31 May 2010
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| Tearout & Turning | |
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I am always rather jealous of woodturners as they are able to get the most wonderful finish on the most difficult of timbers.
Just look at the tearout which my usual bench plane caused on this piece of Pink Ivory wood. ![]() It is a turning stick bought from Yandles at Martock in Somerset. One of my sources says that it is one of the rarest commercial timbers in the world, extremely dense, with a specific gravity of 1.04. This piece also had a distinct ripple. My friend Bob Seymour, who has taken all the photos for my articles, turned the majority of this handle while I finished the precision taper on my Myford. ![]() This long paring shape is my favorite and was the proto type for the Lie-Nielsen model. The joy of these chisels is that you can make any handle shape you like. Best wishes, David |
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| posted by davidcharl at 15:17 | permalink | comments [3] | |
22 May 2008
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| West Dean Handtool Event | |
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Come and meet me a host of woodworking experts at The Hand Tools Event at West Dean College, Sussex on Saturday May 31 & Sunday June 1st 10am - 5pm both days. free entry, free parking, on site catering, beautiful location, great hand tool skills and tools being demonstrated.
Meet and discuss woodworking techniques with James Mursell, Phil Edwards, John Lloyd, Garrett Hack, David Charlesworth, Michael Huntley, Nick Gibbs, Michel Auriou and Brian Boggs plus Deneb Pulchalski from Lie NIelsen Toolworks, Mick Hudson from Clifton, Adria Toolworks, Veritas Tools, Blue Spruce Toolworks, Ron Hock, Bridge City Toolworks, Auriou Rasps, Chris Vesper Tools, Odate crowning plates, Sharpening Products and much more. Free competition to win a five day chairmaking course at The Windsor Workshop. A chance to buy a Brian Boggs Appalachian Chair. Discounts on great hand tools. For further details, directions etc see Classic Handtools News This should be a great event. David |
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| posted by davidcharl at 11:56 | permalink | comments [3] | |
7 Feb 2008
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| Wenzloff Dovetail Saw | |
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![]() As requested, here is a photo of the Dovetail Saw which Mike made for me. It is very nice indeed and the handle is absolutely fabulous. Quite one of the most comfortable and well finished that I have ever seen. It is made from African Blackwood, requisitioned from his wife's woodturning supply stash. Don't know how he got away with that one..... The order turned into quite a complex saga, as some conveyor system in the mail mangled the first one. Mike then had to use much cunning and patience to get the remaining blank dry for the replacement. Rosewoods do not dry fast or easily and this really was quite a feat. So, many thanks to him and this is one of my most treasured tools. One day my sawing skills may catch up with the tool, but I am not holding my breath. best wishes, David |
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| posted by davidcharl at 11:57 | permalink | comments [10] | |
10 Jan 2008
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| Alan Peters Book | |
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I am delighted to note that Alan Peters' book
Cabinetmaking The Professional Approach is due to be republished in the autumn this year at about £20. NB I have edited this page in the light of more up to date information from Jake, see comments below. Thank you Jake. Aparrently it is being updated by Betty Norbury. I have found it disgraceful that the work of one of our most prominent makers should have been unobtainable for so long, and am glad that the position is being rectified. There was much training, grant and government agency loan and college information, which needed bringing up to date. For me it is the notes on techniques and the development of his designs over the years which are the most interesting parts of the book, but it also give invaluable advice to anyone considering setting up as a designer maker. The publishers are Stobart and Son Ltd., 67-73 Worship Street, London EC2A 2EL |
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| posted by davidcharl at 08:28 | permalink | comments [9] | |
31 Dec 2007
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| Jamestown and Bideford | |
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This is the last day of the year when the 400th anniversary of the founding of the Jamestown settlement was celebrated in America and some parts of the UK.
Unfortunately we heard very little of this in North Devon, which is rather odd as the majority of the Tobacco exported to England was landed at the port of Bideford. Bideford is my local market town, approximately 12 miles from the wild and dramatic coast which we enjoy so much in Hartland. Pat and I attended a fascinating lecture by Dr. Mark Houghton, reader of archaeology at Bristol University. Recent Archaeological finds of wonderfully preserved Bideford and Barnstaple pottery, at Jamestown, are providing more evidence for this link. It was regretted that our local council have made so little effort to publicise the connection and there are still no plans for a maritime heritage site in Bideford despite the presence of the Kathleen and May. This fine sailing vessel has been restored largely through the efforts of a local business man. Jamestown was the first english speaking settlement to be established in Virginia and is generally accepted as the foundation of the USA. It was also interesting to hear that at the time, Bideford was the third most important port in England. The many shipyards built vessels to fight the Spanish Armada and Drake, Grenville and Raleigh were all Devon born. Today some sea freight continues, but on a much smaller scale. The fine merchants houses along the quay have mostly become banks, shops and solicitors offices. I hope this is of some interest to my readers in the States. Best wishes for the new year, David |
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| posted by davidcharl at 08:56 | permalink | comments [2] | |
14 Dec 2007
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| Classic Handtools | |
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Perhaps you have seen my Chistmas round up of new tools for Furniture & Cabinetmaking magazine, Issue 135?
I made a grave mistake by failing to mention that several of them are only available in the UK, from Mike Hancock of Classic Hand Tools phone 01449 721327 Mike works extremely hard to find, import and promote these tools, at the many woodworking shows around the country. If we do not support independent tool shops like his there will soon be none left, which will be an incalculable loss. (You may not have heard that Axminster have bought Brimark). I also find it odd, that since Axminster took over the import of Lie-Nielsen tools in UK there seem to be very poor stocks of items that sell well at Christmas. Obviously I do not know the precise reasons for this unfortunate situation. Anyway, I apologise profusely to Mike for my thoughtless assumption that every one else knows where to find those tools. David |
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| posted by davidcharl at 07:44 | permalink | comments [6] | |
27 Nov 2007
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| USA versus UK language usage | |
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There is one variation of usage which has struck me forcibly after many years of reading American magazines and Reviews.
Larry Williams' wooden moulding plane making dvd was described recently on Woodnet as being quite good. SEE Lie-Nielsen Toolworks, inc To my ears this sounded like rather faint praise when I knew perfectly well that the author meant very good indeed. Having consulted a friend who teaches English to foreign graduates, I now understand a little more about the variable meaning of quite. Its meaning alters dramatically if used with gradeable or non gradeable adjectives. Thus; quite unique, quite excellent, quite superb, are all unequivocally positive. NB it has since been correctly pointed out to me that quite unique is tautology and not good english! Good has many grades. i.e. Not very good, Moderately good, fairly good, reasonably good, extremely good & outstandingly good. So quite good (in the UK) tends to give an impression of damning with faint praise. Does anyone else have any good examples of differences of usage spotted in woodworking magazines, please? Best wishes, David |
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| posted by davidcharl at 08:34 | permalink | comments [11] | |
24 Oct 2007
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| Short Course Dates 08 and Entertainment | |
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Finally and regretfully, slightly later than advertised, short course dates for 2008 are now posted on my website.
They are available from late January, which is a departure from the usual schedule. I go into a steep decline when asked to make these simple decisions. Trying to decide the form of the year ahead seems to shut down so many options for travel, late skiing deals, visiting other workshops & friends, new places and shows............... The current day is about as much as my mind will happily cope with and calendars are complete anathema, as I invariably find myself looking at the wrong month or even the wrong year. Do others have these dilemmas, or are they just the luxury of the self employed? Anyway, the short courses of 2007 were good fun and I hope 2008 will be even better. The subtext here is that the course provider, who is paid to entertain the attendees needs a bit of entertainment as well...... best wishes, David |
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| posted by davidcharl at 20:45 | permalink | comments [2] | |
2 Oct 2007
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| Forum Flame Wars | |
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I am constantly amazed at the differing reactions that can follow from rather mild advice proffered on woodworking forums.
A recent thread on Fine Woodworking Knots Hand Tool section took off in a spectacular way, and developed into several simultaneous discussions, which had little relevance to the original question. A poster who I will describe as a traditionalist user of old Stanley planes made several outrageous and inaccurate statements about a number of issues and was also extremely rude in a personal and sarcastic way. Now I know two things about my published articles and DVDs; 1. They are highly detailed and sometimes contain radical approaches to age-old tasks, such as sharpening. 2. They seem to be helpful to a significant number of amateur woodworkers, judging by the number of emails I receive from readers and viewers. This feedback is very important to me as an author; as it makes the considerable effort of writing, photography and technical drawing, seem worthwhile. Magazine article writing in the UK is not a well-rewarded occupation, though it has a significant PR value for the small private classes, which I run in my workshop. The reader is most welcome to reject all of my theories and strategies, and follow whichever methods suit his or her style of work best, but I take grave exception to personal attacks and the misrepresentation of my methods by people who chose not to use them and clearly do not understand the details or the advantages. So I decided to concentrate on more constructive work, here at home. Best wishes, David |
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| posted by davidcharl at 20:34 | permalink | comments [9] | |
13 Sep 2007
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| Scilly time again (Holiday) | |
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Another week in the wonderful Isles of Scilly.
Theresa will be manning office, Monday, Wednesday and Friday afternoons, approximately 2.45 - 3-45. Short course dates (from January 08 - Sept 08) will be posted during the following week. Thank you to all who made the summer so enjoyable, best wishes, David |
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| posted by davidcharl at 20:26 | permalink | comments [0] | |
29 Jul 2007
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| New Manufacturer's Perversion | |
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I never cease to be amazed by the incidence of tools which don't work, and like to refer to them as Manufacturer's Perversions.
More seriously they demonstrate a complete lack of understanding, thought and care by the manufacturer. The latest example is a beech cutting gauge from Marples with brass wear strips. At first I was pleased to note a better made square section brass wedge with a hook on the top to stop it dropping through the hole in the stem, or possibly to aid retreival. In the past we have been offered cast wedges which were rough and out of square and worse still conical wedges that are almost impossible to fit. However the morticed hole is 1/4" square and when one surface has been carefully pared to match the slope of the wedge, the cutting blade cannot be fixed without a thin packer......... If the packer is not of a precise thickness, the brass wedge will have to be shortened as well. The blades are disgrace. Spring or scraper grade steel has been crudely sheared off at a width, well under the 1/4" dimension of the hole. The cutting edge has rudimentary grinding at 45 degrees and the blades are almost always bent in their length which makes flat side polishing difficult. These tools are about as far from 'ready to go' as it is possible to get, with an inbuilt design flaw that requires the user to supply a missing part. I would rather shoot myself than sell such a badly thought out kit of parts. David Charlesworth |
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| posted by davidcharl at 09:14 | permalink | comments [8] | |
26 Jun 2007
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| Book 3 Review | |
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Chris Schwarz has posted a wonderful review of my third book on his blog.
He must be a mindreader, as he points out that many threads from the previous volumes have been tied up or expanded. There is also a nice story of our first meeting in the hot and humid flatlands of Indiana. Thank you Chris. Popular Woodworking Blog |
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| posted by davidcharl at 07:51 | permalink | comments [2] | |
6 Jun 2007
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| Return from USA | |
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![]() It was a very productive, successful and enjoyable trip. The prospect of travel reduces me to a nervous wreck, but once en route it always turns out to be fun. The class at Marc Adams was well attended and the students were friendly and appreciative, they always are. I knocked my single lap dovetail together at a few minutes to three when we had to pack up and rush to the airport. Some nice photos were posted on the Woodnet forum. Transport was very well managed by Chris Schwarz's friend John. No repetition of rental car writeoffs and cracked ribs! Many thanks to John and his delightful family. Our best evening was a dinner at their home. Don't ask about trying to negotiate a basement workshop staircase with a very heavy English pattern bench, after dinner where a certain amount of very good wine had been consumed......I told them it wasn't going to fit, but Chris, Tom and John felt the need to be absolutely sure. Don't worry about the holes in the wall, Daddy will fix them later.......... The other embarrassing question is why Tom and I managed to miss a plane when we had been safely delivered to the airport with a reasonable margin of time......... There is a new film crew at the Toolworks and I feel confident that DVD number 6, which may be a double, will be the technically the best yet. Many thanks to AJ, Sarah and Jeffrey. I spent a delightful day off with Wolfgang and Polly, walked on the beach with their tribe of Dachshunds, and played competitive Scrabble for high stakes, (25 cents). Wolfgang filmed and edited the first five DVDs. The open day on Saturday was fun and I was very pleased to see Tim McKinney who showed me photos of the magnificent bench he has built since attending a short course last summer. (Charlesworthish with recessed wedged tennons and a nice end vice). It seems that the benefits of the sliding removable toolwell are only appreciated by those who have seen it demonstrated! And it appears that my minimalist design is too simple to attract the attention it deserves. Blueskye farm B&B has seen a few changes but is still the best possible place to stay if visiting Waldoboro or the Toolworks. The Hummingbirds arrived a couple of days after I did and the blackflies were minimal after a late cold spell with much snow. I was very happy that the weather was relatively cool and the photo shows Karl on a sunny morning. Karl was our mascot on the first DVD and he is a little older but in fine fettle. (Photo courtesy of L-N). There are several more stories, but they will have to wait till my week off, after the second short course. David NB If you are ever in the bar at Indianapolis airport please remember you can't hear the PA. |
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| posted by davidcharl at 20:40 | permalink | comments [3] | |
30 Apr 2007
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| USA trip | |
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I depart for the Marc Adams School class on 1st of May and will be back 22nd May.
We are filming a DVD on methods of taming difficult grain in Maine, and I will be doing a Hand Planing and sharpening open day at the Lie-Nielsen Toolworks on Saturday the 12th of May. Please book as lunch is included! Theresa will be manning the office, usually on Monday, Wednesday & Friday afternoons, between 2.30 & 4.30. |
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| posted by davidcharl at 12:39 | permalink | comments [4] | |
17 Apr 2007
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| Summer Short Courses | |
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Many of the short course dates are full but some have a significant amount of space.
Tool tuning, sharpening and plane use, is the course that has the most remarkable benefits for those who are not friends with their hand tools. July 9th and August 20th have spaces If you are interested in the finest Arts & Crafts drawermaking, where the drawer tightens in the carcass just before you drop the contents on the floor, there are several places on July 30th. Brian our delightful Texan returnee would appreciate some company! For other dates available please see this link best wishes, David |
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| posted by davidcharl at 16:47 | permalink | comments [0] | |
23 Feb 2007
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| Val D'Isere | |
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We are having a one week half term so that the students may have time with their families, and in Yonatan's case go walking and exploring the South West coast path.
I am going skiing for a week so there won't be any responses till March 5th, though Theresa will continue to man the office on Monday, Thursday and Friday afternoon. |
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| posted by davidcharl at 15:19 | permalink | comments [7] | |
9 Jan 2007
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| Owl nestboxes | |
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Three days before Christmas, my son Jo arrives with many sheets of exterior ply, the raw materials for several Owl nestboxes to be used on the BBC programme Springwatch. Each box has two remote camera boxes and two dummy camera boxes. The real camera boxes are swapped for the dummies, according to occupancy. Jo works on the programme as a remote camera specialist. On the third day we get invaluable assistance from his godfather, John Elbert, who has a splendid workshop in Wandsworth. http://www.furnitureworks.co.uk/
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| posted by davidcharl at 07:33 | permalink | comments [0] | |
9 Dec 2006
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| USA 2007 | |
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I am looking forward to another USA trip in May 07.
This starts with a weekend class at the Marc Adams School in Indiana. We will be looking at chisel preparation and use, featuring the single lap dovetail. Much of the ground covered is in my two latest Hand Tool Technique DVDs. Number 5 “An Examination of Precision Chisel work” should be published soon. Number 4 “Precision Preparation of Chisels for Accurate Joinery” is available now. This visit has been deliberately timed to coincide with the plane class run by Tom Lie-Nielsen and Chris Schwarz. We enjoy excellent dinners in Indianapolis and at the end of a hard day’s teaching good food assumes a disproportionate significance. Then on to Maine for some more DVD work, followed by a presentation at the Toolworks on Saturday the 12th of May. |
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| posted by davidcharl at 09:44 | permalink | comments [0] | |
18 Nov 2006
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| Short Course Dates | |
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Finally the short course dates for 2007 have been posted .
We are reserving certain weeks for people who wish to return after last year. In three weeks time these dates will be opened up so please try to contact Theresa quickly if you wish to return. The courses work best as a progression. Tool Tuning & Technique first, Dovetails second then Drawer Making & Fitting. There is a new week for those who have already been three times, Veneering and Inlay. NEW YEAR SHORT COURSES FOR 08 I am planning to run a series of short courses from January 08 instead of the 12 week long course. Please contact me soon if this time of year sounds attractive as I need to assess demand. The workshop has central heating and it is very pleasing to be warm and dry in foul weather |
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| posted by davidcharl at 08:48 | permalink | comments [2] | |
31 Oct 2006
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| New Website Design | |
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If you are a regular visitor you will notice that my website has a completely new design.
This is very exciting as it coincides with the arrival of Book 3 and DVD 4. John Lovell www.webclever.co.uk has been working hard on this project for many weeks, and I am thrilled with the result. We will be working on the content for the next few weeks and will publish next years short course dates soon, as there have already been several enquiries. Any comments on the functionality of the site will be appreciated. |
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| posted by davidcharl at 07:49 | permalink | comments [3] | |
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