LawrenceofPA
State College, PA, USmember

Taunton Home | Books & Videos | Contact Us | Product recall information
Privacy Policy | Copyright Notice | Taunton Guarantee | User Agreement | About Us | Work for Us | Contact Us | Advertise | Press Room | Customer Service | Subscriber Alert
© 2012 The Taunton Press, Inc. All rights reserved.
Recent comments
Re: BOOK GIVEAWAY: 500 Tables (Updated with winner)
Not too slow; it burns.
posted: 9:00 pm on May 9thNot too fast; it chips.
Clockwise on the inside,
Counter on the outer.
Don't forget the safety gear.
Calming breath. Enjoy.
Re: UPDATE: Book Giveaway: How to Choose and Use Bench Planes and Scrapers by John English
A great father's day gift to myself. :-)
posted: 8:57 pm on May 9thRe: BOOK GIVEAWAY: 500 Tables (Updated with winner)
Ahhh...Hmmmm...Ahhhh...Hmmmm...Ahhhh...Hmmmm....
posted: 1:07 pm on May 8thRe: Bench Cookie Giveaway
Bench Cookies sound cool. BTW, this is Ian.
posted: 12:49 pm on October 21stRe: A sure-fire sharpening method
I really enjoyed this video, since it validates the way I've been doing it. Before I switched to waterstones, however, I spent a lot of money on Klingspor wet/dry adhesive-backed sandpaper. It works, too, but the waterstones ultimately cost less to use, and I like the result better.
posted: 12:29 pm on October 21stNow -- I need a sharpening jig for a skew chisel! What a pain.
Re: Inlay Banding and Buffard Freres
I made a simple inlay band described in "Creating Beautiful Boxes With Inlay Techniques," by Doug Stowe. I also inlaid a box with banding I bought at Rockler. The difference in appearance is unbelievable. The hand-made banding looks like real wood; the store-bought banding looks -- well, store-bought.
posted: 11:51 am on March 25thIt's also a great way to reduce about 5 bd ft of nice wood to a little stack of strips.
I'd love to learn more about this, since I seem to be unable to crack these puzzles myself.
Larry
Re: Jewelry Box in Curly Maple and Padauk
Gorgeous. I'm curious about the epoxy inlay. Did you use something like a pin router to excavate for the inlay?
posted: 12:24 pm on March 8thNice work.
Larry
Re: Tablesaw techniques I wouldn't recommend
this is really scary. if i were to have a beer with this guy, it would be to encourage him in the strongest possible terms to get some training or take up another hobby -- like needlepoint.
posted: 1:11 pm on February 7thRe: Making a Roubo Workbench: Part 2
I built my first bench about 2 years ago and used Doug fir 4x4s for the top, because I couldn't find anything else that was relatively clear. That sort of killed the $175-bench concept. But it's nice and heavy, and not too hard to plane flat. I'm also using this top to learn how to plane. My No. 5 and No. 7 seem to be the right combo.
posted: 3:20 pm on February 5thRe: Inexpensive furniture woods
As has already been mentioned, a local kiln posted an ad on craigslist under materials. He has KD poplar, oak, cherry, pine, and others for 1.50-3.00/bf. Also found a yard in eastern PA that had a sale on 4/4 cherry shorts, and bought 100 bf for a little over 2.20/bf. sure beats the $3.00+ I paid at home center for mediocre poplar!
posted: 11:08 am on February 5th