR crowd out there, I thought I would take one more stab at it.

It’s a tough question and there is no easy answer, of course.  Partly, because the answer depends on what kind of woodworking the beginner wants to do; partly, because each person’s budget and/or available space vary.

So, instead, I will answer an easier question: “If I had a time machine, what basic set of hand tools would I have bought my past self as a birthday present when I was a beginner hand tool woodworker?”  I know it’s cheating, but, after all, the paradoxes largely resolve themselves and this is my website.

Basic Tools

Happy 30th Birthday, Past-James!

The picture above is for (literally) illustrative purposes only.  I thought it would be fun to fit everything in a single camera frame, but I don’t actually own one of the tools I recommend (a No. 5 jack plane) and I apparently forgot to include three others in the picture (low angle block plane, 600 grit diamond stone, saw files).

I am sure my views will evolve over time, but for now, here is what I believe should have been the first tools I owned as a beginner hand tool woodworker (with the goal of making tables and chairs):

Safety: Eye protection (ALWAYS!)
Bench Chisels: 1/4″, 1/2″, 3/4″, 18 oz. mallet
Hand Planes: #5 jack, low angle block
Hand Saws: rip cut panel (8-10 TPI), rip cut tenon (8-12 TPI)
Marking and Measuring: 12 inch combination square (the best you can afford), 12 foot tape measure, double bevel marking knife, mechanical pencils
Sharpening: 600 grit diamond plate, 1200 grit diamond plate, eclipse-style honing guide, saw files
Other: spray lubricant, screwdrivers, deadblow mallet, 2x 12″ bar clamps, 2x 8″ bar clamps, 24″ straightedge, 50″ straightedge clamp, blue tape

These tools (plus a regular claw hammer, a power drill, wood glue and some sand paper) should give a new hand tool woodworker everything absolutely required to get started cutting joints and making things out of wood.   Remember to stick to your budget and always do your safety, technique and sharpening research ahead of time.

I started out working on a WorkMate Portable Workbench, but any stout surface you can clamp material to (such as a sturdy dining table) is just fine.  I recommend laying down some hardboard or plywood to protect any finished surfaces from tool marks and marring, though.

Note: if you are interested in brand recommendations for the above, please leave a comment or email me.

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The Bare Essentials (Part 2, Handplane Edition)

Welcome back to The Apartment Woodworker!

This week, I will be rounding out the workshop tour with an in-depth look at the set of hand planes that I’ve come to know and love.  Just like always, I won’t be using brand names in any description.  After all, only one of my planes is a premium brand (the large router plane; thanks, Mom!) and everything else is at best a mid-budget brand.  If you are here looking for hand tool porn, you are still in the wrong place.

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From left to right: No. 5 1/2, No. 4 1/2, No. 4, low angle block, large router, small router, small chisel, small shoulder, trimming.

Every woodworker loves planes, even woodworkers who don’t use hand tools, and for good reason: planes are the most beautiful and complicated (and expensive) hand tools in the woodworker’s arsenal.  From straightening and squaring rough stock to refining the fit of a joint to preparing the final piece for finishing, hand planes are essential at every step of furniture building.  Even the most die-hard power tool enthusiast still needs at least a block plane.

Ownership of a hand plane is sort of endothermic.  Only through consistent use and maintenance will a plane (and the woodworker using the tool) reach full potential.  Be it a premium modern plane or a rehabilitated antique-store find, “up and running” is just the first step in the lifelong maturity and growth of tool and user alike.  Once the sole is flat and the iron is sharp, the real fun begins.  Plus, S4S’ing a piece of 12/4 ash is excellent exercise.

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This is reclaimed pine, but it’s still super way better than going to the gym.

In my hand-tool woodworking, I quickly developed a preference for two particular planes: the #5 1/2 jack plane and the #4 bench plane.  The #5 1/2 is plenty long enough for jointing, the #4 is plenty short enough for smoothing, and those two planes will touch every single piece of wood in every single project.  I definitely use my other planes (for instance, I’m very fond of my large router plane, and the # 4 1/2 is “super tuned” for smoothing), but the #5 1/2 and the #4 form the foundation of my tool chest. It’s true that sometimes I struggle when edge jointing thin stock, because the #5 1/2 is rather too heavy and tippy and the #4, though thinner and lighter, is probably too short.  Other times, flattening very long boards is a chore because even the #5 1/2 is too short.   Generally, though, these two planes (and a block plane) give me everything I need to prepare all six faces of a board (faces, sides and ends) for joinery and finishing.

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I rarely reach for anything else.

As an aside, I know quality hand planes are expensive and I’m not advocating that any beginner woodworker go out and spend a fortune on premium versions of the planes shown above.  Truth be told, each plane has its limitations and I have made compromises for lack of space.  As always, stick to your budget and figure out what works for you.  If you are dying for a recommendation, though, first go out and buy a regular home center block plane.  Learn how to sharpen it and adjust it.  Then, make your second hand plane a decent quality #5, which I guarantee will get the job done. After that, get a small router plane and hand cut a housing joint. It will change your life.

So, that’s it for the “this is my apartment workshop and these are my tools” portion of The Apartment Woodworker.  I purposely didn’t bore you with my straightedges and other miscellany and I hope you have enjoyed the tour.  Next time, I hope to share with you a silly little personal project that was a little bit about necessity and a lot about testing the capabilities of the Milkman’s Workbench.

The Milkman's Workbench

This thing

By the way, Happy Halloween to everyone!  Do yourself a favor and treat your Saturday hangover to a Netflix binge on Supernatural.  It’s still an amazingly entertaining show, even though it jumped the shark like a billion years ago.

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The Bare Essentials (Full Version, Part 1)

When I first decided to take up woodworking in May 2012, I lived in a two bedroom apartment in Lower Fairfield County, Connecticut and had exactly zero clue on how to proceed.  So I did what I think anyone would do in that situation: go to the home center, grab a WorkMate portable workbench, some hand saws, chisels, marking tools, clamps and a block plane off the rack and get to work.

Tools in hand (and having not yet discovered Paul Sellers and his Woodworking Masters Classes or Chris Schwarz and his Lost Art Press), I then did what anyone in this internet age would do: browse some basic instructions on the interwebs and do my best.  I took on projects well beyond my skill level (including a seven foot parsons dining table for my parents and a vanity sink for my brother’s remodeled bathroom) which, surprisingly, came out okay.  Today, I cringe at the tool marks and gaps in those early pieces (and I have since reclaimed the wood from most of my other early projects), but I was making things and I was hooked.

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Fast forward two and a half years and I am back pretty much where I started: in apartment in Lower Fairfield County, Connecticut, working wood in the evenings and weekends with a limited set of hand tools.  What lives on my workbench now (a Milkman’s Workbench clamped to a sturdy dining table I built for such a purpose) is very surprisingly not much different than what lived on and around my workbench then (a WorkMate 425): some hand saws, chisels, marking tools, clamps and hand planes.  My current tools are nicer, sharper, better tuned and of slightly larger quantity, it’s true, but in retrospect I wasn’t THAT far off when I stumbled into the home center a fresh faced newbie.

I have found a setup that works for me and I hope to be a resource for other new woodworkers wandering in the “what tools to buy” wilderness. I made some very bad tool purchases when I didn’t know any better and if I can steer just one person away from the same mistakes, I will be proud. I am intentionally avoiding brand-name-dropping, so if you are looking for hand tool porn, you are probably in the wrong place.  And remember: all of this is just my opinion based on my personal preference, experience and budget.  Figure out what works for you based on your goals and your resources.

So, here we go.  Please, feel free to judge.

Chisels:

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Marking knives and small planes, as well.

Nothing special here. A set of six bench chisels from 1/4 inch to 1 inch in 1/8 increments (which took forever to flatten but hold an edge quite nicely), plus two other chisels: a 1/2 inch sash mortiser (which I also use for paring) and a 3/8 inch corner chisel.  I use an 18 oz poly-wrapped chisel mallet that I bought off Amazon. That’s it, and it gets the job done. I would love to add a real paring chisel and maybe a wider bench chisel, but I am not quite sure where to fit them in the chest.

Chris Schwarz recommends that beginning woodworkers start with 1/2 inch and 3/4 inch chisels, and I would add to that a 1/4 inch (for cleaning out waste). At that point, though, a low cost but quality set of bench chisels starts to make sense (it seems they are always on sale, anyway).  Be sure to read up on flattening and honing, though, so you don’t completely ruin your first set like I did.

Hand Saws:

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Not pictured: three panel saws.

Pictured are seven joinery saws: an 11 inch crosscut carcass saw, two ripcut tenon saws (12 inches and 16 inches, respectively), two dovetail saws (14TPI and 20TPI), an old Disston coping saw that was my grandfather’s and a box store flush cut dowel pullsaw.  I know that is too many for a beginning woodworker; you really only need three, I think.

In my mind, the essential joinery saw set consists of crosscut carcass, ripcut tenon and dovetail. I know could do without the super fine dovetail saw (at 20tpi, I never use it because I don’t think I can even sharpen it) and the smaller tenon saw (if I had to, though it’s my favorite saw).  Also, there is nothing a flush trim saw can do that a dovetail saw and a chisel can’t in slightly more time.  Furthermore, not everyone hogs out dovetail waste with a coping saw (and mine requires vintage blades). If you use the knifewall marking method (which you absolutely should), you could even skip the crosscut carcass saw, but I have found the decreased resistance when crosscutting shoulders and housing joints helps in developing good sawing technique and habits.

My panel saws include two 26 inch ripcut (4.5 and 8 TPI) and a 22 inch, 10 TPI crosscut, although I got along just fine with only the 8 TPI ripcut panel saw for an extended period.  8 TPI in a ripcut pattern is easy to sharpen and works in a both directions for a variety of woods and thicknesses.

Measuring and Marking:

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Yes, that is a folding rule, and I use it all the time.

Now we are starting to cross into the more “miscellaneous” part of woodworking.  Other than a 12 inch combination square (the best you can afford), a decent tape measure, a marking gauge of some sort, a marking knife and some pencils (mechanical, black charcoal and white charcoal), the rest is personal preference.  I use a folding rule every time I woodwork and I couldn’t live without my brass setup gauges (which I use for testing tenon shoulders depth just as often as setting router depth).  The long white box in the front is a set of aluminum winding sticks, which are absolutely essential for hand-preparing rough stock and work well as straight edges.  The other try squares and the aluminum dovetail marker are luxuries I could live without (but would prefer not to).  And, of course, that Pocket Ref (4th Ed.) is just for show.

Two double bevel marking knives (both gifts), a scratch awl and a Shinto rasp live in the middle top drawer with the sash mortiser and corner chisel (see above).

Miscellaneous:

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There is never enough space for never enough clamps.

We are officially at essential odds and ends.  Some clamps; Blue Tape (you gotta have Blue Tape); screwdrivers; pliers; crepe blocks (if you don’t have one, get one); painters tools; a deadblow mallet; sharp scissors (essential for sand paper); and who knows what else.  I think those are needle files under the beeswax and a magnet at the front right.

And there you have it.  A place for (almost) everything, and everything in its place.  I am satisfied with the current state of my tool collection, although there are still a few, non-critical gaps I will address in due course.

You may be wondering, “where are the big hand planes?!?”  Well, I will treat them in a bit more depth in a second full post that should go live next week (the alluded-to “Full Version, Part 2”).  For now, here they are in their resting state, mere soldiers in this endless, bitter war against corrosion.

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In my defense, my chisel plane, small router plane and shoulder plane were in the “Chisels” picture.

That’s all for this week.  I have to prepare for an early Friday conference call.

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