Td

"Teamcasa"

12/10/2006 9:13 AM

Build with plans - Or not

I see several posts asking for the plans to build whatever. I rarely build
using plans other than a basic sketch to insure correct dimensions. When
someone wants something made, all I really want is a few photos of what they
want and I'll design/build it based loosely on what they had in mind. I
make several mistakes this way but it's part of the learning process. I love
the challenge.

Are you a must have a plan person or do you just build it by the seat of
your pants.

Dave


--
Today's mighty oak is just yesterday's nut that held its ground.


This topic has 26 replies

Aa

"Andy"

in reply to "Teamcasa" on 12/10/2006 9:13 AM

12/10/2006 9:42 AM

> Are you a must have a plan person or do you just build it by the seat of
> your pants.
>
> Dave

Both. A few recent projects as examples: My recent mission style bed
project was built pretty closely to a set of plans (August
Home/Woodsmith), though I tweaked the dimensions a little and came up
with my own bed rail fastening system.
The spice rack I built was entirely my own design, based on the sizes
of the spice jars that were in our cupboard. I did google around to
look at photos of others' designs, but didn't base my design on any in
particular.
My router table is entirely my own design - designed around the scraps
I had on hand, and made to fit in my B&D Workmate. Thus it's swapable
with my stationary belt-disc sander etc.
The rocking chair I'm working on is based very loosely on a plan
(American Furniture Design), but I basically used that for some of the
dimensions and angles. This plan contains very few of the
pictures/tips/jigs I found useful in the August Home plan, and the CAD
drawings that came with the rocking chair plan are poorly done and
inconsistent with the single photo of the original chair. So again, I
found all the pictures of mission style rockers I could, measured all
the chairs I could find, picked elements of each that I liked or didn't
like, and sketched up my own diagram that I'm building from. I'm
thinking that it would probably be beneficial to teach myself how to
use Google Sketchup or some basic CAD program, but I just haven't
motivated myself to spend a few hours in front of a computer when I
could spend a few hours with some wood instead.
The only problems I've had with my own sketches/plans have occurred
when I didn't look at them often enough.
Andy

Td

"Teamcasa"

in reply to "Teamcasa" on 12/10/2006 9:13 AM

12/10/2006 1:27 PM


"Upscale" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> "Teamcasa" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>>
>> Are you a must have a plan person or do you just build it by the seat of
>> your pants.
>
> I've never built from someone else's plans, but when I get an idea of
> something I want to build, I usually draw my own detailed plans.
>
That's mostly what I do as well. Sometimes I'll detail out a particulair
connection just to get a better idea on what order to make the cuts or
should I mortise first, shape later or shape first, mortise later. Oh the
sweet delima.

I also agree with Pete's statement "If this ... (put togeather - take apart)
hasn't happened to you, you don't enjoy working with wood and need a new
pastime like bottle cap collecting."

Dave

w

in reply to "Teamcasa" on 12/10/2006 9:13 AM

12/10/2006 2:31 PM


Teamcasa wrote:
> ... I rarely build
> using plans other than a basic sketch to insure correct dimensions.

> Are you a must have a plan person or do you just build it by the seat of
> your pants.

I'm really fond of the planning process; there's always a plan. The
making of
an esthetic whole out of materials, processes, and techniques is my
definition of a satisfying craft (or craft hobby).

There's three stages of a project (bookshelf, room moulding, room
rearrangement... whatever).
First you identify the goal; bookshelf for books this size, in this
quantity, in this location
in the house.
Second, you put together a plausible scheme to reach the goal (shelf
boards this width,
of softwood, vertical supports blind-sliding-halfdovetailed in plywood,
finished before
cutting, and a cutting plan based on standard lumber sizes).
Third, you make the trip to the lumberyard and transition those boards
from raw wood
to furniture-plus-sawdust.

Sometimes it pays off big; sometimes you have happy accidents on the
way and
the plan changes. I ran into a sample-size display of stains while
shopping for
lumber, and my playing with different stains and woods soaked up an
extra weekend.
Sometimes you hit a hitch and have to re-plan or accept the uneven
staining as a gift of
the wood...

And years of enjoyment of the project can be had if the plan is sound,
while months of
dissatisfaction can result if the wood finish sticks to your books.
The plan DID call for
finishing applied weeks ahead of final assembly, I'm happy to say.

b

in reply to "Teamcasa" on 12/10/2006 9:13 AM

12/10/2006 3:16 PM


Teamcasa wrote:
> I see several posts asking for the plans to build whatever. I rarely build
> using plans other than a basic sketch to insure correct dimensions. When
> someone wants something made, all I really want is a few photos of what they
> want and I'll design/build it based loosely on what they had in mind. I
> make several mistakes this way but it's part of the learning process. I love
> the challenge.
>
> Are you a must have a plan person or do you just build it by the seat of
> your pants.
>
> Dave


I rarely have the luxury to work so loosely. I design in the laptop for
most of my clients, generally on site with a tape measure in hand. I
take it home and detail it out from there. I usually have a complete
cutlist and drawings of plan and elevation views complete before I buy
any wood.

Mm

"Mike"

in reply to "Teamcasa" on 12/10/2006 9:13 AM

13/10/2006 6:05 AM


J T wrote:
> Thu, Oct 12, 2006, 9:13am (EDT-3) [email protected] (Teamcasa) doth
> queryeth:
> <snip> Are you a must have a plan person or do you just build it by the
> seat of your pants.
>
> Plans? Plans? Don' need no steenkin' plans!
>
>
>
> JOAT
> It's not hard, if you get your mind right.
> - Granny Weatherwax


The problem with using plans is that it is so hard to find them. Now,
if there were some way to find plans with a quick and easy search....

Td

"Teamcasa"

in reply to "Teamcasa" on 12/10/2006 9:13 AM

13/10/2006 10:30 AM


"mac davis" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Fri, 13 Oct 2006 02:48:40 GMT, "Teamcasa" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>>If woodworking was my profession, I too would carefully design, plan and
>>purchase with care. As a hobby, I am relieved of that responsibility. If
>>this hobby ever became work, I'd go back to playing golf, welding or
>>diving.
>>
>>Dave
>>
> My older brother drives me crazy when we do a project together.... His
> background is in airframe, and he plans EVERYTHING...
>
> I have to say that his finished work is much better than mine, but he'll
> take
> hours and sometimes days designing in CAD and revising material and cut
> lists,
> dimensions, etc. until I've either built it myself or gone home and done
> another
> project.. *g*
>
> I'm pretty sure that my work would be better if I was more like him, but
> my
> hobby is making saw dust and his is 50/50 planning and building..
> Mac
>
I too like planning- up until I make a mistake or I don't like the way a
plan does something. From then on, its on to improvisational work.

Mac, Mexico soon? I'm turning a bowl from walnut with a big knot in it.
Its a test of my patients.

Dave


CM

"Charlie M. 1958"

in reply to "Teamcasa" on 12/10/2006 9:13 AM

12/10/2006 12:51 PM

Andy wrote:
>> Are you a must have a plan person or do you just build it by the seat of
>> your pants.
>>
I might make a rough sketch from the idea in my head if the project is
complicated enough.

As far as using plans from other sources, I only look at them to get
different ideas of how something might go together. To me, woodworking
is a process that begins with an idea and ends with the finished
product. Building something according to an existing plan cuts out an
integral (and fun) part of that process.

CM

"Charlie M. 1958"

in reply to "Teamcasa" on 12/10/2006 9:13 AM

12/10/2006 2:11 PM

[email protected] wrote:
>> Are you a must have a plan person or do you just build it by the seat of
>> your pants.
>>
>> Dave
>>
>
> Build from plans when you don't have one. Then run around getting the
> material called for in the plan. Or mess around with the plan,
> substitute material and dimensions, and likely mess up the project.
>
> Or get a plan in your head from other plans or pictures, mull it
> around a bit, sketch it out for the joints and build it with the
> material you have. At least your not building what someone else has
> built before you. Call it original design if that makes you happy.
>
> I get the idea and work out the details in my mind, sketching where I
> need to, Lay out my material, write all over it, sand it off, do it
> again, revise the plan because the material doesn't fit, down/up size
> the plan, get more material if I really feel I need it. This takes
> a month. Start cutting to size, need a jig - build one (jig takes 2
> days, cutting takes 10 min), dry fit, cut some more material, more
> dry fit, change plans because I got a better idea, complete all the
> cutting and final dry fit. Begin glue up, take back down because I
> got ahead of myself in the glue up sequence, curse the glue squeeze
> out, fix that, recut the piece that doesn't fit, complete the
> assembly. This takes a week or so, depending on project size and
> complexity - your time may vary. Grab a coffee, have a smoke and
> watch the glue dry.
>
> Sand the snot out of it with progressively finer papers, make a great
> show of being fussy, damp wipe the project down to raise the grain
> and find missed spots to resand, lighly sand again. Grab more coffee
> and a smoke and watch the wood dry while looking for areas that need
> more sanding. This takes about 2-3 days. Give it a first coat of
> oil/stain and curse your blindness for missing that obvious sanding
> swirl that didn't show up when damp wiping, resand and curse some
> more. Complete the finishing, sanding out the damn fruit flies that
> came out of no where and landed in the last wet coat, wax it. Grab
> another cuppa and a smoke, sit down and finally see all the stupid
> mistakes you made, and curse some more. Plan the next project.
>
> If this hasn't happened to you, you don't enjoy working with wood and
> need a new pastime like bottle cap collecting.
>
> Pete
LMAO! You must have a hidden camera set up in my shop! (Except I did
manage to quit smoking a few years back)

Br

"Bill"

in reply to "Teamcasa" on 12/10/2006 9:13 AM

16/10/2006 3:57 AM

On Fri, 13 Oct 2006 09:16:27 -0700, mac davis wrote:

>>Are you a must have a plan person or do you just build it by the seat of
>>your pants.
>>
>>Dave

Summa both. Some times I'll start with plans then, as the project
progresses, depart from them.

I just completed the DP table from ShopNotes #57. Very good plans.

However, I made no drawer and increased the top dims to 39" x 17" x 1 1/4".

And changed the table material to a 3 part mdf / cdx / mdf sandwich.

Then I shellacked it.

And added a corrugated plastic baffle to the dust box to get rid of the
corners and smooth the flow.

And used 3/4 inch square tubing (which I had laying around) in place of
their flimsy-looking angle brackets (which I would have had to buy).

And a shop-built collar for the vacuum hose entry that is exactly right.
The hose just slides in but once the shop vac starts, it's downright tough
to pull it out.

And I made the slots in the back stop by a different method.

Come to think of it ... I could patent this!

;-)

Yeah ... I use plans.
Like a fighter jet uses a catapault.

Bill

c

in reply to "Teamcasa" on 12/10/2006 9:13 AM

12/10/2006 7:06 PM


>Are you a must have a plan person or do you just build it by the seat of
>your pants.
>
>Dave
>

Build from plans when you don't have one. Then run around getting the
material called for in the plan. Or mess around with the plan,
substitute material and dimensions, and likely mess up the project.

Or get a plan in your head from other plans or pictures, mull it
around a bit, sketch it out for the joints and build it with the
material you have. At least your not building what someone else has
built before you. Call it original design if that makes you happy.

I get the idea and work out the details in my mind, sketching where I
need to, Lay out my material, write all over it, sand it off, do it
again, revise the plan because the material doesn't fit, down/up size
the plan, get more material if I really feel I need it. This takes
a month. Start cutting to size, need a jig - build one (jig takes 2
days, cutting takes 10 min), dry fit, cut some more material, more
dry fit, change plans because I got a better idea, complete all the
cutting and final dry fit. Begin glue up, take back down because I
got ahead of myself in the glue up sequence, curse the glue squeeze
out, fix that, recut the piece that doesn't fit, complete the
assembly. This takes a week or so, depending on project size and
complexity - your time may vary. Grab a coffee, have a smoke and
watch the glue dry.

Sand the snot out of it with progressively finer papers, make a great
show of being fussy, damp wipe the project down to raise the grain
and find missed spots to resand, lighly sand again. Grab more coffee
and a smoke and watch the wood dry while looking for areas that need
more sanding. This takes about 2-3 days. Give it a first coat of
oil/stain and curse your blindness for missing that obvious sanding
swirl that didn't show up when damp wiping, resand and curse some
more. Complete the finishing, sanding out the damn fruit flies that
came out of no where and landed in the last wet coat, wax it. Grab
another cuppa and a smoke, sit down and finally see all the stupid
mistakes you made, and curse some more. Plan the next project.

If this hasn't happened to you, you don't enjoy working with wood and
need a new pastime like bottle cap collecting.

Pete

Pp

Puckdropper

in reply to "Teamcasa" on 12/10/2006 9:13 AM

13/10/2006 1:29 PM

"Mike" <[email protected]> wrote in
news:[email protected]:

>
> J T wrote:
>> Thu, Oct 12, 2006, 9:13am (EDT-3) [email protected] (Teamcasa)
>> doth queryeth:
>> <snip> Are you a must have a plan person or do you just build it by
>> the seat of your pants.
>>
>> Plans? Plans? Don' need no steenkin' plans!
>>
>>
>>
>> JOAT
>> It's not hard, if you get your mind right.
>> - Granny Weatherwax
>
>
> The problem with using plans is that it is so hard to find them. Now,
> if there were some way to find plans with a quick and easy search....
>
>

Searching's too hard. I want someone to post links to plans right in
front of me. ;-)

Puckdropper
--
Wise is the man who attempts to answer his question before asking it.

To email me directly, send a message to puckdropper (at) fastmail.fm

md

mac davis

in reply to "Teamcasa" on 12/10/2006 9:13 AM

13/10/2006 9:16 AM

On Thu, 12 Oct 2006 09:13:35 -0700, "Teamcasa" <[email protected]> wrote:

>I see several posts asking for the plans to build whatever. I rarely build
>using plans other than a basic sketch to insure correct dimensions. When
>someone wants something made, all I really want is a few photos of what they
>want and I'll design/build it based loosely on what they had in mind. I
>make several mistakes this way but it's part of the learning process. I love
>the challenge.
>
>Are you a must have a plan person or do you just build it by the seat of
>your pants.
>
>Dave

I've tried working with plans and hit 2 problems:

Not having a planer, the thickness on plans usually isn't possible...
if it calls for 5/8" 11/16" thickness I have to use 3/4" stock and change all
the other measurements or it throws everything off...

I just don't have the patience required... Once the bug hits me I want to
picture it in my head, draw enough of a sketch to get sizes and stuff and just
go with it...

Also, I have a really bad habit of my projects evolving as I progress, with
improvements and changes that I usually like in the end..
Mac

https://home.comcast.net/~mac.davis
https://home.comcast.net/~mac.davis/wood_stuff.htm

JJ

in reply to "Teamcasa" on 12/10/2006 9:13 AM

12/10/2006 1:42 PM

Thu, Oct 12, 2006, 9:13am (EDT-3) [email protected] (Teamcasa) doth
queryeth:
<snip> Are you a must have a plan person or do you just build it by the
seat of your pants.

Plans? Plans? Don' need no steenkin' plans!



JOAT
It's not hard, if you get your mind right.
- Granny Weatherwax

LM

"Lee Michaels"

in reply to "Teamcasa" on 12/10/2006 9:13 AM

13/10/2006 2:48 PM


"Teamcasa" <[email protected]> wrote
>>
> I too like planning- up until I make a mistake or I don't like the way a
> plan does something. From then on, its on to improvisational work.
>
> Mac, Mexico soon? I'm turning a bowl from walnut with a big knot in it.
> Its a test of my patients.
>
I have this strong visual of David turning a bowl while his patients sit in
a waiting/lathe room full of wood shavings.


AR

"Allen Roy"

in reply to "Teamcasa" on 12/10/2006 9:13 AM

13/10/2006 1:40 AM

LMAO, sounds familiar....

Allen

<[email protected]> wrote in message news:[email protected]...
>
>>Are you a must have a plan person or do you just build it by the seat of
>>your pants.
>>
>>Dave
>>
>
> Build from plans when you don't have one. Then run around getting the
> material called for in the plan. Or mess around with the plan,
> substitute material and dimensions, and likely mess up the project.
>
> Or get a plan in your head from other plans or pictures, mull it
> around a bit, sketch it out for the joints and build it with the
> material you have. At least your not building what someone else has
> built before you. Call it original design if that makes you happy.
>
> I get the idea and work out the details in my mind, sketching where I
> need to, Lay out my material, write all over it, sand it off, do it
> again, revise the plan because the material doesn't fit, down/up size
> the plan, get more material if I really feel I need it. This takes
> a month. Start cutting to size, need a jig - build one (jig takes 2
> days, cutting takes 10 min), dry fit, cut some more material, more
> dry fit, change plans because I got a better idea, complete all the
> cutting and final dry fit. Begin glue up, take back down because I
> got ahead of myself in the glue up sequence, curse the glue squeeze
> out, fix that, recut the piece that doesn't fit, complete the
> assembly. This takes a week or so, depending on project size and
> complexity - your time may vary. Grab a coffee, have a smoke and
> watch the glue dry.
>
> Sand the snot out of it with progressively finer papers, make a great
> show of being fussy, damp wipe the project down to raise the grain
> and find missed spots to resand, lighly sand again. Grab more coffee
> and a smoke and watch the wood dry while looking for areas that need
> more sanding. This takes about 2-3 days. Give it a first coat of
> oil/stain and curse your blindness for missing that obvious sanding
> swirl that didn't show up when damp wiping, resand and curse some
> more. Complete the finishing, sanding out the damn fruit flies that
> came out of no where and landed in the last wet coat, wax it. Grab
> another cuppa and a smoke, sit down and finally see all the stupid
> mistakes you made, and curse some more. Plan the next project.
>
> If this hasn't happened to you, you don't enjoy working with wood and
> need a new pastime like bottle cap collecting.
>
> Pete

Cl

Cap'n 321

in reply to "Teamcasa" on 12/10/2006 9:13 AM

12/10/2006 7:02 PM

I'm a recent requester of plans for sideboard -- more for generating
some ideas rather than producing a piece. In this case, the sideboard
is a gift for my son and daughter-in-law and I just wanted a few
plans/pix to make sure what I produce is what they really want.

Teamcasa wrote:
> I see several posts asking for the plans to build whatever. I rarely build
> using plans other than a basic sketch to insure correct dimensions. When
> someone wants something made, all I really want is a few photos of what they
> want and I'll design/build it based loosely on what they had in mind. I
> make several mistakes this way but it's part of the learning process. I love
> the challenge.
>
> Are you a must have a plan person or do you just build it by the seat of
> your pants.
>
> Dave
>
>

JJ

in reply to Cap'n 321 on 12/10/2006 7:02 PM

12/10/2006 9:49 PM

Thu, Oct 12, 2006, 7:02pm (EDT+4) [email protected]
(Cap'n=A0321) doth claimeth:
<snip> the sideboard is a gift for my son and daughter-in-law and I just
wanted a few plans/pix to make sure what I produce is what they really
want.

In that case, if it had been me, I'd have asked THEM for pictures
or plans of what they really want.



JOAT
It's not hard, if you get your mind right.
- Granny Weatherwax

EP

"Edwin Pawlowski"

in reply to "Teamcasa" on 12/10/2006 9:13 AM

14/10/2006 3:03 AM


"mac davis" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> My older brother drives me crazy when we do a project together.... His
> background is in airframe, and he plans EVERYTHING...
>
> I have to say that his finished work is much better than mine, but he'll
> take
> hours and sometimes days designing in CAD and revising material and cut
> lists,
> dimensions, etc. until I've either built it myself or gone home and done
> another
> project.. *g*

I like to do some planning. Most times, it is a sketch made while sitting
in front of the TV. I make a rough cut list so I don't have to go back to
get more wood, but it is subject to change, as are the plans once things get
going.

I've built a couple of projects from bought or free plans though. If I see
something I like, I'd just as well spend a few $$ and have the work done for
me and it can be a good learning experience to find out how others would do
a joint. I also have limited artistic skills so for designs like the Tudor
bench I built from American Furniture Design was money well spent.

sD

[email protected] (Doug Miller)

in reply to "Teamcasa" on 12/10/2006 9:13 AM

12/10/2006 5:16 PM

In article <[email protected]>, "Teamcasa" <[email protected]> wrote:
>I see several posts asking for the plans to build whatever. I rarely build
>using plans other than a basic sketch to insure correct dimensions. When
>someone wants something made, all I really want is a few photos of what they
>want and I'll design/build it based loosely on what they had in mind. I
>make several mistakes this way but it's part of the learning process. I love
>the challenge.
>
>Are you a must have a plan person or do you just build it by the seat of
>your pants.

I always build from plans. Sometimes, they're other people's plans, either
purchased or free downloads. Usually, they're my own plans -- which are
frequently just sketches with dimensions, and a picture in in my head. But I
always, always, always build from some kind of plan.

--
Regards,
Doug Miller (alphageek at milmac dot com)

It's time to throw all their damned tea in the harbor again.

HS

"Henry St.Pierre"

in reply to "Teamcasa" on 12/10/2006 9:13 AM

13/10/2006 11:56 PM

mac davis <[email protected]> wrote in
news:[email protected]:

> On Thu, 12 Oct 2006 09:13:35 -0700, "Teamcasa" <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>>I see several posts asking for the plans to build whatever. I rarely
>>build using plans other than a basic sketch to insure correct
>>dimensions. When someone wants something made, all I really want is a
>>few photos of what they want and I'll design/build it based loosely on
>>what they had in mind. I make several mistakes this way but it's part
>>of the learning process. I love the challenge.
>>
>>Are you a must have a plan person or do you just build it by the seat
>>of your pants.
>>
>>Dave
>
> I've tried working with plans and hit 2 problems:
>
> Not having a planer, the thickness on plans usually isn't possible...
> if it calls for 5/8" 11/16" thickness I have to use 3/4" stock and
> change all the other measurements or it throws everything off...
>
> I just don't have the patience required... Once the bug hits me I want
> to picture it in my head, draw enough of a sketch to get sizes and
> stuff and just go with it...
>
> Also, I have a really bad habit of my projects evolving as I progress,
> with improvements and changes that I usually like in the end..
> Mac
>
> https://home.comcast.net/~mac.davis
> https://home.comcast.net/~mac.davis/wood_stuff.htm

I never use plans. I look at my lumber supply and then at whatever tools
or machinery catch my fancy. I then start cutting or milling or planing
or carving or turning and then sanding or scraping and shellacing or
oiling or varnishing or polyurathaning or painting. I never know what it
is going to be. Even when it's completed I'm not sure what it is, but
it's been cut, milled, planed, carved, sanded or scraped (or sanded and
scraped) shellaced, oiled, varnished, painted, polyurathaned or left
natural. Never know what it is, but I love the workmanship.
"Don't need no steenken plans" (JOAT 2006).
Hank






sining or varnishing or

md

mac davis

in reply to "Teamcasa" on 12/10/2006 9:13 AM

13/10/2006 9:22 AM

On Fri, 13 Oct 2006 02:48:40 GMT, "Teamcasa" <[email protected]> wrote:


>If woodworking was my profession, I too would carefully design, plan and
>purchase with care. As a hobby, I am relieved of that responsibility. If
>this hobby ever became work, I'd go back to playing golf, welding or diving.
>
>Dave
>
My older brother drives me crazy when we do a project together.... His
background is in airframe, and he plans EVERYTHING...

I have to say that his finished work is much better than mine, but he'll take
hours and sometimes days designing in CAD and revising material and cut lists,
dimensions, etc. until I've either built it myself or gone home and done another
project.. *g*

I'm pretty sure that my work would be better if I was more like him, but my
hobby is making saw dust and his is 50/50 planning and building..
Mac

https://home.comcast.net/~mac.davis
https://home.comcast.net/~mac.davis/wood_stuff.htm

Pn

Prometheus

in reply to "Teamcasa" on 12/10/2006 9:13 AM

12/10/2006 2:54 PM

On Thu, 12 Oct 2006 09:13:35 -0700, "Teamcasa" <[email protected]>
wrote:

>I see several posts asking for the plans to build whatever. I rarely build
>using plans other than a basic sketch to insure correct dimensions. When
>someone wants something made, all I really want is a few photos of what they
>want and I'll design/build it based loosely on what they had in mind. I
>make several mistakes this way but it's part of the learning process. I love
>the challenge.
>
>Are you a must have a plan person or do you just build it by the seat of
>your pants.

Seat of my pants, now- but when I was starting out making "real"
furniture (as opposed to sawhorses and nailed-together 2x4 benches) I
used plans until I got a good idea of what joints were availible, when
they were appropriate, what approaches I did and didn't like, and
glue-up procedures. Without that initial education via plans, I think
my current projects would be suffering.

I don't bother with cutlists, either- I've got a lathe, and do little
projects as well, so I just get a couple more planks than I think I
need, and keep the extra in the shop for some future project. I might
plan out buying hardwood ply, but I don't use that much.

Td

"Teamcasa"

in reply to "Teamcasa" on 12/10/2006 9:13 AM

13/10/2006 2:48 AM


<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> Teamcasa wrote:
>> I see several posts asking for the plans to build whatever. I rarely
>> build
>> using plans other than a basic sketch to insure correct dimensions. When
>> someone wants something made, all I really want is a few photos of what
>> they
>> want and I'll design/build it based loosely on what they had in mind. I
>> make several mistakes this way but it's part of the learning process. I
>> love
>> the challenge.
>>
>> Are you a must have a plan person or do you just build it by the seat of
>> your pants.
>>
>> Dave
>
>
> I rarely have the luxury to work so loosely. I design in the laptop for
> most of my clients, generally on site with a tape measure in hand. I
> take it home and detail it out from there. I usually have a complete
> cutlist and drawings of plan and elevation views complete before I buy
> any wood.
>
If woodworking was my profession, I too would carefully design, plan and
purchase with care. As a hobby, I am relieved of that responsibility. If
this hobby ever became work, I'd go back to playing golf, welding or diving.

Dave

Uu

"Upscale"

in reply to "Teamcasa" on 12/10/2006 9:13 AM

12/10/2006 3:21 PM

"Teamcasa" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>
> Are you a must have a plan person or do you just build it by the seat of
> your pants.

I've never built from someone else's plans, but when I get an idea of
something I want to build, I usually draw my own detailed plans.

Mm

Markem

in reply to "Teamcasa" on 12/10/2006 9:13 AM

12/10/2006 1:39 PM

On Thu, 12 Oct 2006 09:13:35 -0700, "Teamcasa" <[email protected]>
wrote:

>Are you a must have a plan person or do you just build it by the seat of
>your pants.

I generally have an outline as to what, but serenidipty strikes more
often than does Murphy. But frustrating Murphy rather than me always
makes me happy.

Mark
(sixoneeight) = 618

BA

B A R R Y

in reply to "Teamcasa" on 12/10/2006 9:13 AM

12/10/2006 5:03 PM

Teamcasa wrote:
>
> Are you a must have a plan person or do you just build it by the seat of
> your pants.

I usually work from a plan and cutlist, but in the vast majority of
cases, _I_ created the plan and cutlist. If the project is based on an
existing item, the plan is created from photos and descriptions of the
item. The "plan" is usually nothing more than an 11"x17" pencil line
drawing, with notes jotted down as to specific details that I don't want
to forget. My cutlists are usually simple Excel printouts. Each
project gets a clipboard, and parts are stretch-wrapped together and
labeled, as I usually have more than one project going at a time. Shop
projects, etc... usually don't warrant a plan.

I've occasionally used commercial plans, not for an entire project, but
for a detailed explanation of how a specific idea is executed.
Sometimes, there's no point in reinventing the wheel.

Personally, I've found the most difficult and mistake-prone way to work
is to modify a plan on the fly that I didn't create.


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