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I’ve been involved in woodworking for
(gulp) 25 years. I started by doing odd carpentry jobs while working out
of my parents’ basement (at least they let me sleep upstairs). I managed
to work a few furniture projects in, a couple of which weren’t bad for a
beginner (the others were bad). After a brief attempt at college (I
almost became an electrical engineer – whew, that was close), my
springboard into life in the real world was a two year stint studying
under Ian Kirby, a traditionally trained woodworker, writer and teacher,
during which time I earned a foundation of woodworking theory, hand and
machine tool use, drawing and design that I am still building on today.
This brief period of exploration and enlightenment was followed by
many years of blundering, missteps and mistakes – at least that’s
what it felt like some days. Since 1988 I’ve been self-employed
building custom residential cabinetry, built-ins and furniture,
beginning with a single helper and growing steadily to as many as 10
employees, and (sparing you many agonizing details here) now have
come full circle to a shop attached to my house, with a single
helper.
So what’s different about that compared to working out of my
parents’ basement? Well, other than having a much better equipped (not
to mention better lit) shop, the difference is that (gulp) 25 years of
experience. In those years I’m watched a lot of good ideas turn out to
be not so good, seen some changes (mostly improvements) in how things
are done in a woodshop, and learned a few techniques that make my job
easier and keep the phone ringing.
Plans for this WebColumn
While it’s impossible to teach
experience, I’m happy to share some of what I’ve found along the way in
the hopes of helping those who are not as far along the path to avoid
some of the pitfalls I’ve fallen into; and since I think I still have a
ways to go myself I also hope to bounce some ideas off of y’all and
maybe pick up a new trick or two along the way.
Your Responsibility
Use suggestions, files, and designs
from this and other ShopBot WebColumns at your own risk. Make sure any
project or technique is appropriate for your tool and shop. And always
verify any toolpaths in Preview Mode and by air-cutting before actually
cutting material. If your material is expensive, it is always best to
first try a test cut in something you can afford to mess up.
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