All posts by Tom

I'm the guy who writes the blog...

A pointed matter

Hey, folks, I was recently approached by John Greco.  Perhaps you remember him as someone in the eye of the storm in the recent issue of the Consumer Products Safety Commission ruling on testing toys for lead content. Well, he’s been a busy guy the past few years, and he wanted to send an article over my way to tell you about what he’s been up to.  Take it away, John!

You might recall a few years back you featured the wooden toys I was making. It was the height of the CPSIA debacle (early ’09 at the time, if I remember correctly). Some time after that, with the inevitability of mandatory destructive testing for toys looming, I decided to stop making toys. It was really a heart wrenching decision and I sort of floundered around for a while looking for something that could become my niche.
I tried making clocks and hourglasses and had some success, but the time invested (no pun intended!) wasn’t working for the price point I felt the pieces needed to be at to sell. After talking to a friend who weaves on a loom, I found myself making a lot of fiber tools. Things like drop spindles for spinning fiber into yarn and stick shuttles for passing the yarn through a loom. That was going alright, but since I wasn’t a fiber-person I didn’t really find myself enjoying it the way I had hoped.
A friend of mine, a hobby woodworker, had been making pens and urging me to try it for a few months. I’m a fan of nice pens and had initially put it off because I didn’t think you could make a pen by hand as nice as some of the big names out there. I finally gave in, and am glad to say I was very wrong. My first pen was turned in February 2011.
I had already been using my lathe for some time by then for the fiber tools, so there wasn’t a whole lot to be learned by way of actually turning the pen. Finishing was another story! I read and read and read, and I watched YouTube videos out the wazoo. I tried a few different methods until finally settling on using cyanoacrylate (CA, the active ingredient in super glue) layered on as my finish of choice. It polishes beautifully after being sanded to 12,000 grit and has phenomenal wear resistance.
Sometime around the Summer of 2011 I was fortunate enough to work out a deal with the Philadelphia Independence Seaport Museum. I got a hold of some salvaged dockwood that had once been beneath the Walt Whitman Bridge and made it into a limited edition run of the pens being carried by the museum exclusively. From there I had some local press and was experiencing a decent amount of success….and enjoying it!
This past April I was contacted by the owner of the Historic Pen Company. He had seen the work I’ve done, is based out of NJ and was looking for a local pen maker to partner with. He stopped by, we chatted for a while and a few days later the details were worked out. The Historic Pen Company acquires the wood, I turn it into pens, and they market and sell it. What’s especially great about it is a lot of the pieces help benefit restoration projects where the wood is originally from.
Some pieces I’ve worked with so far have been from St. Peter’s Church in Philadelphia (250(?) year old Horse Chestnut tree), The Shack – LBI, NJ (a local iconic building seen on the drive into Long Beach Island), Shibe Park/Connie Mack Stadium (Philadelphia, early 1900’s), Wildwood, NJ (an exclusive deal with the city for the boards they rip up from the boardwalk), and the Cedar Bridge Tavern, NJ (c. 1740, believed by some historians to be the location of the final battle of the American Revolution).
Working some of these pieces has been challenging, and the wood from the Tavern was downright spongy. I started to look into sending the pieces out for professional stabilizing but due to the historic nature of the wood there wasn’t a lot of interest in people taking on the task. That’s when I wondered, “How hard can this be?”.
More reading and reading and reading, YouTube videos and even a couple of phone calls with the supplier of a heat cured resin called Cactus Juice. The idea is that you submerge the wood in the Juice inside of a vacuum chamber and draw out all of the air. As you do this, all of the air from the wood is also removed (picture a bunch of straws being squeezed tight). After all of the air is drawn out you release the vacuum and the resin takes the place where the air used to be.
From here the blanks are wrapped in aluminum foil and baked in a toaster oven at 200 degrees for about an hour or so. When they come out they are heavier, hot (wear gloves!), and hard as a rock. As soon as they cool, they are ready to be worked.
I did this same procedure for the piece from the Wildwood Boardwalk, which was really in rough shape. HPC wanted these to have a light blue dye to them, so I added a special reactive dye to the Cactus Juice for this batch. It’s pretty interesting, because you can really see how the fast growth parts of the wood have more air in them, resulting in an almost striped look.
All of my historic pens are listed through the HPC website at: http://www.historicpencompany.com.
On a final note, I was reading an interview David Marks had done a few years back, when I was still making toys. He said the wonderful thing about woodworking is you never know where it will bring you. I laughed at the time, because making toys was exactly what I had always wanted to do. And now here I am. Truer words were never spoken.

 

Important People: Tim and Dan Walter

There have been a bunch of folks who have had a major influence on Tom’s Workbench over the past five years. I wanted to take the time to recognize a few of the folks with which the blog would have never happened.

Today, I send a shout-out to Dan and Tim Walter, formerly of Eagle America Tools.

When I first started woodworking, I quickly discovered that I couldn’t just walk into the local home improvement center and pick up the tools, blades and bits I needed for woodworking.  While there is a Woodcraft store a bit of a drive from my house, I found that it was much more convenient to order the tools I needed and have them sent by mail. One of the first places I found was Eagle America, at the time run by Dan Walter and his son Tim.

After exchanging a few e-mails with Tim, the two Walters approached me about a proposition. “Tom, would you like us to advertise on your site?”  This was a real shift in my time as a blogger… someone actually wanted to be associated with Tom’s Workbench on my home page!  I agreed, and that partnership went very well for years.

Last year, Dan and Tim sold the company, and have since moved on to bigger and better things. That was when our business relationship ended. While initially sad, I ultimately feel great about this experience because it showed me that people were interested in supporting what I had to say, and the risk that Dan and Tim took with me helped open the doors with other advertisers.

Thanks again, Dan and Tim.

 

 

Quick Poll

OK, maybe they aren’t the most accurate of measuring devices. And, in many cases, getting an absolute relative measurement for a part you need to cut is far superior.

But, you can’t deny that a tape measure is a handy tool to have in a shop!

Just like potato chips, though, it seems like you can never have just one. This week, let us know just how many of these handy measuring devices you have in your shop.



 

Link of the week

Instructables scroll sawn wooden bowls

You can build a bowl with a lathe. You can build one with a special router bit. Heck, you can use wood carving tools to hollow out a blank.

But, did you realize you could cut one with a scroll saw?

Oh, yes, and you can do it and make it look pretty darned sweet, too.  This page on the Instructables website shows the process form stock preparation to blade selection to cutting process.

While these basic instructions show you how to build a bowl of a certain dimension, they  guide you on how to calculate the cutting angles if you want to create a bowl of your own design.

Some more friends to the party!

Here we are at post 972 – only 28 to go – and it’s starting to feel like a ride down Interstate 95 and seeing all of those South of the Border signs. You know the annoying, kitschy signs that start something like 200 miles from the place, hyping the kids into a frenzy by the time they get to the nasty tourist trap.

I have to first give a nod to my friend Chris Wong over at Time Warp Tools. I kinda shoehorned him into a thank you post after the fact, and I think most of you might have missed it. So, here we go…

Time Warp Tools is throwing in a set of his bench dogs as another prize. The winner gets their choice of a four pack of either three or five inch long dogs. Thanks, man!

And, I got word from the folks over at Funktionhouse Urban Lumber and Furnishings that they are going to throw in a large flat rate shipping box of blue mahoe. Just what is blue mahoe? Well, it’s pretty darned impressive looking wood from the Caribbean with a very striking color.

The outpouring of support has been nothing but awesome, and I want to thank everyone who has stepped to the plate to make this happen!

 

A week at Tom’s Workbench

With the big thousand post milestone looming, I have been thinking about what I do here at my blog, and the number one question I am asked:

Tom, just how the heck do you write all of these posts?

Hey, I’m just as confused as you!  I had no idea five years ago when I started that this thing was going to take off.

I think it was about six months into my blog that I set my self-imposed publishing schedule. A quick poll every Sunday, two articles on Monday and Wednesday and a link of the week on Friday.  Yes, there are weeks where I sit at my computer and wonder just what the heck I am going to write about, but fortunately, that hasn’t been an issue too often.

So, to give you an idea of what a week is like for me, here’s the schedule:

Sunday:  I wake up and post the Quick Poll I had written 0n Saturday. Have to post that baby on Twitter, Facebook and Google+ – oh, and I have to vote as well. Just to make sure everything works. From there, it’s off to church, the eat some breakfast. After that, I try to get some time in the shop. While there, I ask, “What the heck can I write about tomorrow?” and try to think of a tool, technique, observation or the like to draft a quick 500 words on.   After dinner, sit down at the computer and bang out Monday’s article.

Monday: Wake up, drink a cuppa Joe, post the new article and mention it on the social networks. If I’m doing an article for an advertiser, I make sure to send the draft over for review. Go to work and daydream about woodworking.   Work out, eat dinner, mess around in the shop before turning in for the night, relieved that I don’t have to draft anything for the next morning.

Tuesday: Wake up, down more coffee. Check e-mail and the social networks. Check my readership numbers. Wonder if I have to do a strange woodworking stunt to get more readers. Ponder the thought of jumping the Snake River Canyon on a giant belt sander… Go to work, daydream about woodworking. Come home, eat dinner, suffer small panic attack when I think I have nothing for tomorrow’s post, then realize that – DUH – I already have one. Turn in for the night.

Wednesday: Wake up, attempt to mainline coffee to get the morning jolt. Post the new article and let everyone know what’s going on by pushing it out on the social media outlets. Head off to work, where I will daydream about the stand alone shop I’ll build when I retire.  Come home, eat dinner, futilely  try to disconnect from the online world, but realize that the Modern Woodworkers Association podcast starts taping at 9 p.m.  Bring computer, frosty beverage and Iggy into the shop to record the podcast. Iggy messes with connections, making me sound like a cyborg during the taping. Retire late into the evening.

Thursday: Wake up. Stick tongue directly into outlet to get morning jolt. Check email and social networks. Clean up the mess Iggy left behind after his all-night banana daiquiri bender. Go to work, explore the options for early retirement to begin woodworking full time. Come home, eat dinner, say ‘hey’ to my wife who is now beginning to wonder what I look like in person. Search the web for a new Link of the Week to write about. Discover that half of all woodworking sites are fronts for Ted’s 16 bazillion pirated woodworking plans.  Find obscure woodworking link to a site that might interest folks and bang out the article. Try to retire early after wild Wednesday night.

Friday: Wake up.  Wash up in a basin full of energy shots and Red Bull. Post Link of the Week on the site, and trumpet mightily about it on the social networks. Realize it’s Friday, so I can sleep in a little the next day. Head off to work. Draft resignation letter where I announce I am going to open a woodworking shop and starve for my craft. Tear up draft and get on with the day’s business. Get home. Eat. Attempt date night with my wife, but we usually collapse on the couch with a good movie and fall asleep.

Saturday: Wake up much later than expected. Eat leisurely breakfast than tend to the dreaded “Honey Do” list… After sweating profusely in the yard, attempt some shop time.  Halfway through the shop session, realize, “Oh, crap, I have to come up with a quick poll.” Draft something inane, share link with Marc Spagnuolo and attempt to write something coherent. Attempt some type of social activity… sometimes, we succeed. Get back home, settle in to bed and realize just how lucky I am to be married to an understanding wife, have two great kids and that I sill enjoy woodworking blogging.

Once you add in other things, such as practices for the kids sports activities, helping with homework, cooking and laundry, well, it sure does add up to some exciting times at the Iovino house.

 

Important People: Dave Campbell

There have been a bunch of folks who have had a major influence on Tom’s Workbench over the past five years. I wanted to take the time to recognize a few of the folks with which the blog would have never happened.

Today, I send a shout-out to Dave Campbell at Wood Magazine.

Photo Courtesy of Wood Magazine

So, there I was at this rainy work day when I got a strange email on my smartphone. It was a guy named Dave who needed to talk to me. I didn’t recognize the area code, so I had to check it out online… Iowa? What would someone want with me from Iowa?

Turns out it was Dave, and he had an interesting offer for me – Wood was looking to include some additional ‘outside’ perspective to include in the magazine, and he and other members of the editorial staff were charged with identifying, tracking and evaluating a number of blogs.

Dave was calling because he thought I had a good writing style, was consistent with my posts and seemed to relate well with each of my readers. He also dug Iggy, the trained shop monkey.  “Would you like to write a few columns for us?”  Gosh, who could say no to an offer like that?

Since then, Dave has been my primary contact up at Wood magazine. He’s an excellent editor with an eye for how to improve my writing. We will also bounce ideas off each other to make sure that we are tackling topics that appeal to the magazine’s readers.

So far, so good. And, from what I understand, Dave wants Iggy to hang around a little while longer.  Not bad for a wacky monkey.