Hello everyone,
I recently signed up for a voc. school course called "woodworking for
profit." Figured it would be a classroom sort of situation, but it
turns out that I've essentially bought 30 hours of shop time for $50
(a hell of a deal, if you ask me!) I've got a couple of projects on
the burner right now, but they are all geared towards my personal
tools, and I'm planning on just continuing them at home.
So, as a happy accident, I need to figure out what I'm going to do
with a fully equipped shop and an instructor (with all his fingers, no
less).... The overall goal is for me to eventually become adept at
general furniture making, focusing mainly on tables and chairs of
various sorts. I'd like to make full use of the opportunity, so does
anyone have any suggestions? I was thinking of building the bent-arm
morris chair in the latest edition of Woodsmith, but the project needs
to to fit into ten 3-hour shop sessions, and I'm wondering if anyone
has made one of these, and if so, is thirty hours long enough for an
intermediate woodworker to do this?
Of course, if there is a challenging piece that will provide a better
learning experience, I'm more than open to suggestions- Steam-bending
or extensive dovetail cutting is out, but pretty much everything else
is fair game.
Thanks in advance for any suggestions!
Wed, Sep 29, 2004, 7:58pm (EDT-1) [email protected] (Prometheus)
wants to know:
Hello everyone,
I recently signed up <snip>
I haven't read all the responses. But, I think what I might do is,
sit down and figure out one or two rather complicated, specific,
projects you'd like to know how to do. Chair, table, whatever. Then
talk with the teacher, and find out which you would (or should,
probably) have time to complete in the time allowed - not the sanding,
finish, etc., just the woodworking part.
Than I think I'd shoot for that. With a set time, you're going to
be more focused, and concentrated, than you'd be at home. Then at home,
you can duplicate it, taking more time to do it.
Way I figure, better to start a 20 hour project, and finish it,
then start a 40 hour project, and not.
On the other hand, if you start something, say a table, get the top
done, learn how to do the legs, and only get one leg done in class, and
run out of time, then you'll know how to do the other three legs at
home. In a case like that, running out of time isn't so important.
JOAT
We will never have great leaders as long as we mistake education for
intelligence, ambition for ability, and lack of transgression for
integrity.
- Unknown
That is a great deal!
I think that if I had your situation (opportunity), I would go for
chair design/construction - if your instructor is adept
enough that is. Nightstands and such are relatively simple IMHO.
I've been plugging away as one of those "home
enthusiast/woodworker/fix-it-up types" for 15-20 years now and have
often thought that constructing a great looking dining room chair would
show real craftmanship - haven't arrived on my own yet.
I probably need a class!
Lou
In article <[email protected]>, Prometheus
<[email protected]> wrote:
> Hello everyone,
>
> I recently signed up for a voc. school course called "woodworking for
> profit." Figured it would be a classroom sort of situation, but it
> turns out that I've essentially bought 30 hours of shop time for $50
> (a hell of a deal, if you ask me!) I've got a couple of projects on
> the burner right now, but they are all geared towards my personal
> tools, and I'm planning on just continuing them at home.
>
> So, as a happy accident, I need to figure out what I'm going to do
> with a fully equipped shop and an instructor (with all his fingers, no
> less).... The overall goal is for me to eventually become adept at
> general furniture making, focusing mainly on tables and chairs of
> various sorts. I'd like to make full use of the opportunity, so does
> anyone have any suggestions? I was thinking of building the bent-arm
> morris chair in the latest edition of Woodsmith, but the project needs
> to to fit into ten 3-hour shop sessions, and I'm wondering if anyone
> has made one of these, and if so, is thirty hours long enough for an
> intermediate woodworker to do this?
>
> Of course, if there is a challenging piece that will provide a better
> learning experience, I'm more than open to suggestions- Steam-bending
> or extensive dovetail cutting is out, but pretty much everything else
> is fair game.
>
> Thanks in advance for any suggestions!
>
>
On Wed, 29 Sep 2004 21:25:56 -0500, "Swingman" <[email protected]> wrote:
>"Prometheus" wrote in message
>
>> So, as a happy accident, I need to figure out what I'm going to do
>> with a fully equipped shop and an instructor (with all his fingers, no
>> less)....
>
>I think your chair idea would be an excellent use of the situation ... not
>necessarily the Morris Chair, but perhaps a straight back, dining table type
>chair.
Not the Morris chair, eh? Any particular reason why a dining room
chair would be more useful? It would give me a chance to try out
turning some spindles, and see if I like working on a wood lathe.
(I've only used engine lathes and CNC lathes in the past)
>Chairs take some special skills and techniques and having someone to help
>you, and the equipment necessary to do it with, would put you way ahead of
>most working solo out of their own shop.
>
>Another good project would be something with a curved front ... perhaps a
>demilune table, with or without a drawer.
I've not seen any plans for these- are they usually coopered and then
veneered, or bent into shape? I agree it would make a slick project
in any case, and I'll definately consider it.
>Go for it.
You said it yourself:
> The overall goal is for me to eventually become adept at
> general furniture making, focusing mainly on tables and chairs of
> various sorts.
Focus on tables and chairs (use this time to make one of an eventual set) of
various sorts to get hands-on assistance with. If you look at small tables
and single chairs, you'll learn the imporatnt techniques from your class
that you'll be able to use in your shop at home to tackle bigger projects.
Michael Latcha - at home in Redford, MI
Prometheus <[email protected]> wrote in
news:[email protected]:
<snip>
> Thanks in advance for any suggestions!
Blanket chest
coordinated set of end tables + sofa table + coffee table
headboard for a bed, with coordinated nightstand(s)
More will occur to me later, I'm sure.
Patriarch
lapstrake boat ?
"Prometheus" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Hello everyone,
>
> I recently signed up for a voc. school course called "woodworking for
> profit." Figured it would be a classroom sort of situation, but it
> turns out that I've essentially bought 30 hours of shop time for $50
> (a hell of a deal, if you ask me!) I've got a couple of projects on
> the burner right now, but they are all geared towards my personal
> tools, and I'm planning on just continuing them at home.
>
> So, as a happy accident, I need to figure out what I'm going to do
> with a fully equipped shop and an instructor (with all his fingers, no
> less).... The overall goal is for me to eventually become adept at
> general furniture making, focusing mainly on tables and chairs of
> various sorts. I'd like to make full use of the opportunity, so does
> anyone have any suggestions? I was thinking of building the bent-arm
> morris chair in the latest edition of Woodsmith, but the project needs
> to to fit into ten 3-hour shop sessions, and I'm wondering if anyone
> has made one of these, and if so, is thirty hours long enough for an
> intermediate woodworker to do this?
>
> Of course, if there is a challenging piece that will provide a better
> learning experience, I'm more than open to suggestions- Steam-bending
> or extensive dovetail cutting is out, but pretty much everything else
> is fair game.
>
> Thanks in advance for any suggestions!
>
>
On Wed, 29 Sep 2004 20:31:21 -0700, "Gregory McGuire"
<[email protected]> wrote:
>lapstrake boat ?
Now that would be truely awesome, no doubt about that! If we end up
moving to the coast like the wife wants to, I'll be looking really
hard at that one. Might be a little ambitious for this situation,
though... :)
>"Prometheus" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>news:[email protected]...
>> Hello everyone,
>>
>> I recently signed up for a voc. school course called "woodworking for
>> profit." Figured it would be a classroom sort of situation, but it
>> turns out that I've essentially bought 30 hours of shop time for $50
>> (a hell of a deal, if you ask me!) I've got a couple of projects on
>> the burner right now, but they are all geared towards my personal
>> tools, and I'm planning on just continuing them at home.
>>
>> So, as a happy accident, I need to figure out what I'm going to do
>> with a fully equipped shop and an instructor (with all his fingers, no
>> less).... The overall goal is for me to eventually become adept at
>> general furniture making, focusing mainly on tables and chairs of
>> various sorts. I'd like to make full use of the opportunity, so does
>> anyone have any suggestions? I was thinking of building the bent-arm
>> morris chair in the latest edition of Woodsmith, but the project needs
>> to to fit into ten 3-hour shop sessions, and I'm wondering if anyone
>> has made one of these, and if so, is thirty hours long enough for an
>> intermediate woodworker to do this?
>>
>> Of course, if there is a challenging piece that will provide a better
>> learning experience, I'm more than open to suggestions- Steam-bending
>> or extensive dovetail cutting is out, but pretty much everything else
>> is fair game.
>>
>> Thanks in advance for any suggestions!
>>
>>
>
Prometheus <[email protected]> wrote in message news:<[email protected]>...
> Hello everyone,
>
> I recently signed up for a voc. school course called "woodworking for
> profit." Figured it would be a classroom sort of situation, but it
> turns out that I've essentially bought 30 hours of shop time for $50
> (a hell of a deal, if you ask me!) I've got a couple of projects on
> the burner right now, but they are all geared towards my personal
> tools, and I'm planning on just continuing them at home.
>
> So, as a happy accident, I need to figure out what I'm going to do
> with a fully equipped shop and an instructor (with all his fingers, no
> less).... The overall goal is for me to eventually become adept at
> general furniture making, focusing mainly on tables and chairs of
> various sorts. I'd like to make full use of the opportunity, so does
> anyone have any suggestions? I was thinking of building the bent-arm
> morris chair in the latest edition of Woodsmith, but the project needs
> to to fit into ten 3-hour shop sessions, and I'm wondering if anyone
> has made one of these, and if so, is thirty hours long enough for an
> intermediate woodworker to do this?
>
> Of course, if there is a challenging piece that will provide a better
> learning experience, I'm more than open to suggestions- Steam-bending
> or extensive dovetail cutting is out, but pretty much everything else
> is fair game.
>
> Thanks in advance for any suggestions!
Small table/night stand can always be usefull around the house,
plantstand, vases, phone stand, bedroom etc,
Prometheus <[email protected]> wrote in message news:<[email protected]>...
> Hello everyone,
>
> I recently signed up for a voc. school course called "woodworking for
> profit." Figured it would be a classroom sort of situation, but it
> turns out that I've essentially bought 30 hours of shop time for $50
> (a hell of a deal, if you ask me!) I've got a couple of projects on
> the burner right now, but they are all geared towards my personal
> tools, and I'm planning on just continuing them at home.
>
> So, as a happy accident, I need to figure out what I'm going to do
> with a fully equipped shop and an instructor (with all his fingers, no
> less).... The overall goal is for me to eventually become adept at
> general furniture making, focusing mainly on tables and chairs of
> various sorts. I'd like to make full use of the opportunity, so does
> anyone have any suggestions? I was thinking of building the bent-arm
> morris chair in the latest edition of Woodsmith, but the project needs
> to to fit into ten 3-hour shop sessions, and I'm wondering if anyone
> has made one of these, and if so, is thirty hours long enough for an
> intermediate woodworker to do this?
>
> Of course, if there is a challenging piece that will provide a better
> learning experience, I'm more than open to suggestions- Steam-bending
> or extensive dovetail cutting is out, but pretty much everything else
> is fair game.
>
> Thanks in advance for any suggestions!
Small table/night stand can always be usefull around the house,
plantstand, vases, phone stand, bedroom etc,
Prometheus <[email protected]> wrote in message news:<[email protected]>...
> Hello everyone,
>
> I recently signed up for a voc. school course called "woodworking for
> profit." Figured it would be a classroom sort of situation, but it
> turns out that I've essentially bought 30 hours of shop time for $50
> (a hell of a deal, if you ask me!) I've got a couple of projects on
> the burner right now, but they are all geared towards my personal
> tools, and I'm planning on just continuing them at home.
>
> So, as a happy accident, I need to figure out what I'm going to do
> with a fully equipped shop and an instructor (with all his fingers, no
> less).... The overall goal is for me to eventually become adept at
> general furniture making, focusing mainly on tables and chairs of
> various sorts. I'd like to make full use of the opportunity, so does
> anyone have any suggestions? I was thinking of building the bent-arm
> morris chair in the latest edition of Woodsmith, but the project needs
> to to fit into ten 3-hour shop sessions, and I'm wondering if anyone
> has made one of these, and if so, is thirty hours long enough for an
> intermediate woodworker to do this?
>
> Of course, if there is a challenging piece that will provide a better
> learning experience, I'm more than open to suggestions- Steam-bending
> or extensive dovetail cutting is out, but pretty much everything else
> is fair game.
>
> Thanks in advance for any suggestions!
Small table/night stand can always be usefull around the house,
plantstand, vases, phone stand, bedroom etc,
"Prometheus" wrote in message
> So, as a happy accident, I need to figure out what I'm going to do
> with a fully equipped shop and an instructor (with all his fingers, no
> less)....
I think your chair idea would be an excellent use of the situation ... not
necessarily the Morris Chair, but perhaps a straight back, dining table type
chair.
Chairs take some special skills and techniques and having someone to help
you, and the equipment necessary to do it with, would put you way ahead of
most working solo out of their own shop.
Another good project would be something with a curved front ... perhaps a
demilune table, with or without a drawer.
Go for it.
--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 7/10/04
On Thu, 30 Sep 2004 02:43:39 GMT, patriarch
<<patriarch>[email protected]> wrote:
>Prometheus <[email protected]> wrote in
>news:[email protected]:
>
><snip>
>> Thanks in advance for any suggestions!
>
>Blanket chest
>coordinated set of end tables + sofa table + coffee table
>headboard for a bed, with coordinated nightstand(s)
The tables I have in the works in my own shop- I'm doing all
hand-carved cabriole legs, so they may not be the best use of my
limited time there. The wife suggested the headboard, so that one is
still in the running for sure.
>More will occur to me later, I'm sure.
It always does! That's why I figured I'd ping you guys before I rush
off to start something before carefully considering the options...
many of which I'm sure have not yet crossed my mind.
>Patriarch
>
On 30 Sep 2004 03:21:54 -0700, [email protected] (dteckie) wrote:
>Prometheus <[email protected]> wrote in message news:<[email protected]>...
>> Hello everyone,
>>
>> I recently signed up for a voc. school course called "woodworking for
>> profit." Figured it would be a classroom sort of situation, but it
>> turns out that I've essentially bought 30 hours of shop time for $50
>> (a hell of a deal, if you ask me!) I've got a couple of projects on
>> the burner right now, but they are all geared towards my personal
>> tools, and I'm planning on just continuing them at home.
>>
>> So, as a happy accident, I need to figure out what I'm going to do
>> with a fully equipped shop and an instructor (with all his fingers, no
>> less).... The overall goal is for me to eventually become adept at
>> general furniture making, focusing mainly on tables and chairs of
>> various sorts. I'd like to make full use of the opportunity, so does
>> anyone have any suggestions? I was thinking of building the bent-arm
>> morris chair in the latest edition of Woodsmith, but the project needs
>> to to fit into ten 3-hour shop sessions, and I'm wondering if anyone
>> has made one of these, and if so, is thirty hours long enough for an
>> intermediate woodworker to do this?
>>
>> Of course, if there is a challenging piece that will provide a better
>> learning experience, I'm more than open to suggestions- Steam-bending
>> or extensive dovetail cutting is out, but pretty much everything else
>> is fair game.
>>
>> Thanks in advance for any suggestions!
>
>Small table/night stand can always be usefull around the house,
>plantstand, vases, phone stand, bedroom etc,
I've done many of these things, and my shop is mainly sufficent for
your basic tables and nightstands.
On Thu, 30 Sep 2004 19:56:54 -0400, loutent <[email protected]> wrote:
>That is a great deal!
>
>I think that if I had your situation (opportunity), I would go for
>chair design/construction - if your instructor is adept
>enough that is. Nightstands and such are relatively simple IMHO.
>
>I've been plugging away as one of those "home
>enthusiast/woodworker/fix-it-up types" for 15-20 years now and have
>often thought that constructing a great looking dining room chair would
>show real craftmanship - haven't arrived on my own yet.
>
>I probably need a class!
>
>Lou
I know several of the guys in the class take it every year, just
because they like having the access to the tools. :) No doubt there
are plenty of classes around, I just happened to fall into this one
because my wife saw it in the paper, and she seemed to think I should
make money from woodworking, rather than just spending money on tools
and wood (foolish, huh?)
On 30 Sep 2004 02:54:29 GMT, [email protected] (Tom) wrote:
> Prometheus wrote: snip>Figured it would be a classroom sort of situation, but
>it
>>turns out that I've essentially bought 30 hours of shop time for $50.<snip
>
>Any tools there that you don't have at home? Besides the instructor, of course.
Of course- They have three unisaws (compared to my delta 10" benchtop
on a homemade stand) Four full sized lathes, two 8" jointers, a 24"
surfacer, and three bandsaws, the largest being a Rockwell 20" (I plan
on doing all my resawing as my 9" delta will not handle much!) I've
got a few things they don't (dovetailing tools, cabinet scrapers,
etc.) but overall it's much better stocked than my shop. The most
interesting one is the "wood welder"- that sucker will tack up a joint
to working strength in 5 minutes or less.
>Tom
>Work at your leisure!
On Fri, 1 Oct 2004 20:13:01 -0400, [email protected] (J T)
wrote:
>Wed, Sep 29, 2004, 7:58pm (EDT-1) [email protected] (Prometheus)
>wants to know:
>Hello everyone,
>I recently signed up <snip>
>
> I haven't read all the responses. But, I think what I might do is,
>sit down and figure out one or two rather complicated, specific,
>projects you'd like to know how to do. Chair, table, whatever. Then
>talk with the teacher, and find out which you would (or should,
>probably) have time to complete in the time allowed - not the sanding,
>finish, etc., just the woodworking part.
>
> Than I think I'd shoot for that. With a set time, you're going to
>be more focused, and concentrated, than you'd be at home. Then at home,
>you can duplicate it, taking more time to do it.
>
> Way I figure, better to start a 20 hour project, and finish it,
>then start a 40 hour project, and not.
>
> On the other hand, if you start something, say a table, get the top
>done, learn how to do the legs, and only get one leg done in class, and
>run out of time, then you'll know how to do the other three legs at
>home. In a case like that, running out of time isn't so important.
It's not so much a problem of learning how to lay out or assemble the
parts, it's more a matter of making full use of the superior
facilities while I've got the chance. I'm almost tempted just to buy
a year's supply of lumber and do all my resawing and surfacing while
the doin's good (I've got only a little 9" bandsaw and no planer or
surfacer), but that seems like a least a little bit of a waste.