Over the
last few weeks I have discovered that many of the people purchasing the tools I
have been selling are new to woodworking or just entering the arena of hand
tool woodworking. I have also read many
posts of late asking what tools are needed, both hand and power, to get started
into woodworking. Many of the responses
were from very talented amateur woodworkers and some were from well publicized professional
woodworkers. I was amazed that nary a
one of the respondents asked what type of woodworking the person did or wanted
to do. Every one of these well
intentioned respondents started spewing out a list of tools they thought the
person needed.
This got the
ole glue pot of gray matter warmed up and I wondered how I would answer the
question. Then, while preparing the shop
for my return, it hit me; what the heck are these people thinking? I could not believe that not one individual mentioned
what I now consider to be the foundation, the rock on which all good furniture
is built; The Venerable Bench!
Yes the much
overlooked and taken for granted bench.
A proper bench made for the type of work you do! In my humble opinion, this is the foundation for
success as a woodworker. One must have a
way to secure their work so the tools, paid for with hard earned cash, may be
used to their fullest capabilities. I
have worked on a torsion box precariously perched on saw horses and I have
worked on a solid core door attached to a chest of drawers, my Hillbilly Shaker
period. Now I work on the proper type benches
for the work I do.
Yes I said benches;
I build chairs and furniture so I prefer two different methods of holding my
work. Before I built my bench I did some research, to see what best suited my
needs. I read “The Workbench Book” by Scott Landis, and “Workbenches from Design & Theory to Construction & Use” by
Christopher Schwarz.
This is the bench
I decided upon and use the majority of the time. It is my version of the French Bench or Roubo
Bench as it is also called. Unless one
is a full grown male silver-back attempting to push a dull scrub plane through
100 year old Tamboti, this behemoth will not easily skate across the
floor. This bench weighs in at an
estimated 350 pounds and is rock solid under the heaviest of hand plane
use. The work is securely clamped to the
top or the face of the bench using the vises or holdfasts or a combination of
the two. With this bench I have
experienced projects being completed quicker and to a higher degree of quality.
This is my
other work holding tool, a shave horse.
It is a very specialized bench that the majority of woodworkers will
never use. This is a tool used mostly by
greenwood workers and chair makers. I
build Windsor chairs and this is the ideal tool for shaping the various parts
for my chairs due to the ease with which I am able to clamp and release the
work.
Well the ole
glue pot is cooling down, so I will finish by asking this of you; the next time
someone new to the craft, or anyone for that matter, asks for your opinion on
what tools they should start with, do them a favor and save them the misery of working
on some contrived contraption of a bench.
Ask them what type of woodworking they are going to do, then advise them
to start by building a proper bench best suited to the work they want to do.
-
Ray Schwanenberger
Exactly! And even these two are completely inappropriate if you want to say, carve spoons!
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