-
Dedicated Sled Delivers Perfect Finger Joints -
How to Apply an Aerosol Finish -
Tablesaw Tapering Jig is Safer and Faster -
Five Minute Guide: How to Use a Tablesaw -
How to Make a Simple Jig for Offset Knife Hinges -
Buying and Using Trim Routers -
Upgrade Your Jointer with a Segmented Cutterhead -
Router Jig for Perfectly Aligned Dadoes -
Five Minute Guide: Glue-Ups -
Box Making Tips and Tricks -
How to Drill Windsor Chair Mortises -
How to Cut Sliding Dovetail Joints -
How to Sharpen a Card Scraper -
3 Steps to Great Glue-Ups: Sliding Dovetail Joints -
Best Tabletop Finish -
Fixing Woodworking Mistakes -
T-Track is a Smart Workbench Accessory
Reader's Gallery
FWW Magazine Gallery, member
Design or Plan used: Not specified
posted in: Reader's Gallery, maple, shellac, claro walnut, Bay Laurel
Fort Bragg Wall Cabinet
comments (1) October 24th, 2012 in Reader's Gallery
"The instructor’s rules said to keep it small, solid, simple, and sweet," Williams says, describing this wall cabinet (7-1/8-in. deep by 26-1/4-in. wide by 7-7/8-in. tall). "To those, I added my own requirements: to work only with native species and shape curves by hand." The cabinet is claro walnut, bay laurel, and maple, with a shellac finish. "The College of the Redwoods is such a welcome change of pace," Williams said. "We know fast won’t last, so we slow down and build real, durable furniture."
Design or Plan used: Not specified
posted in: Reader's Gallery, maple, shellac, claro walnut, Bay Laurel







_sqs.jpg)
_sqs.jpg)









Comments (1)
Posted: 10:25 pm on May 20th
You must be logged in to post comments. Log in.