Review Show #16 - 17th Century New England Carving with Peter Follansbee
Peter Follansbee teaches us the basics of 17th century carving! →
Wood Talk is a radio-style show for the modern woodworker. Join hosts Marc Spagnuolo, Matt Vanderlist, and Shannon Rogers for a light-hearted look at the latest news and techniques from the world of woodworking. Catch our live recording every Wednesday at 7 PM Eastern on The Live Page!
Peter Follansbee teaches us the basics of 17th century carving! →
Wiping varnish, building with something other than 3/4" stock, disposing of sawdust, and restoring some old Stanley planes. →
Japanese chisels, getting the most from a dust extractor, planing one side of a board, veneering, storing left-over finish, and ash for hurleys. →
The Handworks even in Iowa, locking miter joints, quality dividers, locating an air filter, using OSB, large wet slabs, and alternatives to traditional stickering and stacking. →
Bone up on joinery basics with 9 Essential Woodworking Joints from WOOD Magazine. →
We're talking about Marples blades, Sweetheart vs Bailey, storing hand planes, high end sanders, protecting your assembly table, and pressure treated wood. →
We're talking about die grinders, PVC pipe, Forrest vs Freud, scraping, jointer length, granite top retrofits, back bevels, blade height, effects of finish on wood movement, and buying wood just because. →
Cupped table top, a box for severed fingers, using router bits with shapers, t-slot miter bars, compact table saws, bevel angles on bevel down planes, jointer options, dado blade safety, and designing difficulty. →
Nordfab ductwork, European saws, quartersawn wood, round vs square dog holes, thin kerf blades, smoothing expensive wood, cutting up burl, and graduating from shop projects to real furniture projects. →
Peter Ross teaches us how to take a piece of metal and make an awesome compass from it! →
Jack planes, leaving dovetail scribe lines, the difference between some common saws, inspecting an old table saw, using B-grade wood, fixing a warped chair seat, and using epoxy. →
Responsible wood usage, green mineral spirits, design for strength, fixing a hand-cut mortise, Arm-R-Seal alternatives, riving knives, carving tools, RAS, cross-cut sleds, steel hardness, butcher block finish, elmers glue, and sprung joints. →
Peter Follansbee teaches us the basics of 17th century carving! →