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Quick Poll

With the holiday season now upon us, visions of new additions to shops are dancing through the minds of woodworkers everywhere.

Before we get any further into the season, it would be a good time to stop and think about our tool collections.  For instance, when was the last time you added a power tool to the arsenal?  Maybe you added a sander or router to the collection, or maybe you went whole hog and replaced your table saw with a more powerful and capable model?

And, yes, I mean the tool… no accessories allowed. So, you can’t count that big box of router bits or the new saw blade as a power tool…

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Link of the week

The Renaissance Woodworker’s Hand Tool School

Aren’t hand tools cool?  Hand saws, chisels, planes, scrapers… the quality of the tools being made now rivals that of those made before the arrival of power tools. The problem with them, however, is that they do their best work when you use the proper technique.

So, where can you learn those techniques?

Why, in the comfort of your own home!  Shannon Rogers of the Renaissance Woodworker has recently launched the virtual hand tool school. Chapters will be set up to feature different tools, their proper use and a project that features that particular tool.

Yes, there is a charge to join the hand tool school, however, it’s considerably less than going to a woodworking school, you have access to the content any time of the day and you can learn at your own pace.   And, to get an idea of how the school works, you can get a free preview by registering.

Happy little woodworkers…

Some things that I watch on TV can get me very excited.  The recent negative political ads before Election Day made me completely angry and frustrated. A  close football or basketball game can get my heart pumping.  Watching the nightly news leaves me  feeling disgusted many evenings.

But, there are also shows that leave me totally relaxed. On the PBS Create channel, I recently rediscovered a show I hadn’t seen in decades – Bob Ross’ Joy of Painting. I’m no painter, but the late Bob Ross’ voice was exceptionally soothing, and it’s amazing to watch him paint realistic looking landscapes in less than half an hour

The show is airs twice a week here in my market, and I’m even getting my wife and two sons into watching it.  Tonight, as Bob painted a serene sunset, I began to think about some of the things he said and what he did, and how I can apply them to woodworking.  For instance:

  • Bob can paint the majority of his paintings with a 2″ trim paint brush.  Tonight, he must have hit 80% of the painting with that brush you or I might use to paint the baseboards.  Bob could make that brush do just about anything… How many times do we as woodworkers stop ourselves from trying a new technique because we don’t have the ‘proper’ specialized tool?  It took me a long while before I cut my first mortise – using my plunge router – because I believed I had to have a dedicated hollow chisel mortiser. Read up on the tools you already own… you might be surprised what you can do with them.
  • “Here’s your bravery test.” Bob said this just after he had completed some gorgeous landscape but before he painted a large looming tree in the foreground. For most of us, when we get the structure of a project built, we tend to complete it with many of the same techniques we are used to. Maybe it’s one particular kind of door pull or finish we’ve used several times with success. Why not put yourself to the bravery test and push beyond what you are comfortable with?  Something like an inlay or a hand cut door pull made of a contrasting wood can bump up the style and take your work beyond the expected into the realm of stunning masterpiece – and it will help you grow as a woodworker.
  • “Beat the Devil out of it.” Bob would say this as he cleaned one of his brushes before he would work on a new part of the painting. He would swish them in the paint thinner and then rapidly beat them dry on the leg of his easel. He always smiled when he did that. (Bob would also remind his viewers to use odorless paint thinner when cleaning brushes. “If it’s not odorless, you’ll find yourself working alone very, very quick.”).  Lately, I have discovered myself dreading the basic shop tasks that we all have to do.  Sharpening chisels and plane irons, sweeping the shop, cleaning up stacks of wood. But, when you think about it, aren’t those mundane tasks part of what makes woodworking great? Is there anything more pleasant than paring a joint perfect with a honed chisel or sweeping up the remains of a hard day’s work?  You made all of those pretty curls with your own hand plane… and each of those means you have made your project boards that much more ready to be finished.  Just like Bob, I’m going to try to take more pleasure in those more routine tasks.

  • “We don’t make mistakes, just happy little accidents.” Bob always encouraged his viewers to overcome their fears and just relax in front of the canvas. He realized that many of his viewers would freeze like frightened rabbits, brush in hand, because they believed that every single stroke of paint they laid down had to be perfect. In every episode I’ve seen, he’s always reminded the viewer that if the paint went onto the canvas and didn’t look right, a quick swipe of the palette knife would erase all traces of the mistake and they could start over.  In my shop, I often come down hard on myself for miscuts, splintering boards and other miscues.  Yet, I’ve been able time and again to either erase the mistake or to simply mill up another piece to replace what went wrong.  And, that old woodworker’s adage of “It’s not a mistake, it’s a design feature,” comes into play as well, as many happy little accidents have allowed me to improve the final product.

  • The heck with critics. If you do an internet search for Bob Ross, you’ll find plenty of detractors. His work is too simplistic. He’s painting from his imagination, not painting accurate recreations of actual landscapes. He doesn’t paint like ‘The Masters,’ by doing painstaking subject studies and taking weeks to produce his final piece. I call BS. Each artist – each painter – each woodworker – is a person unto his or her own, with their own unique styles, quirks and ways of learning. Feeling you have to spit out authentic reproductions of Shaker tables, Chippendale highboys or Krenov-style cabinets just because someone says that’s the way it’s supposed to be done is ridiculous.  Heck, Krenov became famous for breaking from traditional forms to create a unique style of furniture. To stifle creativity in the name of doing things the ‘right’ way is crazy.

Will I ever lay down my saws to pick up the palette?  Not sure… Painting does look like a lot of fun. But my medium is wood… and I’m having a lot of fun with my happy little projects.

I call monkeyshines….

If you are building holiday gifts, you might want to check out the latest edition of Wood Magazine.  In the December  2010/January 2011 edition, you’ll find the latest installment of the Shop Monkey column called “Living in the present.”


In it, you’ll find some of my tips for keeping your sanity when building woodworking projects during the crazy holiday season. Have you thought about how you’ll ship those things?  What will you do if you end up with a bad cold and have to play beat the clock?

If you want to read even more Shop Monkey input, why not check out my blog over at the Wood Magazine forum website?  Navigate the content and read the input from your favorite bloggers.

Yes, you can even read my content if you have nothing better to do …

Now, no more monkey business… back into the shop!

Quick Poll

‘Tis the season… again!

The time when woodworkers start thinking about the holidays.. and the family and friends who have dropped subtle hints that yes – they would like something from your shop as a holiday present.

So, are you building holiday gifts this year?

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Link of the week

Woodworker’s Guild of America: Working with big wood

Wood sliced into boards is great to work with and can allow you to build awesome furniture.  But, once you work with a giant slab of wood, well, you’ll be amazed at the designs mother nature can throw into the piece.

This page gives you some pointers about working with these huge pieces of wood. From the safe lifting of boards that could weigh hundreds of pounds to the safe way to cut the boards down to size when building smaller projects, there are a number of common-sense safety and storage tips available.

Much to be thankful for…

With Thanksgiving tomorrow here in the United States, I wanted to start today’s post by listing some of the things I am thankful for…

I’m thankful for  my family for putting up with the time I spend in the shop and on the computer running the blog.

I’m thankful for the folks at Eagle America, for giving me the support and setting me up with some sweet tools.

I’m thankful for the fact that y’all didn’t laugh me off the blog when I cut my finger with the hedge trimmers back in May:

I’m thankful for the folks at Bell Forest Products, for your support and the wood… the beautiful, beautiful wood!

I’m thankful for having met the Wood Whisperer, Marc Spagnuolo, and for him helping me get this blog off the ground more than three years ago… and for still standing behind me – and so many other bloggers bringing you high quality woodworking content.  Special thanks also  go to his wife Nicole who helps to make the Wood Whisperer a great community.

Thank you to Matt, Shannon, Kari and the rest of the folks who make Wood Talk Online so much damned fun to listen to.  Heck, Roberto, I’m thankful for your interesting phone calls!

I’m thankful for talented woodworkers like Mike Siemsen, Jim Heavey and Gail O’Rourke (there are dozens more) who have taken the time to help me figure out some woodworking head scratchers.

I’m thankful for all of the woodworkers I met at the Woodworking Show in Tampa back in March and the Woodworking in America conference held in Cincinnati back in October. My eyes were opened to the incredible talent, humor and knowledge possessed by the folks out there building in their basements, garages and dedicated shops.

I’m thankful that my niece didn’t just laugh at me for building her something without an LCD touch screen and 4G connectivity for her 16th birthday:

I’m thankful for Wood Magazine, for your continued support and helping the legend of the Shop Monkey grow.

I’m thankful for talented tool makers like Ron Hock, the folks at Lie Nielsen, Veritas, Festool and so many other companies for creating quality tools so woodworkers can build their creation.

I’m thankful for my friend Paul, who showed me what patience was all about as we figured out how to build that huge home office system and disrupted the harmonious flow of his home while we installed it.

And, most importantly, I’m thankful for  each of you for stopping by Tom’s Workbench and taking a look at what I’m up to.  By the way, the entire crew of Tom’s Workbench – Me, my wife Rhonda and my two sons Dominic and Steven, have a message for each of you:

Now that we are officially in the holiday season, I guess I need to tell you that I was given excused duty this year for building holiday gifts.  That’s right, no cutting boards, no wine racks… Nothing.  After a few seasons of racing to beat the clock, Rhonda took some pity on me and said I had the year off.  I have a few projects on the table, though, so I plan on getting a little time in the shop after the big feast.

As I raise my glass tomorrow to toast the family members at the table, know that I’ll be raising one for you as well – the members of the Tom’s Workbench family.