Molly Bagby

Mar 032014
 

This week, Highland Woodworking is hosting master chairmaker, Peter Galbert, who is teaching a 7-day class entitled Build a Continuous Arm Windsor Chair from March 3-9.

After Day 1, students have already made progress on building their own chairs, which they will get to take home at the end of the week:

chairclass1Students are holding their own on their horses while they pile up the shavings using drawknives on rived red oak stock, which will become the back spindles for the chair.

chairclass0314002Pictured above, you can see one student’s results from a good productive first day on the shave horse. A batch of chair back spindles roughed out and ready for the drying box. Once they lose some moisture, they will be pared down to final dimension.

CLICK HERE to go to Days 2,3, and 4

CLICK HERE to go to Day 5

CLICK HERE to go to Day 6

CLICK HERE to go to Day 7

Feb 282014
 

Today, we’re featuring two more woodworkers for Follow Friday and they are Don Schneider (Carving) and Paul Bucca (Woodturning).

Carving: Don Schneider

Don Schneider is a woodworker living in the northern woods of Havana, FL. He first got interested in carving after he used only an exacto knife and two wood files to carve a claw and ball foot, and was able to teach himself all of the carving techniques he needed to turn it into a regular hobby.

Don’s main focus in woodcarving is bas-relief carving, which he often does in a surrealist style. Another one of his carving interests is ornate masks. You can see several of his pieces below.

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You can read more about Don and see more of his carving in his Show Us Your Carving section of our February issue of Wood News Online.

Woodturning: Paul Bucca

Paul Bucca is a former Oceanographer who now enjoys creating segmented bowl turnings. Over the past 9 years that he has been turning, his segmented bowls have been getting more and more elaborate as he has gained skills in marquetry, and better tools.

One of his biggest pieces was featured in the Show Us Your Woodturning section of our February issue of The Highland Woodturner. The turning consists of 685 pieces making up two hemispheres that were finished and mated together to create a beautiful and elaborate porthole bowl seen below:

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Fridays on the Highland Woodworking Blog are dedicated to #FollowFriday, where we use this space to further highlight a woodworker or turner who we have featured in our monthly e-publications Wood News and The Highland WoodturnerWould you like for your shop or woodworking to appear in our publications? We invite you to SEND US PHOTOS of your shop or work along with captions and a brief history and description of your woodworking (Email photos at 800×600 resolution.) Receive a $50 store credit redeemable towards merchandise if we show your shop in a future issue.

Feb 212014
 

Today, we’re giving you not one, but TWO Follow Friday’s! Every month we feature several woodworkers within our online publications, Wood News Online and The Highland Woodworker, where they each have a column devoted to a woodworking specialty. These specialties include Shop Design, Woodworking, Carving, and Turning. Want us to showcase your own shop or projects? Check out the end of this column to see how you can submit to our newsletters!

For February 2014 we are featuring the following woodworkers:

shop1smShow Us Your Shop: Jim Brown has a beautiful woodsy shop in Old Forge, NY, where he sometimes has wildlife visitors while working (see the deer in the photo on the left?). Some unique characteristics of Jim’s shop include:

  • Plywood walls to allow easy installation of shelves and hangars.
  • A Sawstop Cabinet Saw (which makes him feel much safer when ripping stock).
  • 10 foot high ceilings, which allow easy swinging and handling of long boards.
  • Shelves with angled fronts that allow easy clamp storage and which also keep items from falling.
  • A self-fashioned system to easily move his non-mobile lathe.
  • A sturdy, fold-down set of stairs that can be lifted with just one finger.
  •  An attic used for wood storage.

To find out more about Jim’s shop and to view pictures of some of his mechanisms, CLICK HERE.

Show Us Your Woodworking: Mike Stafford has been fascinated with woodworking for much of his life, and is now at a point in life where he gets to do it as an everyday hobby! Mike and his wife, Kathie, built their kitchen together after Kathie created the design and Mike did the actual construction. After the kitchen, they decided to redo their bedroom furniture including nightstands and dressers, made of a variety of woods, finishes, and hardware. Most recently, they designed a 3-part Credenza to store all of their old movies in their living room.

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The top drawer is straight grained walnut cut in a serpentine pattern which shows off the vertical lines in the wood. The lower two drawers have an outside ‘frame’ in very uniform grained walnut sapwood. A maple inlay sets off the book matched walnut crotch wood as the inside face of the drawer frame.

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The dresser drawers are all book matched crotch wood. The drawer details in the night stand drawer fronts are the same in the dressers as in the nightstands. The hardware on the flat drawers is original 1930’s Art Deco Bakelite with bronze metal.

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Each bank of drawers on the Credenza is book matched and the faces have incredible depth. We found some drawer pulls in matte bronze with an art deco design impressed on them. The finish is Arm-R-Seal wipe on finish.

To find out more about the wood, hardware, and techniques that Mike used on his bedroom and living room furniture projects, CLICK HERE to go to the article!

Stay tuned next Friday, when we feature our Carving and Turning columnists for February!

Fridays on the Highland Woodworking Blog are dedicated to #FollowFriday, where we use this space to further highlight a woodworker or turner who we have featured in our monthly e-publications Wood News and The Highland WoodturnerWould you like for your shop or woodworking to appear in our publications? We invite you to SEND US PHOTOS of your shop or work along with captions and a brief history and description of your woodworking (Email photos at 800×600 resolution.) Receive a $50 store credit redeemable towards merchandise if we show your shop in a future issue.

Feb 182014
 

februaryhwtThis month we have another great issue of The Highland Woodturner, our online publication dedicated solely to woodturning. If you aren’t currently subscribed to The Highland Woodturner, you can easily do so HERE, and you will only receive our monthly publication, no sale gimmicks or anything else!

Issue #35 includes:

A Visit to the Kansas City Turning Club: This month Curtis shares his recent visit to the Kansas City Woodturners, and the fun and welcoming experience he had. Curtis gives us a brief tour of the club headquarters, and shows us pictures of the wooden tobacco pipe he saw being turned while he was there.

Easy Wood Tools: A Few Good Rules for Success: In this classic blog entry our frequent blog contributor, Terry Chapman, gives us a review of several Easy Wood Tools, a great line of turning tools that help make woodturning easier!

Show Us Your Woodturning: February features the segmented woodturning of Paul Bucca, who created an elaborate segmented bowl made up of 685 different pieces. The bowl depicts a variety of animals, all made out of naturally colored woods.

Phil’s Woodturning Tip: This month Phil has a tip on using Howard Feed-n-Wax and how it can bring back the luster to your woodturning projects.

All of this and more in our February issue of The Highland Woodturner!

Feb 112014
 

woodnewsphotoOur February issue of Wood News Online just came out! As always, we have multiple monthly features that show off the work of woodworkers around the country (and even the world sometimes). Wood News also gives woodworkers the opportunity to get their own tips and tricks out to the woodworking world.

This month’s special features include:

Building a Pennsylvania Step-Back Cupboard– Kerry Lancaster, from Jonesboro, GA, built this case piece after making a promise to build “a nice piece of furniture” to his old high school wood shop teacher, who recently passed away.

Building a Thickness Sander and Re-Saw Jig– Linda Master, a miniature artist, needed some tools to help her build her miniature pieces, so she decided to make her own tools, a thickness sander for making really thin boards, and a re-saw jig for her band saw.

Create Your Own Wooden Plane– Lee Laird, our Lie-Nielsen tool of the month blogger, wrote an extensive article detailing the building process of a wood-bodied smoothing plane.

Our regular contributors have some great tips and advice including:

Tips from Sticks in the Mud-Jim gives us some tips on the best product he has found to fight inhaled dust, as well as ways to keep your old dust collection system work like you just bought it!

Down to Earth Woodworker-Steve continues his dust collection series with the prep and delivery of his new dust collection system, the JDS 2100-CKV. He also discusses superstitions in the shop, and ponders the question “are woodworkers the last surviving artists?”

Finishing with Alan Noel– Alan gives us 9 tips on the use of India Ink, which is great for decorating furniture.

We’ve also got several product reviews including the Bessey Auto-Adjust Toggle Clamps, and Roy Underhill’s book, The Woodwright’s Guide, “a comprehensive explanation of how to use and maintain essentially every wedge and edge used in woodworking.”

And lastly, we have our Show Us series, with pictures and articles submitted by our readers and customers. These include:

Show Us Your Shop– This month we get to see Jim Brown’s shop in Old Forge, NY, with a great upstairs storage area for lumber.

Show Us Your Woodworking– Mike Smith is a hobby woodworker, who shows us his bedroom furniture project.

Show Us Your Carving– Don Schneider shows off his beautiful Bas relief works, and a variety of other carvings.

All of this and more in our February issue of Wood News Online!

Jan 242014
 

Today we are dedicating #FollowFriday to woodworker, Greg Pennington, who we recently featured in our Show Us Your Shop column in the January 2014 issue of Wood News Online. You may know Greg if you have taken any windsor chair building classes with Peter Galbert or Curtis Buchanan, both of whom he assists. When he isn’t assisting, you can find Greg teaching his own classes out of his timber frame workshop in Hendersonville, TN.

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Greg built his timber frame workshop in 2009, making it into an old fashioned barn raising event with the help of several friends and volunteers. You can read more about the actual barn raising event on his blog with Part 1 and Part 2.

Greg specializes in building windsor chairs and other period furniture, and uses hand tools as much as he can. The only power tools he has in his workshop are a lathe and bandsaw, and believes “that hand tools bring you closer to your work and really connect you to what comes from your heart.” Below are some of the windsor chairs that he has built:

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You can find out more about Greg and his projects by visiting his website at www.penningtonwindsorchairs.comYou can also read his blog at greg-aroundtheshop.blogspot.com.

———————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————–Fridays on the Highland Woodworking Blog are dedicated to #FollowFriday, where we use this space to further highlight a woodworker or turner who we have featured in our monthly e-publications Wood News and The Highland WoodturnerWould you like for your shop to appear in our publications? We invite you to SEND US PHOTOS of your woodworking along with captions and a brief history and description of your woodworking (Email photos at 800×600 resolution.) Receive a $50 store credit redeemable towards merchandise if we show your shop in a future issue.

Jan 152014
 

janwoodturnerCheck out our latest issue of The Highland Woodturner, Highland Woodworking’s online magazine dedicated to just woodturning. This month we have a few highlighted articles including:

Sharing the Love of Turning: Curtis Turner discusses how he has finally been able to teach his passion of woodturning to his oldest son. Within his article, he discusses methods of teaching younger children, as well as the process they used to make a beginning project.

Turning with Temple: Porch Posts: We have started featuring a bi-monthly column with Temple Blackwood, a turner located in Castine, ME. This month, Temple discusses his work on several porch posts that were used in the renovation of a nearby real estate office, and the process of turning these posts.

Show Us Your Woodturning: This month we featured the woodturning of Fred Warshofsky, who is able to combine the methods of turning and carving in order to create unique pieces of woodworking.

Phil’s Tip: Making the Perfect Tenon: Phil Colson has a tip on how to set the jaws of your chuck in order to create a perfect tenon.

Get your virtual copy HERE today!