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 Wednesday, October 10, 2007
Wish Her Luck
 I’ve taught a number of classes during my woodworking days. Teaching is one area that I thoroughly enjoy each and every time I’m called upon. I’ve found that most woodworkers who take classes are very receptive to direction as well as open to new or different ideas on how to go about the craft. I enjoy the looks on their faces when they grasp the idea put forth, and I like it when that bewildered look in their eye turns into a twinkle.
In my prior life, although I knew each woodworker had a certain method of work, I didn’t realize how different those methods could be. I adopted my Dad’s way of thinking – do it his/my way or do it wrong. Since becoming a part of the Popular Woodworking staff I’ve been privy to a number of different paths that all lead to the same end result. Editor Christopher Schwarz, Senior Editor Robert W. Lang and I approach woodworking from various directions, but each of us arrives at the same destination.
So, you may ask, what about Managing Editor Megan Fitzpatrick? She’s the subject of this entry. Today, Megan and I began work on a project in the Popular Woodworking shop. She asked that I teach her my woodworking methods. Poor woman.
Megan has a couple challenges in learning woodworking and at least one big benefit. You might not know this, but Megan is a teacher in her own right. She is a former adjunct professor at the University of Cincinnati (and now a 4th-year PhD student). I’ve found those who teach, when learning something they haven’t mastered, are usually like a sponge when being taught. I’m sure Megan fits this model too.
What about those challenges? Chris and Bob (no, they’re not the problem) have each spent time in the shop working with Megan, filling her head full of their woodworking methods. She’s benefited from their teaching and now she’s traipsing down my path as well. She’s being shown a third method of work. This could be good – or it could be bad.
With each new teacher she must forget, or at least put out of mind for the time being, the processes she learned with other instructors. That opens her mind to accept new methods. And that, in the long run, allows her to grow as a student. (I think it’s best for students to examine a number of ways to get things done, then choose the method that best fits his or her comfort level and ideas.) Megan may end up being the better woodworker of the Popular Woodworking staff because she’ll be able to take three different methods of work (one from each editor) and apply the ones that work best for her…then pitch the rest.
If things go well over the next few weeks, I’ll keep you posted on our progress. If things don’t go so well, I expect you’ll hear about it from Megan. Maybe this should be titled, “Wish Me Luck.”
– Glen D. Huey
Read other entries by Glen D. Huey
Wednesday, October 10, 2007 3:45:21 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Monday, October 08, 2007
Confusing the Beginners-Another Tool List
I consider myself fortunate to share the Popular Woodworking shop with two world-class woodworkers – Christopher Schwarz and Glen D. Huey. After many years of working mostly by myself, it’s refreshing to see approaches and techniques that are different from mine yet work just as well, or even better. As an old dog, it’s nice to learn some new tricks. Also sharing the shop is a less experienced woodworker, our managing editor Megan Fitzpatrick. We all try to be helpful and teach her what we consider to be the “right” way to do things as she develops her skills in the shop. Nice guys that we are, we feel free to jump in and offer unsolicited advice whenever we pass by and she is at her bench. Except for the admonition to not get blood all over the shop, I don’t think there has been an occasion where the three of us offered the same method, tool or technique. Megan isn’t shy about pointing out to us where we contradict each other (or occasionally ourselves) and we’re slowly learning not to jump in as she practices what one of us has shown her. I think all beginning and semi-experienced woodworkers go through a similar experience, but not as intensely and not on a daily (or hourly) basis. I learn things by going into “sponge-mode” trying to soak up as much as I can from different sources. I try different things until I find something that works for me. When I learned about woodworking, there was no Internet and no local woodworking store; there was one bi-monthly magazine, and only a few catalogs and resources for tools. I got reasonably good at doing things before I found out that I didn’t have anywhere near enough tools.  If I were just learning how to work with wood, it would be easy to become overwhelmed with the volume of information available today. This is especially true when it comes to tools. Many of our readers want to be woodworkers, but they aren’t yet because they are busy gathering all the tools they’ve been told they need, and getting their shops together before they actually start making stuff. There’s a good chance that many of these will pass on before they realize that gathering tools and getting the shop in order can become an eternal effort. The problem with woodworking is that there is always one more tool that promises to make a daunting task quick and painless. Special tools can indeed do that; the hard part is sorting out the tools you want from the tools you think you need – and the tools you really need from the tools that will help you do what you want to do. The list of tools I want looks like a telephone book, but the tools that will do at least 90 percent of what I want to do are in the picture above. I have more tools than this, but these are the ones that have been with me awhile – the ones that have shorter blades from being sharpened a zillion times and the ones that show some signs of age. I think this represents a good basic list for any woodworker. If your main interest is power tools, these tools will make your setups more accurate and will save the day when the power tools get you close to what you want, but not quite there. If you want to be a hand-tool woodworker, knowing how to use, sharpen and tweak these basic tools will get you well on your way. You’ll have a better idea of what more specialized tools you need, or you may decide that these are all you need. The important thing is to get going and make something. Click below for a list of the tools in the picture as a Word document. 10-05-07_list_ blog.doc (30 KB)Click below for the list of the tools in the picture as HTML RLang_list.htm (9.69 KB) – Robert W. Lang Read other entries by Robert W. Lang
Monday, October 08, 2007 10:19:29 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Friday, October 05, 2007
November Videos Added
We've added our November videos to our Video Site at popularwoodworking.com/video. Take a gander at a snippet of the Hybrid Tablesaw Shootout, see Christopher Schwarz explain and demonstrate using a bench hook, and study Rob Porcaro's upgrades to his workbench. Click here to view the Tablesaw Shootout video. Click here to view the video on using a Bench Hook. Click here to view the Workbench Upgrade video. Oh, while you're there, check out the other videos too. – Glen D. Huey Read other entries by Glen D. Huey
Friday, October 05, 2007 2:28:51 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Wednesday, October 03, 2007
My Views On Cutting Glass
Last week I penned an entry about the similarity between dovetails and glass cutting (click here to read it). I wrote about confidence being a large part of success. One comment listed cooking in that mix, too. The writer also added that you have to learn the skills before the confidence kicks in to play a part. That’s true for dovetails and I can only assume for cooking. However, I don’t believe that glass cutting fits into that category. Simply pick up a cutter, etch the line and snap. There’s not much else to learn about the basics.
This week I’d like to share a few simple ideas to get glass cut for your projects. Keep in mind these are not tips from a seasoned cutter, but from an ordinary Joe just scratching the surface. (Get it?)
It all starts with the right tool. For years I tried to cut glass with the regular cutters you find at hardware stores. The task was iffy at best. Frustrated, I visited a stained-glass store where the clerk recommended a Fletcher Designer II Pencil Grip Oil Cutter. This tool costs nearly seven times what the hardware-store cutter cost. Did they see me coming when I walked through the door? Looking for an answer (or at least being a pushover when it comes to purchases), I bought the cutter and went straight for the shop. I was amazed by how well it worked. So yes – the price of a quality glass-cutting tool is worth it.
 To fit glass, you have to begin with a straight edge. Position a straightedge tool onto the glass and roll the cutter from end to end, then snap the glass at the etched line. This is where confidence pays off. If the glass doesn’t snap like a good bakery cookie, tap the cut on the underside with the ball end of the cutter. You’ll see the crack start. Then use a framing square, one that’s really square, to make a second cut resulting in a 90º corner.
Don’t try to fit a piece of glass too tight. Measure the opening and transfer the layout to the glass with a Sharpie Permanent Marker (the best marker I’ve found to write on glass). I leave about an 1/8" of gap when fitting panes into a cupboard door. That’s a 1/16" per side. Line up the square and etch the line. Have confidence and snap the glass (sometimes you’ll have to tap with the ball end). Continue until the pane is sized.
Tombstone panes (seen in the door from the previous blog entry) present a problem. I paid someone to cut the first pane. The glass vendor had a sander that he used to get the sharp corner detail. It got the job done, but I wasn’t impressed. After that I tried it myself – got my confidence up.
The secret is no sharp corners. In the Authentic Shaker Clock article, August 2007, I rounded the corner of the rabbet to make the glass fit more easily. Another method is to round the cut of the glass.
 Here’s what I do. Cut the pane to fit the opening by cutting the width and the height at the apex of the arched or tombstone top. Position the pane into the opening and draw the tombstone onto the glass with the marker. Freehand the cut making sure to round the corner of the tombstone. The cut starts at the side and terminates at the middle of the arch. Two waste pieces are removed to make the profile.
Once the lines are etched, tap the cut line from the bottom and watch the crack begin. Apply a small amount of outward and downward pressure with pliers as you tap. When the break happens the waste will be in your pliers. Don’t forget to wear your safety glasses.
For the four panes of the door on the corner cupboard shown in the previous entry, I made five attempts. One piece of glass was lost. I must have been thinking about something else and my confidence dipped.
– Glen D. Huey
Read other entries by Glen D. Huey
Wednesday, October 03, 2007 2:20:05 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Tuesday, October 02, 2007
Greene & Greene: Clues to the Mystery
Here at Popular Woodworking we like great pieces of furniture for the projects we publish in the magazine. What we really like are great pieces of furniture with a good story behind them. In our November 2007 issue, we have an article by Darrell Peart that is exactly that – a reproduction of a library table originally made in the workshops of Peter and John Hall. The Hall brothers made the furniture designed by Greene & Greene in the early 1900s.  This table has all the design elements of Greene & Greene, but its actual origin is something of a mystery. While Darrell was doing research for his book "Greene & Greene: Design Elements for the Workshop," he visited the grandson of Peter Hall. In the living room was this table, that had been altered in the 1950s to make a coffee table. Darrell posted some pictures on the Yahoo! Greene & Greene group and I got in touch with him to see if he would build a reproduction of this piece for Popular Woodworking.  Darrell kindly agreed and the article is featured in our November issue. Darrell is thorough and meticulous, and sent us more material than we could fit in an 8-page article. Not wanting this to go to waste, we are putting the extra text, drawings and photos online in a pdf document. Click the link at the bottom of this entry to download it. Also online is a slide show of detail photos of the original table, and the lower 12" inches that have survived. Click here to download additional text, drawings and photos. (1.04 MB)
Click here to download a slide show of detail photos of the original table.(2.52mb)— Robert W. Lang
Read other entries by Robert W. Lang
Tuesday, October 02, 2007 12:17:18 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Sunday, September 30, 2007
Workshop Inventory: The Tools I Need to Build Furniture

Last week a long-time reader called to ask me about a bullnose plane I had reviewed favorably a few years back.
“What” he asked, “is this thing good for?”
I walked him through some of its uses, such as cleaning up stopped rabbets and leveling up dividers in assembled casework. Then he asked if I used the plane for those operations.
“Not much,” I replied. “I use a shoulder plane.”
After that, I could hear an edge of frustration in his voice. He had bought a tool on my recommendation that he didn’t really need (he had a couple shoulder planes). He only had so many dollars to spend on woodworking, and he wanted to spend them wisely so he could squeeze the maximum functions out of the fewest of tools.
And now he had a tool he didn’t need.
That conversation bummed me out for the whole weekend. There is a ton of equipment out there that is well-made and useful but that is unnecessary for certain types of woodworkers or people who already have such-and-such a tool. I try to add caveats to my reviews, but sometimes those aren’t as obvious as they should be in the text. Or sometimes, I hear from a reader who buys a tool after reading a review without any further research about the tool and its historical uses.
Now, I don’t have the space in the magazine to fully explain every gizmo that passes through our shop, but I can offer two suggestions:
1. If you are unfamiliar with a tool and its uses, do some legwork before you click “Buy It Now.” You might already have a tool that does the same task faster and more accurately.
2. Download and check out my personal tool inventory (two links are below). This is a list I compiled this weekend of the machines, power hand tools and hand tools that I use for about 90 percent of my work. I have a lot more tools than are listed here (as my kids are fond of reminding me), but these are the tools that are within arm’s reach, are always in tune and never put into storage. My woodworking might be different than your woodworking, but this list reflects a good blend of hand and power operations.
I’m sure I’ll update this list in the coming months. Meanwhile, take a look at the tools I have in my shop and see how this core set compares to yours.
Microsoft Word document: Workshop_Inventory.doc (50 KB) Same document in html format: Workshop_Inventory.htm (11.3 KB)
— Christopher Schwarz
Read other entries by Christopher Schwarz
Sunday, September 30, 2007 8:58:16 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Wednesday, September 26, 2007
Of Dovetails and Glass-cutting

The well-known saying "If you see it, you can be it" along with the famous phrase "I think I can, I think I can" from The Little Engine That Could, are just two examples of positive thought that are served up many times during our lives.
Dr. Norman Vincent Peale spent years preaching this message and wrote a number of books on the topic such as “The Power of Positive Thinking: A Practical Guide to Mastering The Problems of Everyday Living” (Running Press, 2002) and “How to make Positive Imaging work for you” (Revell, 1982)
I was drawn into this thought process when faced with having to use hand-cut dovetails in reproduction furniture. I’ve chronicled my journey with dovetails earlier in this blog (click to read) so, here’s a short version. I fought the idea "tooth and nail" for as long as I could before succumbing. After fighting dovetails for a good number of years, I woke up. I knew how to create pins and tails; I had cut the joints many, many times. So, I should not have any problems creating this joint. I came to believe that I could dovetail without issue and from that day forward I completed hand-cut dovetails with ease.
A while back I found another area in woodworking where that same idea holds true – cutting glass. I have always cut the glass I wanted to use in the cupboards and other pieces I’ve built. I like the look of old wavy glass that I buy new from Bendheim Restoration Glass known as full-restoration glass. I buy it in sheets and cut to the needed sizes.
 One day I was struggling cutting the glass for a secretary door, breaking a number of pieces along the way. I was about to exceed my patience quota when I said to my Dad, who was trying to keep me from pitching the entire mess in the trash, "I’ve watched stained glass artist on HGTV’s show "Modern Masters" simply grab a glass cutter, draw on the glass like they’re using a pencil then snap the piece exactly on the cut."
I then proceeded to pick up the cutter and demonstrate the technique. Danged if the glass didn’t snap exactly where I had the cut line. The proverbial light went off in my head and I connected the dots. It was positive thinking. I believed I could cut the glass that easily and I did just that.
Ever since that day I’ve had no problems cutting and fitting glass into my furniture. Who would have thought that dovetails and glass cutting had so much in common? There are a few secrets, a few techniques that I’ve picked up over the years. If you would like to have those secrets exposed, drop me a note or leave a comment. Maybe next week I’ll delve into glass-cutting 101.
– Glen D. Huey
Read other entries by Glen D. Huey
Wednesday, September 26, 2007 7:56:17 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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Tool Review: Ryobi's New Green Lithium
Another box came into the Popular Woodworking shop this morning. This one was unmarked. Secret. No names applied. I had to open it immediately. Inside there was one chartreuse-type green canvas bag with “Ryobi” emblazoned on the front. Inside was Ryobi’s newest toolkit offerings; the lithium tools that are an extension of the One+ System. And you will not have trouble finding them at the store. They're hyper green and gray.  There are three different kits available. One kit is the Lithium Battery Upgrade Kit. As the name implies, it’s the new battery, a 2.4 amp-hour (Ah) design that works with all existing tools, and charger. The charger energizes any and all One+ batteries. Prepare to pay $99 for this battery upgrade. For a paltry $60 more you can pick up the two-piece Lithium Power Drill Kit. This kit has the gear from the first kit plus an 18-volt, 24-position clutch drill with a 1/2"-sleeveless chuck in addition to a high-intensity flashlight with a swivel head.  Feeling extra flush? The four-piece Lithium Power Tool Kit includes a 5-1/2" circular saw with a left-side blade design (you can see the cut line more easily), a variable-speed reciprocating saw, an extra battery as well as the tools from the two-piece kit – all this for $259. We’ll use and test these tools in the coming weeks then report back our thoughts. In the meantime, if you want have a large "Honey-do" list around your home or shop, you might want to grab one of these deals right away. The kits are rolling out to Home Depot stores now. – Glen D. Huey Read other entries by Glen D. Huey
Wednesday, September 26, 2007 7:32:02 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Monday, September 24, 2007
Bosch Visits Popular Woodworking
There aren't many things better than free food, new power tools, and a friendly bunch of woodworkers. Last Wednesday evening that's what things were like here at the Popular Woodworking shop. Bosch tools sent several crates and boxes on Tuesday. Wednesday afternoon, Jim Stevens, Group Product Manager-Benchtop & Cutting Tools, Jason Feldner, Product Manager-Benchtop Tools, and Jon Howell, Product Manager-Circular Saw Blades arrived to unpack and set things up. Over in our cafeteria the caterers arrived with an enticing spread of barbecue beef, cold cuts and potato salad.  Close to 60 readers arrived, and after dinner the Bosch reps spoke about and demonstrated new tools and saw blades. In the corner of the picture is the new jobsite table saw, the Bosch 4100DG-09. We were impressed with this saw in Las Vegas particularly with the user-friendly guard system. We've had one in the shop for a couple months, and like it a lot. If you don't have space for a cabinet saw, or work in a garage where you have to put your tools away, it's worth taking a look at this one. It has a "gravity rise stand" that folds up easily and rolls, and a digital measuring system is available for the rip fence. Jason Feldner, Bosch's product manager for this tool showed the features after dinner. Jim Stevens gave the group a quick look at some hand-held tools; the Colt palm router and a new random-orbit sander. We promised not to show the sander yet, but as soon as we get the OK, we'll share some pictures and first impressions with you. Jon Howell wrapped up the formal presentations with a discussion of carbide and saw-blade technology.  With our appetites for food satisfied, and our appetites for tools properly whetted, it was off to the shop to take a closer look and to try the tools in action. In the picture above, Jason is explaining some of the fine points of the saw. We also had routers, sanders, a compound miter saw you can see sitting on the corner of Glen's new bench over Jason's shoulder, and cordless drills. To close out the evening, we drew names and the Bosch reps gave away two of the table saws, equipped with the gravity rise stands and digital rip fences. Bosch also gave everyone who attended a free 10" table saw blade.  Here's a picture of Jason Feldner, Popular Woodworking Publisher Steve Shanesy, and the two table-saw winners. If you look back at the first picture in this post, both of the winners were sitting together at the front table at dinner. Is it good luck to grab the table closest to the presentation, or is there some sort of conspiracy? If you show up at our next get together (which will happen this fall) you can enjoy the free eats and the camaraderie, and find out for yourself. Watch the blog for the announcement, or sign up for our free e-mail newsletter (link is in the lower left hand corner of the home page) to get on the guest list. — Robert W. Lang Read other entries by Robert W. Lang
Monday, September 24, 2007 3:09:09 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Friday, September 21, 2007
Rosewood Studio Reopens
Back in June, we reported on the closing of the Canadian woodworking school, Rosewood Studio. We're happy to follow that up with this report on the reopening and reorganization of Rosewood.  Ron Barter, a long-time instructor at the school purchased the assets in July, and the school resumed classes in mid-August. Many classes are scheduled through December, including two taught by Garret Hack. The current schedule is available at the Rosewood web site, and more will be scheduled in the near future. Barter said that any deposits paid before the June closing will be honored. Welcome back Rosewood Studio. — Robert W. Lang Read other entries by Robert W. Lang
Friday, September 21, 2007 3:33:01 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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