Popular Woodworking - 016 - 1984 PDF

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The magazine discusses various woodworking tools, techniques, events, and finishing methods.

Some of the woodworking tools and techniques discussed include new woodworking machinery, saw fences, carving miniatures, drawing ovals, and 'through-lay' woodworking.

Some of the woodworking events and shows mentioned include the Los Angeles show, Del Mar show, Willamette Valley Woodworking show, and craft shows for displaying and selling work.

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oodwor
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Inside this issue:


Guide to New Woodworking Tools
The T-Square Fence
Countertop Assembly
Finishing Techniques
Alder Wood
Craft Shows
and More!

New Technique: "Through-Lay"

Special Issue! More Pages than Ever Before!

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Pacific Woodworker

Pacific Woodworker (ISSN 0277-576X) is


published six times a year by Charles Harris,
Box 4881, San ta Rosa. CA 95402.
Cop yright 1983 by Charles Harris. Reproduction without prior permission is
prohibited .
Subsc ript ion rates $9.95 per year, $15.95
for two year s. Single copy: $1.95 . Address
subscription inquiries to Subscription Dept.,
Pacific Woodworker, Box 4881, Santa Rosa,
CA 95402. Canada add $3.00 per year . Rates
for subscriptions outside North America on
request . Unless a claim is made for nonreceipt of an issue within six months of
mailing date, that issue will not be replaced
free of charge. Allow 6 weeks for address
changes.
Unso licited manuscripts , photographs, art
work and othe r ma terials are accepted , but
Pacific Woodworker can not assume responsibility for these materials. Submissions
must be accompanied by a self-addressed,
stamped envelope fo r return .
The op inions expre ssed by the authors do not
necessarily reflect the policy of Pacific
Woodworker . Editorial correspondence is
encouraged, and ma y be edited for publication.
Direct all advertising inquiries to :
Ad vertising Manager, Pacific Woodworker,
Box 4881, Santa Rosa , CA 95402
(707) 525-8494.

Deadline/or Issue 17: December 23. 1983.


Bulk mail postage paid at Santa Rosa, CA
Prin ted in U.S .A.

Staff
Jean M. Davis, Editor
Contributing Editors:
Bill Farnsworth
William H. McMaster
David Paul Eck
Book Reviews, Alan Marks
Cartoons, Bill Atherton,
Bill Horgos
Charles Harris
Advertising Manager
Typography
Nickels Graphics, digi-type
Barlow Press, Printing
Charles Harris, Publisher

PaCific
Woodwor-kpr
Volume 3, Number 4
December 1983/January 1984
Issue 16

Contents
4

New Woodworking Machinery by Charles Harris


A Selection ofItemsfrom the Los Angeles Show

10 Letters
11 Focus on Carving by William H. McMaster
Carving Miniatures, Part 2: Eight Steps

13

Reader Survey Results

14 Marketing by Ray Jones


Crafts Shows: Displaying and Selling Your Work

18

Calendar and Announcements


Events ofInterest to Woodworkers

21 Pacific Woodworker's Shop Tip by Paul McClure


Drawing an Oval

22 The Biesemeyer Story by Charles Harris


A ward Winning Saw Fence

24 Finishing Techniques by Robert O. Briggs


Part 1: Surface Preparation

26 The Del Mar Show


28 "Brick Laid" Counter Tops by Patrick Warner
31

Widow's Lament by Linda A. Hynson


Humorous Essay

32 Store Review
Woodcraf ters in Bellevue, Washington

The Fourth Corner by Bill Farnsworth


A Woodworker Comes Out of the Woods
38 Works in Wood '83 by Paul Gerhards
Williamette Valley Woodworking Show
33

41 Classified Market
42

45

"Through-Lay" by Mary A. Cristy


A Pacific Woodworker Profile ofKathy Blair
Living with Murphy by Charles Harris
How To Fix Mistakes

47 Northern California Woodworkers Association News


48 Wood Types by David Paul Eck
Alder

50

Books Reviews by Alan Marks

51 As I Was Building a Gazebo by Jeff Taylor


Subscribe to Pacific Woodworker. See Reader Services and
Back Issue Sales on page 46.
December / January 1984

New Woodworking
Machinery

A Selection of Items from the Los Angeles Show


Table Saw Accessories

Christmas . in September! With more


than 300,000 square feet of the latest in
woodworking machines, hardware and accessories, the Woodworking Machinery
show was a woodworker's delight. Aisle
after aisle of nifty machines which
automatically cut a dozen cabinet doors in
a single pass, programmed finish spraying
systems, edge banders and more-the
show had enough to make any small production woodworker green with envy. Of
course, the five- and six-figure price tags
on some of these machines might make the
woodworker a little green around the gills
as well.
Perhaps less obvious than these
monsters, but imp ressive nonetheless,
were a wide range of tools and accessories
designed to facilitate and improve limited
production and individual woodworking .

Large production table saws are often


equipped with a power feed machanism
which prolongs tool and blade life, reduces
waste, pro vide s a more accurate and
reproducible cut , and (properly used)
decreases the chance of injury. But until
now, a power feed machanism was so
heavy that only the large st saws were
solidly built and heavy enough to support
the weight of the feeder.

Now Rockwell has produced a lightweight (44 lb.), inexpensive power feedattachment for their popular Unisaw and
other 3 HP table saws. The feed rate varies
from 20-90 feet per minute, and the height
adjusts up to I 5/8 '~ Single phase wiring
simplifies installation. The Unifeeder also
fits shapers, when combined with an optional accessory kit.

Rockwell 's Unifeede r (TM) brings powerfeed


into the small shop.

by Charles Harris

Pacific Woodworker

A dust pick-up skin surroundsthe business end


ofMilwaukees orbital sander.

Dust-less Sanding
Finish sanding produces quantities of
fine sawdust,and preventing the spread of
this dust in the shop always presents problems. A coupleof productsdisplayed at the
sh0'f provide different approaches to the
dust problem.
Milwaukee Electric Tool offers a Dust
Pick Up Kit: a plastic skirt and dust bag
which snap around their new 6014 orbital
sander. The 12,000 orbit/min. sander
features ball-bearingconstruction and a 4
1/2" x 11 " sanding area.
Black and Decker uses a different
method to collect the dust from their 4010
Palm Grip Finishing Sander. Six holes in
the bottom of the sander extract the dust
from the actual sanding surface. The
12,000 orbit/min. sander uses ',4 of a standard piece of sandpaper; a template and
punch included with the sander quickly
providethe six holesinanystandardpaper.
List price is $73.

The anodizedblack guide of Rockwells new

Unifence (TM) slidesforward and backward.


handling both largeand small pieces.

Earlier this year Rockwell introduced


theirUnifence (TM), a high-precision saw
guidefor their Unisaw. (This newproduct
is similar to the Biesemeyer T-Square
discussed elsewhere in thisissueof Pacific
bodworker.) The fence stays squaretothe
blade as it slides acrossthetable,and locks
with lI64" accuracy withbothEnglishand
metric scales. The extruded aluminum
fence slides forward andbackward through
the locking mechanism; this feature helps
eliminate kickbackby reducingpinching,
while allowing a fulllengthfencefor large
panel cuts. Forcutting laminates, the fence
canbe flippedon its side, so that it guides
thecore and notthe veneer. The Unifence
alsofitsRockwell's 10"tiltingarbor bench
saw and 10"contractor's saw. It will supportthe Unifeederwhen equiped with an
optional adapter. Price of the Unifenceis
under$350.

December/January 1984

Blackand Deckers PalmGrip orbitalsander


extractsdusts throughsix holes in the bottom of
the sander.

The solid metal stop on Mertes radialarm saw


gaugeflips out of the wayfor longer cuts.

AnotherSaw Guide
It looks like woodworking manufacturers have started listening to woodworkers, and begun producing a range of
durable, high-precision cutting guides for
table and radial arm saws. With a built-in
measuring scale, always-square operation
and quick resettablity, these saw guides
decreasethe 'time needed for the cut, and
improve the accuracy. No wonder their
popularity is growing. The latest entrant in
the field is the Mertes Manufacturing
LG500 gauge for cut-off and radial armsaws. A calibrated rod slides along a
plastic guide fastened to the table top,

while the stop rolls along the front


aluminum fence on bearings. Flipping the
rear lever locks the gauge as required. The
stop also quickly flips out the wayfor other
cuts. Contact Mertes Manufacturing, 7330
Ethel Avenue, North Hollywood, CA
91605 or (213) 765-1490.
Compressedair does the hard work of clamping
with MBD'sPorta-Pnuematicpipe clamp.

Clampsand Clamping

The A.H.Ottcorner clamppulis two pieces of


woodtogether, end to end.

Do you do a lot of clamping? All that


twisting is tough on the arm by the end of
the day, isn't it? If you have an air compressor, you can let it do the hard work,
with the Porta-Pneumatic Bar Clamp.
Hook your compressor up to the back of
the clamp, then gently increase the
pressure with the optional squeeze valve.
When you remove the air supply, the
clamp stays tight by means of an internal
diaphragm. The Pneumatic clamp also
comes in a band clamp model. List price
for the basic clamp is $129, plus $29 for the
air injector. Contact MBD Inc. PO Box
8548, Grand Rapids, MI 49508 or (616)

How do you pull two pieces of wood


together, edge to edge? The Comer/Cross
clamp from A.H.Ott is one answer. The
high-quality (and heavy!) clamp has foam
rubber jaw surfaces for the two side grips.
Between is a ratchet mechanism strangely
reminiscent of the VW bug tire jack. Just
crank the jack handle, and the two pieces
of wood slide together! Beautifully smooth
and very solidly made, list price for this
tool is $193 from International Woodworking Equipment, 11577 A Slater Ave.
Fountain Grove, CA 92708 or (714)

957-1176.

549-3446.

Pacific Woodworker

"Biscuit" Jointer
Of the many ways to join two pieces of
wood edge-to-edge, the " biscuit" jointer is
one of the best. Traditional dowelling is
time-consuming , and intolerant oftiny errors. The " biscuit" method is very fast,
and allows some adju stment of the joint
after final assembly.
Elu's DS 140jointer and groover uses a
.85 HP, 220 v motor to turn a 4 " blade at
about 7500 rpm . To use the jointer, set the
fence for the thickness of wood used , rest
the DS 140 against the wood and gently
depress the motor housing. The blade extends through the base plate , leaving a
curved groove. Water based glue causes
the beech " biscuits" to swell, firmly locking the joint.
The Jointer lists for $395 with case, and
the biscuits sell for about three cents each .
Contact Elu Corp., 9040 Dutton Dr ive,
Twinsburg, Ohio 44087 or (216) 425-3135.

1M Elu "Biscuit" joimer dramatically reduces


dowelling time.

of fastene rs, hardware, veneer and


upholstery, all displayed in the most professional way. Once knocking out all the
After attending the show in Los Angeles, parts for your Queen Anne Highboy by the
Martin Zschoche sent us the following computerized method, it would be no
reflections ofa small shop woodworker.
problem to find high class polished brass
One can hardly attend such a hardware that would defy detection as
phenomenal event without recalling "The copies.
After the initial "country-boy" shock
Roar of the Greasepaint and the Smell of
the Crowd," a classic play about "show- had worn off and I had become somewhat
business." Indeed this Woodworking Fair acclimatized to the rarefied air of the mass
was complete with bright lights and pretty production world, I had to sit down for a
girls. The technology was enough to bog- moment and ponder what my own place
gle any mind and cause a small town wood- was in the midst of all this carnival-like atworker like myself to drool with envy at mosphere. Where was the woodworking
the capabilities packaged into highly com- craftsmanship and care to be found?
puterized hardware. There were robots to Where was the master craftsman who
do your painting and massive contraptions poured his very life and soul into each and
that would take any rough cut board and every piece he made? Certainly the
tum it into a fancy moulding or cabriole leg machinery had been carefully crafted. Of
in a matter of seconds. Days of hand work that there was no doubt. But did it have a
were compressed into a mere fraction of place in " real" woodworking, or . . .
the time. One man with one machine could maybe it was I who no longer had a place
out-produce any master craftsman a in our advanced world of computers and
thousandfold. Frankly, I hadn't known that mechanization? The world has changed so
this type of equipment existed outside of a much from the days when all things were
Buck Rogers version of woodworking.
made by hand. There are more people and,
Besides machinery from around the therefore, more households than ever, all
world, not to be ignored were the supplies of whom legitimately are in need of fur-

Is Craftsmanship Dead?

December/January 1984

niture . If everything had to be made by old


fashioned methods, admittedly, time and
expense would be prohibitive.
So, where is the answer? Perhaps there
are places for both of us-the big machines
and the one man craftsman. Mass production woodwork does meet the needs of
many people. But I feel computerized copy
furniture can never equal the feel and spirit
of handcraftsmanship. It may even be
because of mass production work that we
craftsmen still have a place. The contrast
still shows up and those customers with the
taste and ability to pay for the genuine
article will grow weary of imitations.
Stapled joints are a long way from handcut
dovetails, and solid walnut is not even
comparable to a walnut colored plastic
coating over particleboard.
Our greatest enemy in our continued
struggle to maintain craftsmanship is
discouragement when seeing how quickly
a similar product can be made by a
machine. There still is a valued virtue in
long hours of tedious work and unique
rewards available only to the few who try
it. I was fascinated by the marvels of
technology, but frankly, I'd rather do it
myself.

Contractor Power Tools


Makita has added a new contractor
grade table saw to their extensive power
tool line. The Model 2708 saw sports a 12
amp . 2 HP motor, holds an 8 1/4" blade,
and weighs only 35 pounds. Both the saw
fence and the miter adjustment lock
quickly from the front of the saw. Suggested list price is $268.
Rockwell's new Sawbuck frame and
trim saw also attracted much attention at
the show. The Sawbuck combines many of
the features of a radial arm saw with the
quick, accurate adjustments of a power
miter box. The 15 amp motor rides on two
solid steel guides, above the work. The
motor tilts for bevel cuts, and the entire
head and grooved lower guide tum for
miters. A large 20" ring allows accurate
miter cuts. The 8" blade will handle 2 "
thick stock, as wide as 16" (in the 90
degree position) . The lightweight saw
folds into a compact package , complete
with wheels, for easy handling .

Rockwells Sawbuckcombinesthefunctions of a
power miter box and a radialarm saw.

Multi-Purpose Machines

The Lyon FlexPolyvalUniversalMortiser _n a


gold medalfor best new technologyin Lyon.
France.

Universal woodworking machines oftop


quality attracted lots of woodworkers at the
show. Among the noteworthy pieces of
equipment was the Lyon Flex Polyval
Universal Mortiser. Instantly interchangeable heads chisel, chain saw or bore
slots and mortises, with high precision, as
the table slides into the stationary cutting
instrument. A 3 HP motor provides plenty
of cutting power. The machine sells for
$5695 from International Woodworking
Equipment, 11577 A Slater Ave., Fountain
Grove, CA 92708 or (714) 549-3446.

MakitaS contractortable sawfeatures quick


lockingleverson bothfence and bevel.

Pacific Woodworker

DIVI:&
A Subsidiary of

YAV.RMONT AM.RICAN CORPORATION

1350S. 15thSt., Louisville, Ky. 40210, (502) 587-6851

December/January 1984

Where To Find OptiVisor

letters.

Reader Recommends Vicks


Reading Andy Anderson's letter re
cracks in fingers due to loss of oil working
with wood: I've found rubbing in Vicks
Vapo-Rub notonly oils but seems to aid the
healing process faster than lotions.
Betty R. Truitt
~ountLaguna ,CA

Georgian Found
Calendar Helpful
I picked up a couple issues of Pacific
Woodworker while I was visiting California . Thanks to the information in your
Calendar, I drove up to Mendocino for the
woodworkingshowsand the school at Fort
Bragg. It really made my trip to the West
Coast.
R.H. Grimes
Atlanta, GA

I enjoyedWilliamMcMaster's first column (Pacific Woodworker Issue 15). I do


mini-turnings, and I would like information on a source for Optit/isoras mentioned in your column.
Alec Yuill-Thornton
San Francisco, CA

Lumber Mill Wanted


I have been able to obtain some California Walnut and need to find a lumber
mill that will sawthis timber into slabs and
a fewboards. Also, unless I can find a kiln
that would dry the wood for me, I will of
necessity have to air dry the lumber.
Marvin Smith
Castro Valley, CA

Most commercial mills won't touch an


individual'slogs. because ofthe possible
nails. bits offence and other metal which
willdestroythe saw mill'sblades. The last
mill that we know of catering to the individual woodworkerin the Bay area has
ceasedoperations. Can anyof our readers
help find a portable mill or other
assistancefor Mr. Smith?See also Pacific
Woodworker Issue I for plansfor a solar
drying kiln.

McMaster Responds : Optii/isor is


manufactured by Donegan Optical Company, 15549 ~st 10Bth Street, Lenexa. KS
66219 and is carried by eyeglasssuppliers
such as Franklin Optical. jewelry supply
houses such as Otto Frei, and lapidary
supply houses. A similar vieweris sold by
Brookstone, 127 ~se Farm Road. Peterborough , NH 03458 (C-3510 Headband
magnifier. $15.95). I personally preferthe
OptiVisor. I am sureyou canfind it at one
ofthe companies referred to above in San
Francisco.

Where To Buy Alder's


MAG-PAD
In our Test Report of the Alder MAGPAD (see Pacific Woodworker, Issue 14,
August/September 1983) we neglected to
include the addresses of two Western
dealers whocarry the product. Theyare:
D & D Saw & Supply. 6162 Mission Gorge
Rd.SanDiego, C4 92120 (714) 280-9320;
also The UbodTool Center. 2545 Showers
Dr., Mountain View, C4 94040 (415)
948-3844.

Pacific Woodworker welcomes your


comments. pro or con. about articles and
informationwepublish. Send your letters
to Editor, Pacific Woodworker. PO Box
488/. SantaRosa. C4 95402. Lettersmay
be editedfor publication.

Pacific Woodworker

10

Focus on Carving

Eight Steps in Carving Miniatures


by William H. McMaster

Inthelastissue, I discussedthetoolsyou
will find useful in carving miniatures. In
this issue, I will outline the eight steps involvedin carving miniatures.

One: Choice of Wood


When carving miniatures it is best to
choose fine-textured wood without open
pores. In general, the smaller the details
the harder the wood should be. Strong
grain variations should be avoided since
they will fight the details, making them
harder to see. An open-pored wood is
undesirable because a cut can open a pore
just where you are trying to carve fine
detail and require starting over.
Some common woods which work well
with hand tools are boxwood, cherry,
myrtle, and walnut. Open-pored woods
such as padauk and teak are very difficult
for carving small details.

Two: Pattern Making


When making standard miniature
replicas, it is useful to work from
photographs. Iflucky, you will have more

BillMcMaster ofLivermore. California,


is chief of the Education Division of the
California Carvers Guild and a regular
teacher of woodcarving classes. Woodcarvinghas been Bill's avocationfor the
past seven years; he has won numerous
awardsat juried shows held by the Calif
omia Carvers Guild.

December/January 1984

than one view. Knowing the full size, make


a 1/12th scale pattern using the squares
method to transfer the design from the
photograph to your pattern. Transparent
grids of different scales are sold in art
supply stores and are indispensable for
transferring designs. You can also easily
make your own transparent grids using a
clear sheet of plastic and a permanent
marking pen .
When the pattern is made, make a copy
of it on a piece of clear plastic. There are
several brands of felt pens which will write
on plastic. Two of these are Sanford's

Sharpie brand and the Pilot fine point pen.


This transparency will be used to check the .
results against the pattern as you proceed
with the carving . While carving,
periodically view your piece through this
transparent pattern to be sure you are not
deviating from your design .
Next, transfer the pattern to the wood,
using carbon paper. If necessary, use a
pencil to darken the lines on the wood.
Neveruse ink or afelt pen, since ink would
be absorbed into the open grain and could
ruin your carving. When putting the pattern on the wood, be sure that the grain is
lined up with the thin sections of your
carving to give them more strength.

Three: Clay Model


Unless you already have a model or can
easily visualize three-dimensional form, it
is best to develop the basic form in clay
first. For this, use oil-based Plastilina
modeling clay. This clay comes in white or
grey-green. I recommend the white, to
avoid transferring color to your clothing. In
the white you have a choice of two grades
of hardness: #2 (medium) or #4 (firm).
The hardness you use depends upon the
amount of detail you plan to put in the clay
model. The idea here is to develop the
basic shape in the clay first before arriving
at Step #5. This procedure enables you to
make design changes which could not be
made if working in the wood first. It is not
necessary to make the clay model the same
size as the carving. In fact, since you are
carving a miniature, it is better to make the

11

METAL PARTS KITS AT lOW FACTORY


DISCOUNT PRICES-SAVE $50 TO $500

clay modellarzerthan the carving. During


carving, you can compare the two by using
a proportional caliper in the reducing
mode.

SEE " You can build a Quality band saw


from . a kit " m Sep t .-Oct . 1978
WORKBEN CH .

Four: Remove Waste Wood

12-IN . BAND SAW


Ball bearing drive. Ball bearing
blade guides . Precision aluminum
wheels . Big 20in. 20 in. table .

18-IN. BAND SAW


Ball bearing drive. Ball bearing blade
Ruides. Precision aluminum whH!'ls .
, Cuts to center 01 36in. circle . 12in .
deep throat. Big 26 in . 2Sin . table.

O-IN. TILT/ARBOR SAW


Ball bearing arbor. 27.29 ;n .
table . Floor model 34in. high .
Sold lor
37Yur .

ALSO:
WOOD SHAPER
9IN. BENCH SAW
COMB . LATHE
DRILL PRESS

-IN . BELT SANDER


Use 6 in. 4S in. belts .
Sealed ball bearin g dri ve.
Belt operates eit her

vertical or horizontal.

KITS FROM
*39.99 TO *194.99
W ith SoYearGuarantee

J5

00
PLANS
wit h
' P tl
FULL SIZE
PIan
PATTERNS Deductible

Featured in Workbench, Popular Science, Mechani. illustrated. Step-by-step plans, photos, full-scale patterns show
you how. No machining, no welding. Send $5 eachfor Plan s
plus $1 for postage, stating tool plans wanted; Catalog in'
eluded. Or, send $1 for catalogI

GILLIOM MFG., INC.; Dept. PW12


1700Scherer Pkwy. St. Charlss, MO 63301

Because you start with more wood than


the pattern will use up, you want to remove
as much excess as you can before starting
to carve . The easiest and quickest way to
do this is by band sawing. Using the pattern, band saw out the shape , staying a
small fraction of an inch away from the pattern . Do not forget to leave some waste
wood for holding the block in your vise.
This is best done by leaving a square column of wood below the main part of the
piece. This column is cut square to
facilitate turning it in the vise jaws without
needlessly changing their setting. It should
be located so that it provides sufficient
holding strength while you are carving the
extremities.
Internal voids can be removed using an
electric hand drill or, better yet, one of the
power tools. However, if the voids are in
delicate regions , you should wait until you
begin carving the details in Step #6.

Five: Carve th e Basic Form


First, it is important to develop the
overall basic shape in the wood. The whole
object should be shaped before any detail
carving is done. Otherwise, it is too easy to
make an irreversible error. For this step,
use the largest of your carving tools able to
make the cut you want. Large amounts of
wood are first removed using the deep
gouges. Then smooth surfaces are obtained using the large No.3 sweeps.

Six: Carve the Details


Details should not be started until the
basic shape has been achieved and the
various levels established. Otherwise you
may either waste your effort or make an
error in the basic shape. While doing the
detailing, keep all parts of the carving
equally developed . This will greatly help
you obtain a coordinated piece. Hint: by
observing your carving in a mirror, you
will get a new view which will help you
detect any errors.

12

Seven: Prepare the Surface


Surface preparation requires a combination of fine grade s of sandpaper and fine
jewelers' riffler files. Start with #180 grit
sandpaper and proceed to the next finer
grades. Do not make a large jump in
grades from coarse to fine, or you will
leave a surface which takes the finish
unevenly, no matter how smooth the wood
feels to your touch. I find that open cut
garnet paper works best. The paper should
be reinforced with plastic tape on the back
before cutting the sheet into smaller sizes.
Small, hard-to-reach regions can be
smoothed using riffler files. As with all
abrading, do not use a heavy hand or you
will cause scratches.
When finished , the carving should be
wiped clean with a lint-free cloth and then
vacuumed to remove all dust particles . A
hard toothbrush is useful in cleaning out
crevices.
Light-colored woods get dirty easily and
readily absorb oils from your hands.
Therefore, in the final stages of preparing
the surface it is best to wear gloves. Thin
cotton photographers' gloves or thin latex
ones used by painters work well for this
purpose.

Eight: Finishing
Most miniatures carved in light woods
such as basswood may be finished by
coloring with either oil or acrylic paints.
Remember not to use a heavy opaque coat
of paint , as this will obscure the fact that
you have done a wood carving. The wood
grain showing through the colors greatly
enhances the appearance of the final
product.
A clear varnish such as McCloskey Egg
Shell works well both as an undercoat for
the painting or as the final surface coat by
itself.
In my next column, I will di scu ss
specific carv ing techniques for miniature
work.

Parts of this column have appeared


previously in The Log, a publication ofthe
California Carvers Guild.

Pacific Woodworker

Reader Survey Results

What are Pacific Woodworker's readers


like? This past summer we asked a sample
of our subscribers who you are and what
you want to read. The results are in, and I'd
like to tell you what we found out.
Slightly more than half of you are
hobbyist woodworkers or carvers; the rest
are evenly divided between part-time and
full-time woodworkers , plus a few
teachers, suppliers, and manufacturers.
During the next year, the average
subscriber plans on spending $2115 on
wood and tools. The most popular tool
choices are band saws, table saws, sanders
of all kinds, planers, routers, lathes,
sawblades and jointers. Most of you
already own table saws, band saws and
routers , so many purchases will be to
replace or upgrade equipment.
While about half of our subscribers earn
less than $500 each year from wood
projects, some 13percent manage to make
$30,000 a year or more from woodworking. (Please write in and tell us your
secrets!)
Yourfavoritearticles in the magazine are
technical features, test reports, and equipment guides, so you'll be seeing these
more often in future issues of Pacific
Ubodworker. You'll be pleased to note our
new series on finishing techniques starting
in this issue, as well as a new column on
wood types . And you should find our
report on new products exhibited at the Los
Angeles Woodworking, Machinery &
Furniture Supply Fair interesting reading .
You also want more projects and "how-to"
tips. We'll try to provide them.
Because many of you would like to hear
from other readers on short-cuts, jigs, and
shop hints, we've kicked off a series on
shop tips with this issue (see page 21). And

December/January 1984

we want your input for this regular feature.

Pacific Woodworker will pay for readers'


tips published in the magazine. Contact me
at PO Box 4881, Santa Rosa , CA 95402
with your shop hints and a diagram or
photograph, if appropriate.
For those of you who received and
answered the survey questionnaire, thanks
for your help with this project. And for
those who did not receive a questionnaire,
we'd still like to hear from you . One

especially gratifying finding from this


research was that almost every part ofthe
magazine was appreciated by a percentage
of the readers, and almost every article
we've published in the past year was mentioned by someone as especially interesting or informative. If we didn't hear
from you, write and let us know what you
like, or don't like, and what you would like
to read in Pacific Woodworker.

- Jean Davis, Editor

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(619) 695-3990

13

Marketing
Getting Started in the
Crafts Show Business

Displaying and Selling Your Work


by Ray Jones

In my previous article about working the


crafts show circuit , I cove red the
preliminary steps : finding and choosing
shows, applying successfully, and obtaining the necessary permits (see Pacific
Woodworker Issue 14,August/September
1983). Because many of you may be doing
your first show during the Christmas
season , it seems appropriate now to
discuss some more of the basics involved
in displaying and selling your work .

Displays
A craftsworker's display is very important. It must present the work,to its best advantage in order to attract potential
customers. The types of displays woodworkers build are as varied as the types of
woodwork they are selling. A furnituremaker may have no other display than the
furniture itself, while a craftsman who
sells miniature turnings may need a large ,
elaborate display to catch the eye and focus
attention on his work.
Often the design and construction of a
display is the last thing done before a show,
when, unfortunately, insufficient time remains to do the best job. It is a common
tendency to spend too much time making
Ray Jones ofGranada Hills. California

has run his own woodcrafts business since


1980 and is a frequent crafts show
.exhibitor.

14

things to sell and not enough time making


a display to sell them on , even though it is
the display that must first attract attention.
A good first step toward designing a
display involves visiting a few craft shows
to get ideas. Some criteria to keep in mind
while designing a display are: presentation
of the work, appearance, pro tection from
the elements, storage space, and portability. Probably the simplest type of display is
a table with a cloth covering. This provides
an elevated surface on which to display
your work, with a concealed storage area
underneath . But unless the pieces are
fairly large , customers passing by may
look over and past your items, seeing what
is behind your booth instead. Also, the
typical card table used may be too low for
customers who will be standing when
viewing your work.
Alternatives to the covered table include
bookshelf-type displays , walls with cantilevered shelves, or any number of combinations and variations of these.
The appearance of your display is important not only in catching potential
customers' attention, but also in gaining
entry into shows. Some promoters weigh
booth appearance quite heavily as an acceptance criterion.
Woodworkers who participate in outdoor shows may want to protect their work
from direct sunlight or the unexpected

rainshower by means of a roof or canopy.


Another danger at outdoor shows, often
overlooked by the novice, comes from
wind. What seems like a light breeze can
exert considerable force on a vertical surface, and strong gusts can do an amazing
amount of damage. So protection for items
which might topple easily should be provided for in the display, and displays which
might blow over should be weighted down
or otherwise secured.
The portability of the display should also
be kept in mind. The display must, of
course, fit into the vehicle which will
transport it, while allowing room for
carrying the work to be sold. The booth
should also be fairly easy to set up and take
down. At outdoor shows, displays are
usually taken down at the end of each day.
Since shows often run three or more days
in a row, this time can add up to quite a bit
of work.
Participants at indoor shows don't have
to worry about wind, rain, or sun and can
usually leave their displays set up for the
duration of the show. However, they may
be required to provide their own lighting if
the promoters keep the auditorium dimly
lit in the interest of "atmosphere." Also,
participants at indoor shows-and even
some outdoor shows-may be required to
have any cloth used in their display
flameproofed .

Pacific Woodworker

Shelvesas well as verticaldisplay areas show


offGreggJones smarquetry at the 1983 Crafts
Festival in Tuscan , Arizona. Note that the
shelves raise the work 10 a better viewing
height than woulda table.

Flameproofing companies can be found


in the telephone book yellow pages. Some
companies sell a solution to spray on or
immerse the fabric in; others will only do
the flameproofing themselves. It's a good
idea to check with a flameproofing
company for information about shrinkage,
streaking, and discoloration before purchasing fabric. The effects of the
flameproofing agent vary with the type of
material. Natural fibers generally are
easier to treat than synthetics.
You should consider also the surfaceroad, ground, or floor-your display will
be set up on. If your booth is in a street or
parking lot, the surface may be covered
with oil and grease, and it might be worthwhile to use a carpet or mat for your
display area . (Use of a mat may be
desirable as well on hard but clean concrete floors at indoor shows, to minimize
the wear and tear on feet that comes if you
will be standing on a hard surface for days
at a time.) Be advised that you may be required to tape down the edges of your floor
covering with duct tape.

long it takes you to produce your work,


how much time you can devote to it, and
how much you can sell at each show, It is
nearly impossible to determine the
number of shows you should do until you
have done a few. It might be wise to start
out slowly, allowing plenty of time between shows , since it always seems to take
longer than anticipated to stock up. Of
course, how often you attend shows also
depends on the availability of good shows .
A craftsperson may do only a few shows in
the first several months of the year, while
doing a show every weekend from Thanksgiving until Christmas. As with other
forms of retailing, it's probably true that
craftspeople make a large proportion of
their sales during the holiday season.

Handling Money
Caution is the most important concern
of craftspeople about handling money at
shows . Craftspeople are easy targets for
thieves , since a portable booth often lacks
a place to keep cash that is both secure and
easily accessible. At a recent show in
Southern California, a rash of thefts
occurred where one or more people would
distract the seller with questions about the
work while an accomplice stole the cash
box .
Having a helper at your booth can help
avoid this situation. Working with a helper
also makes it possible never to leave your
booth unattended. And many craftspeople
prefer to keep their cash on their person, in
pocket or pouch, rather than in a cash box.

Doing Shows
Deciding how many items to make for
each show and how often to do shows are
interrelated considerations. In general, the
more you have at a show, the better. The
more work you display, the more
noticeable it will be and the more likely
each shopper will be to find something
which suits his or her taste and price range.
Shoppers tend to want a selection from
which to choose, and will sometimes
bypass a booth offering only a few items,
even if those items are of the highest
quality.
How often to do shows depends on how

A booth specializingin one type ofwood product or a line ofrelateditems can appeal 10
customers. HereEd Eberle displays a complete line oflaminatedkitchen utensils.

December/ January 1984

15

Many crafts show shoppers want to pay


for their purchases with credit cards. You
may be hesitant at first (as I was) to obtain
credit card service because of the added
complexity and cost. But then you will
realize that yo.u are losing business,
especially in the form of impulse buying of
more expensive pieces.
Most banks offer credit card services.
Some, however, do not provide this service
to merchants who work at their place of
residence, as many craftspeople do. In any
case, this service is not free. Besides a fee
for initiating the service, the bank charges
a percentage of gross credit card sales as a

Displays incorporatingsheltersfrom sun or


rainprotect craftsarticles and provide some
comfortfor exhibitors whoput in long hours on
the craftsshow circuit.

fee. In addition, an imprinting machine


must be purchased or rented.
Your best bet for setting up this service
is to deal with the bank that normally
handles your other bank services. Once set
up, as long as the bank's instructions are
followed carefully, depositing credit slips
into your business account is just like
depositing cash.
Personal checks are also often used to
pay for crafts purchases. When receiving
a check, make sure that it is filled out completely and correctly, and write down the
purchaser's driver's license, check
guarantee card or credit card number on
the back. While I've heard lots of horror
stories about bad checks, I haven't received
one yet in working the crafts show circuit.

16

Customers
At each show you will come into contact
with hundreds or thousands of people of all
ages and from all walks of life. You will
find that people like to touch woodwork. If
you don't want your work to be handled,
you should mark it accordingly, or place it
out of reach. If you do allow handling of
your work, keep a watchful eye on it, not
only to avoid shoplifting, but to prevent
damage by scratching fingernails, burning
cigarettes, and-especially among
children-dirty, sticky, or clumsy fingers.

Setting the Price


When pricing your work , you should
consider not only the materials and time
involved in making it, but also the cost of
selling it. Your costs include the entry fee
to the show, traveling expenses, and the

time spent at the show as well as travel


time.
Many crafts show shoppers are looking
for "bargains" and may ask you to sell your
work at a lower price. You can handle this
by "padding" all your prices to allow for
haggling, or you can refuse to haggle at all.
Whichever extreme you choose, or if you
choose to handle each case on an individual basis, you should decide on your
approach before you open for business.

Organization Is Key
Those who do shows often recommend
keeping a list of all the regular items you'll
need each time you go to a show. As you
pack, you can then easily make sure that
you haven't forgotten any of those little
details: tape, charge slips, change, and so

forth. Take the list along with you and


you'll probably find a number of items
you'll want to add to your list as you gain
experience.

The Rewards
After considering all the details, plans,
and potential hassles involved, you may
wonder if the crafts show business is worth
the effort. There's the obvious monetary
incentive, of course, but there are other
benefits as well. Woodworking tends to be
a solitary occupation, and crafts shows
give woodworkers a chance to rub elbows
with their peers. Besides, there are many
wood lovers who do not themselves work
with wood, but who appreciate fine craftsmanship when they see it. The "strokes"
these people give are nice to receive.
Crafts shows also give woodworkers an
opportunity to see how the general public

Rubbingelbowswiththe public and fellow


craftspeopleprovidesmotivationfor someto
workthe craftscircuit. Commentsfrom
customersalsoprovidevaluablefeedbackfor the
often solitary woodworker.

reacts to their products. This exposure and


important feedback may lead to changes,
improvements, or even ideas for new
products.
While crafts shows Can be financially
rewarding, in most cases it would probably
be easier to make a living working for
someone else. But the satisfaction of being
one's own boss and controlling one's own
livelihood is difficult to put a price on.
And, even if a full-time wood crafts
business is not your goal right now, doing
a few crafts shows might at least pay for
those tools you've always wanted.

Pacific Woodworker

Calendar & Announcements

Events ofInterest to Woodworkers . . .

New Woodworking Gallery

Woodworking Shows in 1984

The Wood Merchant ha s recently


opened in La Conner, Washington . The
gallery specializes in handmade furniture
and gift wooden items. Stuart Hutt , proprieter of The Wood Merchant, seeks
quality wood pieces for sale on a commission basis . Contact him at Box 511, La
Conner, WA 98257 or (206) 466-4741.

The Working Wood Show, originally


scheduled for Feb 11-13, 1983 at the San
Mateo fairgrounds , has been cancelled.
The Working With Wood show set for the
San Francisco Trade Center April 6-8,
1983 is still on.
Southern California's new entrant in the
field of consumer-oriented woodworking
shows is the Woodworking Show for
Craftsmen and Hobbyists , scheduled for
Apr il 13-15 at the Pasedena Convention
Center. For more information , contact
Ellen Sandler, 1516 S. Pontius Ave., Los
Angeles, CA 90025 or (213) 477-8521.

Pacific Woodworker will publicize


events of interest to woodworkers.
Send complete information to Pacific
Woodworker Calendar, PO Box
4881, Santa Rosa, CA 95402.

through Dec. 1. San Rafael, CA.


BaulinesCraftsman's GuildShow, MarinCountyCivic
Center, Box 4159, San Rafael. CA 94913 or (415)
499-7348or (415)499-7331.

through Dec.31. Los Angeles, CA.


Exhibit, "Tools of theWood'Mlrker," The Cutting Edge
store. 3871 Grand View Blvd., Los Angeles 90066or
(213) 390-9723.

Dec. 24. Tempe, AZ.


OldTownTempe Fall Festival juriedinvitationalcrafts
show.

Dec.2-4 & 9-11, Alameda, CA.


Finishing\\brkshop. Contact \\bodline, 1731Clement
Avenue, Alameda, CA 94501 or (415) 521-1810.

Dec.3. Alameda, CA.


Router Seminar. Contact Woodline. 1731 Clement
Avenue, Alameda, CA 94501 or (415) 521-1810.

Looking For That


Hard To Find Fumiture
Hardware Part?
The answer 's elementary: Send for Kemp Hardware 's extensive
furniture and woodworking hardware catalog. A supplier to furniture
factories for over 60 years, Kemp Hardware inventories over 2300
specialized furniture hardware items, until now only available to the
large furniture manufacturers.
In stock : tab le slides, furniture lights. trim hardware grills. industrial
woodworking glue , European hardware, table locks. waterbed
hardware and much more . Send $3.00 for a complete catalog, and
we 'll refund your $3 .00 with the first order .

18

Pacific Woodworker

Dec. 3. Ber keley, CA.


Christmas Woodcraft exhibit and sale, The Cutting
Edge, 1836 Fourth Street, Berkeley 94710 or (415)
548-6011.

Dec.3. Alameda, CA.


LatheTool MakingWorkshop. ContactWoodline, 1731
Clement Avenue, Alameda, CA94501 or (415) 521-1810.

Dec. 3. Los Angeles, CA.


Christmas Woodcraft exhibit and sale, The Cutting
Edge, 3871 Grand ViewBlvd., LosAngeles90066or
(213) 390-9723.

Dec.3. Alameda, CA.


Router Template Seminar. Contact \\bodIine, 1731 Clement Avenue, Alameda, CA 94501 or (415) 521-1810.

Dec.3. Alameda, CA.

Woodworking Trip to Japan


A group of American woodworke rs will
tour Japan from April l7-May 4, 1984. The
group will show their work in Japan and
attend worksh ops in Japanese furniture
design, joinery, lacq uer finis hing, temple
building and timber hom e construction.
For tour details, contact Doug Beckstein,
Santa Cruz Woodworkers Association,
406 Dakota Ave., Apt. D, Santa Cruz , CA
95060 or (408) 423-03 51. App lication
deadline is Jan . 15, 1984.

Dec.to. Alameda, CA.


Face PlateThming. Contact Woodline, 1731 Clement
Avenue, Alameda, CA 94501 or (415) 521-1810.

Dec.tO-n . Anaheim, C A.
Christmas Gift Fair, Ganahl Lumber Co., 1220East
Ball Rd., Anaheim. Open9am to4pm. ContactValerie
Bloom at (714) 772-5444.

Dec.n. Alameda, CA.


The StickyPoints of GluingUp withDon Braden. Contact Woodline, 1731 Clement Avenue, Alameda, CA
94501 or (415) 521-1810.

Dec .n . Ber keley, CA.


Christmas Woodcraft exhibit and sale, The Cutting
Edge, 1836 Fourth Street, Berkeley 94710 or (415)
548-6011.

Dec.U. Santa Cruz, CA.

Layout Seminar. Contact Woodline, 1731 Clement


Avenue,Alameda, CA 94501 or (415) 521-1810.

Dec.3-4. Anaheim, CA.

Regularmeetingof SantaCruz Woodworkers, open to

Dec. 3. Phoenix, AZ.

5th AnnualAnaheimGift Faire. 104 in La PalmaPark,


Anaheim, CA. For informationcall (714) 999-5191.

all. ContactGary Benaquisto, Whispering WindsHard-

Christmas Woodcraft exhibit and sale, The Cutting


Edge store, 10844 N. 23rd Ave., Phoenix or (602)
997-1OOL.

Dec.3. Alameda, CA.


Furniture Design and Construction. Contact \\bodIine,
1731 Clement Avenue, Alameda, CA 94501 or (415)
521-1810.

Dec. 3, to. Berkeley, CA.

woods,565B7thAve., SantaCruz, CA95063or (408)


476-9030.

Workshop, "Building Simple Musical Instruments."


Contact The Cutting Edge store, 1836Fourth Street,
Berkeley94710 or (415) 548-6011.

Dec.t7. Alameda, CA.

Dec.3-18. Point Reyes Station, CA.

Dec. t7. Alameda, CA.

3rd AnnualWestMarin Woodworkers Association exhibit and sale. AdraskandGallery, 11315 Route I, Pt.
Reyes Station, CA 94956 or contact Richard Vacha
(415) 663-1'iQ4.

BasicTableSawSeminar. ContactWoodline, 1731 Clement Avenue, Alameda, CA 94501 or (415) 521-1810.

Advanced TableSawSeminar. ContactWoodline, 1731


ClementAvenue, Alameda,CA94501 or (415) 521-1810.

continued

at c5\1ason &$ullivan

BUILDING A GREAT CLOCK


STARTS FROM THE INSIDE OUT
Any good clockbuilder knows that when you're
building an heirloom you start with a great movement.
Mason & Sullivan has been selling the finest
movements available since 1947 and we back that
statement up on our best brass movements with a 36
month guarantee against defects in workmansh ip.
After 35 years in the business, Mason & Sullivan has
the know-how to assist you in every phase of your project , from initial planning , to movement installation.
We want to make you a great clockbuilder too.
So whether your requir ements are massive nine tube
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Dept. 4403, W. Yarmouth, Cape Cod, MA 02673

December/January 1984

19

Dec.l9-21. San Diego, CA.

Jan. 14. Alameda, CA.

Feb. 18-19. Berkeley, CA.

BeginningWoodworking for kid s. ContactWoodline,


11844 Rancho Bernardo Road, San Diego, CA 92128
or (619) 485-7907.

\\bodworking demonstration. ContactWoodline, 1731


ClementAvenue, Alameda,CA94501 or (415) 521-1810.

Grew-Sheridan Chairmaking Seminar. The Cutting


Edge, 1983 4th St. , Berkeley, CA 94710 or (415)
548-6011.

Jan. 6. Los Angeles, CA.


Japanese\\bodworking100ls workshop, Fridaysto Jan.
71. The Cutting Edge, 3871 Grand View Blvd., Los
Angeles, CA 90066 or (213)390-9723.

Jan. 14. Los Angeles, CA.


A Day with Sam Maloof. The Cutting Edge, 3871
Grand View Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90066 or (213)
390-9723.

Jan. 26. Ber keley, CA.

Feb. 20-24. Los Angeles, CA.


Building a Lapstrake Sailboat workshopwithSimon
Watts. The CuttingEdge,3871 GrandViewBlvd., Los
Angeles, CA 90066 or (213) 390-9723.

Feb. 2S. San Diego, CA.

Jan. 7. Berkeley, CA.

Untraditional Furnitureworkshop withGarry Bennett.

Simple Musicallnsuument workshop, Sats. to Jan 28.


The CuttingEdge, 1983 4th St., Berkeley, CA947lO or
(415)548-6011.

The Cutting Edge, 19834thSt., Berkeley, CA947lO or

Dry Bent Laminationworkshop with Martha Rising.

(415) 548-6011.

The Cutting Edge, 7626MiramarRoad, San Diego, CA

Jan. 3O-Feb. 3. Berkeley, CA.

92126or (619) 695-3990

Jan. 7. Berkeley, CA.


Carving a Rocking Horse workshop with Anton
Lignell. Sats. to Jan. 28. The Cutting Edge, 19834th
St., Berkeley, CA 94710 or (415) 548-6011.

J an. n. Los Angeles, CA.


Dry Bent Lamination workshopwith Martha Rising.
\\eds. to Feb. I. The Cutting Edge,
3871 Grand View Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90066 or
(213) 390-9723.

J an.n . San Diego, CA.


Panel Discussion on Wood Finishing. Contact San
DiegoFine Woodworkers, Box99656, San Diego, CA
92109.

J an. 13 an d 15. Berkeley, CA.


Traditional African Wood Carving workshop with
Geoffery Nwogu. The Cutting Edge, 1983 4th St.,
Berkeley, CA 94710 or (415)548-6011.

Buildinga Lapstrake Sailboat workshop with Simon


Watts. The Cutting Edge, 1983 4th SI., Berkeley, CA
94710 or (415) 548-6011.

Feb. 6-10. Berkeley, CA.


Buildinga Lapstrake Sailboat workshopwith Simon
Watts. The Cutting Edge, 1983 4th SI., Berkeley, CA
94710 or (415) 548-6011.

Feb.7-Apr.lo. Oakland, CA.


Beginning woodworking class. ContactCalifornia College of Arts and Crafts, 5212 Broadway at College,
Oakland, CA 94618 or (415) 653-8118.

Feb.9-Apr.12. Oakland, CA.


Continuing woodworking class. Contact California
Collegeof Arts and Crafts, 5212 Broadway at College,
Oakland, CA 94618 or (415) 653-8118.

Feb. 2S-Mar. 31. San Diego, CA.


Comprehensive Cabinetmaking (with UCSD.) The
Cutting Edge, 7626 Miramar Road, San Diego, CA
92126or (619) 695-3990.

Feb. 27. Berkeley, CA.


Shaker Boxesworkshopwith John Kassay. Mons. to
Mar. 12. The CuttingEdge, 19834thSI., Berkeley, CA
94710 or (415) 548-6011.

Feb. 27-Mar. 2. Los Angeles, CA.


Buildinga LapstrakeSailboat workshopwith Simon
Watts. The CuttingEdge,3871 GrandViewBlvd., Los
Angeles, CA 90066 or (213) 390-lJ723.

Mar.lo. San Francisco, CA.


Application deadline for Ace Craftfair for Sept. 84.
Contact American Craft Enterprises, Inc., 256 Main
Street, New Paltz, N.Y., 12561 or (914) 255-0093.

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20

DEALER INQUIRIES INVITED


SEND ONE OOLLAR FOR
FULL COLOR CATALOG AND
NAME OF NEAREST DEALER.

Pacific Woodworker

by Paul McClure

Shop Tips

Drawing an Oval

A Simple Way to Draw the "Perfect Oval"


Here's an easy way to draw a visually
pleasing ovalof any dimension, using only
a pencil and straight edge. First determine
the overall size of the oval (A " long x B"
wide). Now divide each of these dimensions by 2, producing a rectangle A/2 x
B/2. If the finished oval will be40 " x 30 ",
the template will be 20" x 15 ". Next,
divide the longer side into 10-20 equal
parts (C). For example, mark the 20 " long
side at I" intervals. Number these marks
from one end .
Nowmark the shorter side with thesame
number of marks as used on the longer
side. If you used 20 equal marks on the
long side, use 20 on the short side. The
distance between each mark will be

smaller in the same proportion as the


sides . D =C x (B/A). In the example ,
therefore, the marks on the shorter side are
I" x (15120) = 3/4" apart. Number these

overall length of oval!2 (A!2)

.,

marks as on the long side. (See Fig.. I.)


Finally, connect marks with the same
number: 1 to 1, 2 to 2 , etc. with a straight
line. (See Fig. 2.) The result is a smooth
curve-l/4 of your " perfect" oval.
Youcan lay this drawing out on a scrap
of wood, cut out the resulting curve and
use it as a pattern to cut the actual oval.

Ideas Wanted

(D )

.,

(C)

.,

Figure 1. Starting with a scrap board with length


and width one halfoffinal oval, mark equally
spaced points on two sides. then number them as
shown.

Figure 2. Connect correspondingly numbered


marksfor your Perfect Oval!

Do you have a time- or money-saving


hint, idea or jig? Share it with Pacific
Woodworker and win a free subscription,
a set of back issues or a woodworking
book. Send your previously unpublished
suggestions to Box 4881, Santa Rosa CA
95402. (Thanks to Gene Kampa of Sunnyvale, California for this idea.)

Woodworker
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Name
Address
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December/January 1984

10

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21

The Biesemeyer Story

A ward-Winning Saw Fence


by Charles Harris

For 35 years Bill Biesemeyer worked in


cabinet shops, and for 35 years he cursed
the inaccurate, time-eonsuming fences that
are standard equ ipment on table saws. " I
was fed up with trying to cut wood with the
old fences ," he remembers. Bill finally
found time to build a saw fence which
eliminated some of the problems with a
standard fence , but even this was not
enough to satisfy Bill's exacting demands.
A second version of his custom saw fence

proved more useful , and he used it in his


shop for a few years.
The story may have ended there, except
that about five years ago a back inj ury
sidelined Bill . With this enforced break
from woodworking, Bill spent the time
perfecting his T-Square saw fence , then
started to sell the new fence in the Phoenix
area.
At first , he sold each fence personallymaking each sale, installing the fence, and

checking back later to handle any problems . A few woodshops recognized the
value of the fence for improving accuracy
and speed , but for the most part , woodworkers remained unconvinced of the need
for a better saw fence. Woodworkers were
so used to the old system of measuring,
squaring up, measuring again and then
cutting (and measuring once more , to
check); they simply didn't believe you
could set the hairline, lock the fence down
with a single motion , and cut.
Bill, however, was so certain of the value
of the T-Square fence that he offered a unique marketing pledge: customers were invited to buy a fence, install it, and try it for
a while. If the customer was not completely
satisfied with the fence, he could return it
for a full refund , including shipping both
directions. " Once a woodworker got the
fence on the saw and used it a few times, I
knew he'd never take it off the saw," Bill
said confidently. Apparently his faith was
well placed; no customer has ever requested a refund!

Bill Biesemeyerescapes the pressures of


business by building radiocontrolled model
airplanes in his shop.

22

Pacific Woodworker

Old habits died hard, however. Bill still


found resistance to the idea of the T-Square
fence, even among woodworkers who had
installed one. "They would set the
hairline, then take out their tape measures
and measure top and bottom . After the cut,
they would measure again," Bill recollects.
" They just wouldn't believe you could set
the hairline, lock it down and cut , perfectly
square and accurate to 1/64 '!" One woodworker said he had to leave his tape
measure on the other side of the shop, to
resist the temptation to measure again and
again.
Bill's perseverance finally began to pay
off. News of the improved accuracy and
ease of operation of the T-Square fence
slowly filtered through the woodworking
community. Business began to grow. "I
realized that we needed a talented person
to market the fence ," Bill explains. "We
found him in Roger Thompson , now partner and part owner." Roger set up a dealer
network throughout the United States and
Canada.
"We're picky about choosing our
dealers," explains Gloria Lorts, Roger 's
assistant. " This company is very service
oriented, and we look for dealers that will
take the time to really help the customer.
"This commitment to quality and service is a trademark of the company. We
start with the highest quality of materials,
and Bill personally supervises the operation on a day-to-day basis," Gloria
elaborates. "If a customer is having difficulty with the fence, we ask him to send
it back, and we'll replace it with a new one.
If we simply gave him a 'quick fix', he
might have problems again later, and we
would rather have a satisfied customer." If
a part such as the locking handle fails
("probably got hit with a fork lift truck,"
Bill murmurs) Biesemeyer will replace it,

without charge. But thanks to good design,


quality mate rials and careful attention to
detail , problems seldom occur. "Our
fences really hang in there," Bill explains
proudly.
The international woodworking
machinery industry thought so much of the
design that the group recently awarded its
coveted Chal lenger Award to Biesemeyer
for the T-Square. This award is given to the
woodworking machine or process which
has made the greatest contribution to the
woodworking machinery industry over the
past two years. The T-Square fence competed for the prize with more than 300
other entrants from around the world , including automated machines with lots of
whistles and bells that cost tens of
thousands of dollars. The judges selected
the T-Square fence because of its simplicity of design and because it provided so
many benefits for the woodworker with
such a small investment. (The T-Square's
list price is in the $300 range, less if purchased as part of a saw package.)
This formal recognition by the woodworking machinery industry of the value of
a fast, accurate fence has spurred a host of
other manufacturers to put auxiliary fences
on the market, such as Rockwell's new

Unifence. But Bill Biesemeyer isn't worried about the imitations. Well aware that
imitation is the sincerest form of flattery,
Bill is confident that the T-Square fence
can hold its own against all competition.
The T-Square fence has already proven its
reliability and strength over several years .
And its track record is not the only advantage of the T-Square fence. "We have iU
to 80 patterns out in the shop for all kinds
of new and old table saws. Or a customer
can send in the dimensions of his saw, and
we'll engineer a T-Square fence to fit," Bill
says confidently. " Woodworkers can install the T-Square on other types of saws as
well: radial arm saws, band saws. There's
a guy who wants to add a T-Square guide to
a large panel saw, to aid in cutting smaller
pieces."
Besides the T-Square, Biesemeyer also
manufactures a stop gauge for radial arm
saws, auxiliary tables for the fence and
miter stop, and will soon market laminatecovered throat plates for table saws, for
precision work. For more information on
Biesemeyer products , or for the location of
the dealer nearest you, contact Biesemeyer
Manufacturing Corp. , 216 South Alam
School Road, Mesa, Arizona 85202, or
(602) 835-9300.

The Biesemeyer T-Square fence.


Bill Biesemeyer, inventorof the T-Square personally oversees the production of thefences.

December/January 1984

23

Finishing Techniques
Part One:
Surface Preparation
by Robert O. Briggs
The finish will hide no mistakes. Every
scratch is amplified, every dent becomes
more obvious , every tool mark is
highlighted when the stain goes on. The
more care that is taken in the sanding
phase, the better will be the final finish. No
amount of extra effort in the later stages
can be as productive as good care taken in
sanding.
While planing and scraping produce a
fine quality surface, these techniques are
not suitable for all circumstances and
wood types . Nor has every woodworker
acquired the specialized skills required. So
most woodworkers use sandpaper to
prepare the wood for finishing. When sanding , choose the right paper for a quick,
clean job.

Thisarticle begins a series on Finishing same 50-60 grit paper, sanding with the
Techniques by Robert O. Briggs, to appear grain.
With practice, you can learn to handle
in the next several issu es of Pacific
Woodworker.

Removing Tool Marks:


80 grit
80 grit paper on a belt or orbital sander
will remove marks caused by any of the
following: 50-6Ogrit sanding marks, table
saw marks, hand saw and hand plane
marks , router marks and loads of others
caused by well-operated tools.
Although 80 grit on an orbital sander
will leave visible swirls , these will be
sanded away in the next step. And it is
much faster to use 80g and then 120gthan
to try the frustratingly slow process of
removing tool marks with the finer paper.

Leveling Uneven Joints:


50-60 grit
If I have a lot of wood to move, for example when I level a glued up panel , I use a
hand plane or 50-60 grit belts on a 4" x
24"belt sander.
A belt sander is useful, too, to level misaligned panel joints. Uneven laminations
can be leveled quickly and efficiently.
I'll take you through the process as I do
it. First, I start at one corner and sand in
parallel, overlapping strokes on a diagonal
to the grain , keeping the sander in motion
at all times. Then I start at the other corner,
sanding on the other diagonal. I repeat the
process until the panel is flat. The crisscrossing marks I then take out with the

24

the sander so as not to gouge the work. Just


spend some time, and you'll get it.

Removing 80 grit Marks:


120 grit

About the author: Robert Briggs is a


professional woodworker from Rancho
Santa Fe, California. Formerly a woodworking instructor, Robert now designs
and buildsfurniture andalso does restoration work for museums. An article about
him appeared in Issue 10 (December!
January 1983) of Pacific Woodworker.

I use 120 grit only to remove 80g sanding marks. Years of experimenting have
taught me that it is not worth the time to
sand out tool marks with this grit. It can be
done, but it is too slow. Go to 80 grit, then
come back here to remove 80 grit marks.
120 grit will leave visible swirls in wood
used on an orbital sander.

Removing 120 grit Marks:


220 grit
When used on an orbital sander, 220g
seldom leaves visible swirls in the wood.

Pacific Woodworker

Fine Sanding:
400 and 600 grit
Usethesefora final finesanding,which
leaves the grainclear, "unrnuddied" lookingandverysmooth,readyfortheapplication of a good finish.

Hints and Tricks of the Trade


During sanding, some of the grains of
wood compress into the surface. These
will sometimes swell when stain is applied. A once silky smooth surface turns
cat-tongue rough. By flaring off between
sand paper grits you can eliminate the
problem. Wipe the entire surface of the
wood with a clean rag soggy with fresh
water. This causes the offending grains to
swell, allowing themto be sandedoff with
thenextgrit. Wait tillthe wood driesbefore
sanding, so the paperdoesn'tdisintegrate.
I always sand by hand with my final grit
after I have used it on the sander just to
remove any stray swirls which may have
sneaked onto my otherwise perfect
surface.
Don't waste yourtime trying to squeeze
the last bit of good from a worn piece of
paper. When it gets dull, throw it out and
go on to a new one.

A Word About Hand Held


Power Sanders
Like many a poor but honest woodcutter, I don't wantto spend more money
than I haveto. On the other hand, I hateto
payfor a tool, then find it isn't adequate.
If you saveyour moneylong enough to
buy a 4" x 24" belt sander,youwon'thave
the annoyance of a smaller tool which

spends most of its time simpering on a


shelfeatingchocolates. Likewise, selectan
orbitalsanderwithat leasta 3.0amp motor
and 10,000 orbits per minute. Makita,
Black & Decker, Rockwell, and others
make a good tool, and my favorite is the
Bosch 20,000o.p.m. The Sears Dual Action 4,000o.p.m. is so slowthat I can sand
faster by hand.

Last Step
Before Applying Finish
Having sanded thoroughly, I clean the
wood witha tackrag, a slightly stickycloth
available at paint and hardware stores
which removes the smallesttraces of dust.
If youfollow the stepsI've outlinedhere,
you should havea finely prepared surface
ready for the next stage, applying the
finish. In the next issue of Pacific Ubodworker, I will talkabout some of the types
of products you may want to use: stains,
dyes, bleaches, wood filler, lacquer, and
varnish.

rI ~~~' 1I
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December/January 1984

25

Oval cabinet by Lee Covill.

A Pacific

WOOl

Show

Th~

Nick Disparti 's roll top desk featured inlays of


walnut. olive and nectarine burls constructed
otherwise ofavocado wood with lacquer fi nish.
Nick . who teaches woodwo rking at a local commun ity college. has also developed a fil m strip
on the desk 's constructio n.
Kent Johnson 's sculpted stereo stand wasan intriguing use offlowi ng sculptural elements to
create a piece very strictly defin ed by its fun ction. The walnut piece wasdesigned to accomodate albums . receiver and turntable. with a
drawer f or accessori es. These square elements
are housed efficiently between the curves ofthe
skeletal structure. The piece used stack lamina tion techniques and wasfinished with an oil/varnish mix.

26

San Diego Fine Woodworkel


For the second year in a row, woodworkers in San Diego County, California,
have staged a highly successful exhibit.
This year saw several changes in the exhibit , which was sponsored by the San
Diego Fine Woodworkers Association at
the Southern California Exposition in Del
Mar. After its initial success last year (see
Pacific Woodworker, Issue 9) , this year's
show moved to larger, more central
quarters. A panel of three juried the show,
awarding cash prizes in four categories.
Last year pieces were selected by a sole
juror and no prizes were offered .
The sixty pie ces in the 1983 show
covered a wide spectrum of functional
work from table s, seating pieces, accessory items and turnings, to cabinets and
chests and even two boats. The award

categories were: best histo~cal p


contemporary piece; best turning
of show. Although there were fe
in the turning and historical cr
competition was keener in the I
categories, and the jury chose to
the prizes. The $100award for be
went to Larry Breedlove for hi!
porary wall hung cab in
photograph).
The show was dramat ically I
this year by the use of a dozen 01
and white photos of selected era
work . The 161/ x 20 1/ photogra
mounted and hung next to the ap
pieces along with a quotation
art ist. Personalizing the wood
creations in this way gave the sho

Pacific Woodworker

Larry Breedlove'scontemporarywallhung
cabinet wonthe Best ofShowaward.

~el

Mar Show

It Again!
impact and createda senseofgroup energy
behindthe entire body of work on display.
The exhibit also included a display board
featuring about sixty wood samples from
around the world.
On the whole, the quality of work accepted was quite good this year. The show
included several well-conceived original
designs, several impeccably crafted
pieces, and a few works which achieved
both. Visitor reaction, as well as the
response from the Del Mar Fair Board,
were both quite positive.
With this second successful show, the
San DiegoFine Woodworkers Association
hasdemonstratedthatthe localarea houses
enoughcraftsmenproducingenough high
quality work to sustainan ongoing effortto
sponsor this annual exhibit.

December/January 1984

Del Cover'srockerofWindsorinfluencefeatured
delicate and elegantlines in rich. dark cocobolo
wood. Builtat the same time as two other variations on a theme, this piece soldfor $950 and attractedsome other commissions.

Infonnation for thisarticlewasobtained


withthe kindassistanceofSheldonHarris
and KentJohnson.

PeterTao's end table of CentralAmericanZura


wasbeautifullyproportionedand executed. It
was made almost entirely witha router, with improvisedtemplates and jigs. Accordingto Peter,
the design grewout of a desire to find an interestingway to attach a top on a small table
piece. The top "floats" on tenons that penetrate
the two side-supportpieces. Finishwas tung oil.

27

"Brick Laid" Counter Tops

by Patrick Warner

On several occasions I've made long,


wide, thick surfaces for desks, bars, and
general counter service. There are two
ways to approach these counter tops: fulllength planks or shorts (less than 4'
pieces). I usually choose short lengths
because flat, first-quality, thick, long
lengths are both uncommon and hard to
prepare. On the other hand, short lengths,
because they are less desirable for many
other purposes, are plentiful, cheap, and
easy to machine. A surface built up with
these shorter boards laid on end like
bricks, i.e. "brick-laid," can be striking
and beautiful. And, if the joinery is crisp
and the parts well-milled, the counter will
be sound; in fact, it probably will be
stronger than a full-length plank assembly
surface.
Four factors contribute to top quality
counters: excellent surfacing and jointing,
scrupulous edge glue joint treatment,
some means of end squaring, and use of a
panel glue press.

28

Getting Started
I begin by determining the length, _
width, and thickness ofthe "bricks." The
number of bricks per total length is arbitrary, but some considerations include:
jointer-planer capacities, quality of stock,
size of glue press, method of edge joining,
and length of time available for the job. I
have learned, from a practical viewpoint,
to use as few bricks as possible. Typically,

5. It completed "brick-laid"countertop makes


good use of smallerpieces oflumber. Notethe
use of decorativesplines on thefront edgeof the
counter, to eliminatetwisting.
1. The assembledpressframe of 6/4 ash. The
centerbeams are tenonedand dowelledinto the
side rails. The end beams are gluejointed and
throughdowelled. Thickpads of ash toppedwith
plastic laminatecoverall but the clampscrew
side. (Detail: the notchesfor the clampscut
primarily throughthe pads; the notchesonly ertend 1/2 into the frame itself.)
H

Pacific Woodworker

2. The pressframe loaded with I-beam clamps.


Note that the counterrestson the plastic
laminatepads. not on the clamps.

I use two basic lengths, computed by


dividing the overall counter length by 2, 3,
or4.
I alternate the number of bricks in each
row, starting and ending with the same
number. For example, in an assembly less
than 8 'long, I start with two bricks on the
first row, three on the second, two on the
third, etc., and finish with two on the last.
For counters from 8 '-14', a 3-4-3-4-3 pattern works well. (See Figure #1.)
I select the width of the brick by strewing all the rough candidate stock on the
floor and picking the best fit yield. This
pick is important because, unlike the
length, the width should be the same
throughout in order to simplify assembly
and machining work. Also, the wider the
bricks, the fewer rows are needed, simplifying construction. The width I choose is
also influenced by my planer capacity
because, after ripping, I plane the edges to
width. It's important to include edge treatment waste in width considerations (i.e.,
tongue and groove, glue joint, spline, etc.).
The final consideration in choosing width
is, of course, the overall width of the
counter itself. Remember that, once completed, the counter cannot be handily
ripped or planed; once assembled you
can't change the finished width. Balancing
all of these factors, I usually keep my
bricks around 3 1/2" to 4 1/2 " wide.
Before machining my stock to width, I
plane all the bricks to thickness. The
thickness of the bricks is easy to determine
based upon design, economy, stock quality, method ofedge joining, and degree of
expertise on the jointer and planer. For
edge joining I use a special glue joint
router bit, whose capacity is restricted to
a stock thickness of from 5/8" to 2 1/2"
(similar limitations exist for other bits and
saws).

EdgeTreatment
Once the bricks are machined to width
and planed, they need to be edge treated.
Edge treatment could include tongue and
groove or splining, but the best all-around

December/January 1984

notoriously small work rests of most


machines, which make handling difficult.)

joint, in spite ofthe extra width required in


each brick, is prepared with a glue joint
profile cutter. My glue joint cutter consumes 1/4" of stock per joint, but careful
scrutiny during ripping and jointing often
reveals defects up to 1/4" on the face side
that would otherwise have to be ripped out.
Glue joints can also be drilled anywhere
along the glue line. Additionally, the joint
offers greater side-grain gluing surface,
pulls bowed stock into alignment and, if
carefully done, leaves a dressy cut-off.
Dowelling and straight line ripping for
edge treatments are not recommended.
Dowelling will only complicate an already
burdensome project, and a straight line
ripped edge will squirm out of plane.
Once the bricks are ripped and edged,
the ends must be carefully squared to prevent unsightly gaps. My tool of choice is
the edge sander, but judicious setup of the
radial arm or table saw can also render
tearout-free square ends. (The disk sander
is not a good choice, because of the
unevenness of its abrasive cut and the

The Press Frame


A specially constructed press frame is
the secret to gluing up the counter (see
photograph 1). The frame greatly
streamlines the assembly process and
assures a flat surface. I use a flush frame
press milled from 6/4 " ash with beams on
15 " centers. Formica-clad ash pads on all
surfaces except the screw clamp end help
support the clamps. Notches every 7 1/4"
receive 4-foot l-beam clamps such as
Jorgensen #7248s. The notches should be
1 9/16" deep at a minimum. Only the last
1/2" ofthe notch is cut into the frame itself;
the rest comes from the thickness of the
pads. (See detail in photograph 1). Thus
less material is taken from the frame,
leaving it stiffer for flatter clamping. All of
the clamping is done from the underside of
the bricks, and the I-beam clamps rest
about 1/16" below the pad surface (see
photograph 2), so that at no time do the
bars touch the stock even under heavy

Figure I. Odd/EvenBrick Layout

/5
1/

/2.

I
8

.if
/

/6

/3

2-

I
6

/7

11/

10

29

4. Thefirst caul restsagainst the clampscrew


pads. held gently in place with hand screw
clamps.

J. Thepress frame witha simple. light-weight


stand, ready for the clamps.

pressure. (The flatness of the counter surface is assured by light pressure down on
the pads, not on the clamps.)
The overall dimensions of the press
frame are based on the anticipated sizes of
counters. The maximum capacity in width
of counter determines the inside measurement of the press, less 10" (6 " for cauls and
4 " for screw pad and stop). The capacity in
length is unlimited, since the counter is
assembled in sections, but length should
be at least as long as your longest brick.
50" is a good choice so that the empty
press frame will be light and small enough
for one-man handling. Sawhorses or some
sort of knockdown stand are a nice accessory, so that the structure can remain in
one area during use (see photograph 3).
Once a press frame is loaded with stock ,
deep throat, Co, l-bearn, and handscrew
clamps, it may be too heavy to move.
Also necessary are two cauls for

assembly in the press frame. One of these


should be run through the complete
machining process along with the brick
stock and, if glue joint profiling is used,
the caul should have one glue jointed edge.
The other caul should be flat, straight,
squared, and at least as thick as the brick
stock. Both cauls should be four to six
inches longer than the press .
In any of these brick-laid structures, the
joints between the bricks on the outside
rows, because these bricks are glued on the
inward edges only, need to be kept in alignment , by means of end glue joint, spline,
or keyed treatment. Otherwise, these outside bricks might twist. (Since all interior
bricks are supported on both edges and
therefore can't twist, no end joint is
necessary there.) I cut end slots in my outside bricks (see photograph 5and figure #1)
and, after final assembly, knock splines into the slots for added strength .

Figure 2.
Clam p
Pres sure

Clamp

Pressure

Paint 1ull inaide

edge of brlck '2

Flat Slded ca wl

Assembly
Assembly begins by loading the press
with its complement of I-beam clamps.
Next, the flat caul is handscrewed down on
the press at the screw pad end of the press
(see photograph 4) . This keeps the caul
flat, which in turn keeps the bricks from
buckling. (No matter how tightly the caul
is handscrewed, it will still slip and slide
nicely into the bricks under I-beam clamp
pressure.)
Gluing up is a multistage operation starting with bricks 2,5, and 6 (see odd/even
row layout, Figure #1). Brick 2 should be
wet with glue over the entire length; bricks
5 and 6 should be painted only to the point
where the ends of brick 2 strike them (see
Figure #2). This procedure keeps the
unglued sections of bricks 5 and 6 clean for
later gluing. No glue is necessary on the
end grain.
Next, place the machined caul across
bricks 5 and 6, centered on brick 2 (see
Figure #2), and clamp it down with Cclamps . This machined caul, up against
the unglued edges of 5 and 6, will preserve
those fragile edges (especially if profiled)
until they are ready for gluing.
Now, apply I-beam pressure while
pressing the stock down on the frame. The
countertop may buckle slightly, but light
clamping across a joint down onto a press
frame beam with deep throat clamps
(Wetzler 7, 9, or 12") will flatten it.
Squeeze the glue out of the joint and
continued on page 40

30

Pacific Woodworker

Widow's Lament

by Linda A, Hynson

Widows. Black widows, football


widows, and now, wood widows. That
first flush when their mates arrive
home with their loot from the lumber
yard, the truck bedazzled with jewels
from Africa, Guyana, the Yucatan.
The glaze on their husbands' eyes as
they carry the precious cargo to that
haven of hardwoods: The Shop . If
you are a wood widow and can readily
identify with this scene, you know that
this is where it all starts.
For some it happens at retirement
when there is finally time for all those
woodworking projects that have long
sat on the shelf; for some it is a young
man 's stubborn determination to
forge a living and peace-of-mind from
his craft; and for.some hapless chaps,
the call of the walnut, vermillion and
cocobolo are the song of the siren that
casts to the wind the stability of a dentist, the lucrative calculations of an
engineer, the social stimulation of a
business man .
Is there a profile of this characterthe wood widow's mate? The mailman
knows him by the proliferation of
woodworking publications that spill
from the mailbox; the UPS driver
knows him as the dust-covered creature who lopes down the driveway
eager to sign for boxes from Craftsman,
Garret- Wade,
and
Constantine's; and the neighbors
suspect he's the one with the giant

December/January 1984

bumble bee living in his garage. He is


notoriously easy to lose at yard sales
and swap meets. If you should turn
around and find that you're talking to
yourself or have just slipped your arm
around a strange man's waist, merely
smile, excuse yourself, and retrace
your steps to the nearest pile of rusty
metal where you are sure to find your
friend gingerly checking for overlooked or discarded treasures.
Birthdays and Christmas are easy as
you come to know the litany of the
three T's: tools, tools, and tools.
Should your woodworker be one of
the more reserved types, you can
always coun t on bursts of unparalleled
enthusiasm at the arrival of a new
machine. Unfortunately, the more
complete the shop becomes, the more
trouble you will have coaxing your
woodworker out of it. Friends may
come to doubt that there really is
someone else living at your house.
You may find yourself attending parties alone, buying movie tickets for
one, and checking out vacation plans
for singles. Friends invited for holiday
meals will ask who that masked man
was who dashed in, downed some turkey and dashed out, leaving a trail of
padauk and oak by which to find his
way back.
Football widows, while they have
their men in close physical proximity,
may have little success at making

themselves heard over shouts of' 'hold


that line" and " touchdown!" Black
widows once they get their men in
close proximity can, as we all know, be
embarrassingly unforgiving. But
wood widows have to be wiley to even
catch a glimpse of their quarry. Once
you have learned never to sneak up on
man and machine, you may spend
hours standing perfectly still, hoping
to be spotted. More creative or desperate attempts may have you pirouetting
around the driveway or flapping your
skirts in hopes that any movement will
catch some attention. An intercom
system may give you the satisfaction
of voice contact which can always be
supplemented with photos sent at
monthly intervals.
Truth be told, there are benefits to
wood widowhood. Testimony to that
fact are the lovely gifts adorning my
desk : the letter holder, letter opener,
beautifully turned vases and bowl. My
sweaters have taken up residence in a
stunning cedar chest large enough to
house a small family, and the dressing
table has been graced with a custommade jewelrybox and a music box that
plays the theme from Romeo and
Juliet. Now, unless the elves have been
slaving at a steady pace, that seems
fair proof that there lurks somewhere
beneath all that sawdust the heart of a
romantic man. If I could just remember his name ...

31

When you walk into Woodcrafters in


Bellevue, Washington, you' immediately
view an array of flooring, carving supplies, clock parts, finishes, books and
plans, and hand tools arranged in a front
area around the sales counter. In a back
room, lumber is stacked for storage: oak,
maple, alder, cherry, birch , and a fewexotic species.

"I'm trying to build the business up by


numbers," states owner/manager Jim
Sypher, "Not by collecting a lot of money
from just a few people."
Jim managed the store first when it was
located in Seattle, one of a chain of stores
based in Salem, Oregon. Three years ago
Jim bought the Seattle store and moved it
to its Bellevue location.

The business currently is about 85 percent wholesale, IS percent retail. Many


customers are professional cabinetmakers
and custom furniture makers; others are
builders and mass producers. Some
building supplies such as doors, stair parts,
windows and skylights are not kept in
stock but can be ordered through the store.

Of special interest is the store's woodworking class program. Recent classes


have included a sharpening seminar,
cabinet construction, finishing, and table
saw techniques. Students in a given class
receive a discount on tools, or may obtain
at reduced cost a package of tools for use
during the class. The classes are advertised through a regular newsletter. (David
Paul Eck, Pacific Hbodworker's new contributing editor, whose column on wood
types appears for the first time in this issue,
also writes for Woodcrafters on wood
species and on a "tool of the month.")
Woodcrafters is located at 1910 132nd
Northeast in Bellevue, Washington,
telephone (206) 641-8008. Hours are
SAM-6PM Monday and Friday, SAM8PM Tuesday through Thursday, and
9AM-5PM on Saturday.

32

Pacific Woodworker

..

THE~/

FOURTH
CORNER

by Bill Farnsworth

A Woodworker Comes Out of the Woods


Lately, on those rare occasions when I
can sneak away from my work, I lock the
shop door early on a Friday, throw my
backpack into the pickup and head out of
Seattle into the woods (a halfhour or less
in any direction if one avoids Tacoma).
Usually I head \\est, by ferry, to the Olympic Peninsula, where, in addition to
wilderness I have family, friends and a few
years of my past to visit.
I began my woodworking business over
there in Port Angeles about eight years
ago. In small towns where jobs are scarce
a profession frequently chooses a person
instead of vice versa, and this is my story.
After college in California I moved to the
Olympic Peninsula because it was very
unlike Berkeley, California-it had more
trees than panhandlers. In between
unemployment checks I worked variously
as a cook, truck driver, lumber salesman
.and carpenter, finally turning my woodworking hobby into a business so that I
could look and feel permanently (if not
gainfully) employed. My first shop was a
five by eight foot utility porch-one of
those shops where you opened the door to
rip a board and cut your plywood outside
on the lawn. For power tools I made do
with a small radial arm saw, a drill and a

December/January 1984

cheap Sears sander. A big job back then at what I did, I often resented the "purists"
was anything netting over ten bucks, but it for what I perceived to be a smug attitude
towards woodworking entrepreneurs.
was a start.
For two years I lived mostly in a mobile Only now when financially I have come
home parked fifty yards from the banks of out of the woods have I realized that maybe
the glacier-fed Dungeness River, where there's more to the argument than that.
salmon jumped the rapids heading
I have discovered that a woodworker can
upstream, and bald eagles perched in near- in fact earn a decent wage, but sometimes
by oak branches to scavenge the fish that financial rewards come at too great a cost.
didn't survive their trek to spawn. For a In the last two months my shop has netted
while I built enough simple furniture and more income than I grossed those two
cabinets to buy groceries, and cooked at years I lived in the woods, and I am told
(or remode led) my sister-in-law's this is another succesful achievement of the
restaurant during leaner times. I drove a American Dream. But it is a dream
rotted-out station wagon with no rear win- belonging not to me but to those whom
dow and four bald tires, and each Henry James called the "dollar dollar
December my Chrismas presents to others Americans." There is another great
were by necessity hand-made. But I was American dream, however, steeped in a
self sufficient, and, in retrospect, fairly different American tradition, which is
carefree and happy.
closer to my heart. Its main proponent,
Now I sometimes wonder if this is the Henry David Thoreau, left the crowded
way my life should have remained, if in streets of Cambridge and Boston also to
that environment I might still truly love my. live two years in the woods. His book,
work and work wood lovingly. Instead I Walden, has remained tucked in the side
moved to Seattle to establish myself as a pocket of my backpack since high school
bonafide, big-city woodworker. As my life days, to be read over and over again by the
and shop grew more complex I began light of numerous campfires. And his
carrying on a running debate with the justification for his withdrawal from the
James Krenov school of "impractical" American rat race has never quite left my
woodworkers . Struggling to make a living mind:
continued

33

"I went to the woods because I wished to


live deliberately, to confront only the
essential facts oflife, to see ifI could learn
what life had to teach, and not, when I
came to die, discover that I had never
lived."
Thoreau went on to say how most of us
lead "lives of quiet desperation," and it
often seems that such a quietly desperate
woodworker's life I lately have come to
lead. More expensive and complicated
shop equipment, larger shop space, higher
overhead, bigger payrolls-all demand
constant activity and unrelenting participation in the rat race as their justification. I now must take on big but not always
fulfilling jobs to keep ahead of the bills,
then must slave nights and weekends to
pump out the work on schedule costeffectively. Creative control has been
relinquished, quality control inevitably
has suffered, too many comers have been
cut, sleep lost, health and safety endangered. There are costs that don't always

show up in the bottom line. I hardly see my


wife and child. More and more I confront
the non-essential facts of life.
Economists talk of a point of
diminishing returns, where the production
of a company exceeds its optimum limits
and in effect becomes counter-productive.
This point is not necessarily a tangible
statistical figure, but often is a
psychological limit one crosses, like the
proverbial thin red line between sanity and
madness. That point is marked by familiar
signs: one no longer works tolive but lives
to work, and one finds no joy in either
anymore. One's work becomes an endurance test, and the too-few off-hours
begin to simulate recuperative stays in an
intensive care ward rather than a whole
rewarding life. Then the dollars are not
worth it. Success, one's reputation, one's
upward mobility, even survival as one
falsely comes to perceive it (budgets
bloated with new expenses) are not worth
it.

"Simplicity, simplicity, simplicity!"


said Thoreau. Sam Maloof warned me to
keep my shop small and remain close to
my work when we talked last year, and I
didn't listen . James Krenov has been professing the virtues of impractical woodworking for years, and I have defensively
closed my ears . Too busy looking at the
ledger book's bottom line, at times I have
lost touch with what I truly reel is important. When your two-year-oldson flies into
a tantrum as you leave for yet one more allnighter gluing plastic laminates onto
restaurant walls, you know your priorities
have become muddled. At that point the
writing, not the Formica, should be on the
wall.
We too easily lose touch with the essential facts that Thoreau sought at Walden
Pond. We too readily are distracted from
the life going on all around us by tight work
schedules, myriad details, checkbook
balances, clients' demands, our own
workaholism. Wenot only come to lose the

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Pacific Woodworker

fulfilling little moments and events of our


lives generally, but the fulfillment we once
garnered from our love of working wood :
conceiving an object and using our own
hands to carefully make it a reality. In the
past several years my woodworking expertise has increa sed , my business assets
multiplied , and my income potential
developed as I have taken on bigger jobs
and gained a reputation of sorts for doing
commercial work. Despite these improving prospects of monetary gain, however,
I remain a " mush-headed" romantic who
nostalgically longs for simpler times when
I had never heard of Kortron or Marlite.
There is much more to be said for the kind
of woodworking where you don't care if
you run at a loss becuase you learned
something and felt good about the final
results.
The problem goes beyond the size or intensity of one's woodworking operation, as
dissatisfaction can come simply from being out oftouch with one's basic materials
and processes . My son thinks milk comes
from cartons and news comes from a little

man inside the TV, and at times my own


sensibilities seem not much more advanced. After all, my wood comes from
flatbed trucks, my glue from plastic bottles
inside cardboard boxes, and my finishes
from metal cans containing who-knowswhat chemicals (have you ever seen a Thng
nut?). For all my love of the wood I cannot
differentiate a hemlock from a fir unless it
is a piece of dimensioned, planed lumber.
This difficulty I suspect is partly the fault
of the local lumberyards which sell a
species of 2x4 called "hernfir" , Until
recently I thought linseed oil came from
"lin" seeds. Only on a technicality was I
right, as the ancient Romans called flax
lin.
I call myself a woodworker, but find
myself build ing boxes of high density
overlay, topped and faced with plastic
sheets and only sparsely garnished with a
bit of oak trim. New job titles should be introduced, such as "plyboardworker" or
"plasticlaminator,'
We constantly have to consider the
origins of our woodworking, and compare

it to where our work is now centered so we


can decide where it should be heading. But
we must also, I think, continue to root our
work in the history of our craft. Let us
remember that wood does not grow in 4 x
8 sheets; it does in fact grow on trees! I run
to the forest to live deliberately for a little
while , perhaps, but also to reacquaint
myself with my raw material and with
woodworking skills the Neanderthals
practiced.
On my recent backpacking trip to the
Olympic National Forest I began to look at
woodworking from a different perspective.
In a backcountry clearing I came upon a
rustic shelter built from logs and cedar
shakes hewn on the spot. Its superstructure
was tooled entirely with an ax, yet it was
assembled with rudimentary mortise and
tenonjoints-Iagbolts would have been too
weighty to pack into this remote spot . At
one campsite, looking for something to do
before dinner, I pounded four stakes with
notched ends into the ground, strung two
sticks across the notches for an apron and
laid split firewood flitches acro ss them : in
continued

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THE BEGINNER'S
HANDBOOK OF
WOODCARVING
CHARLES

BEl DERMAN and

WILLIAM

* 44 Full Patterns
.Getting Started

Techniques

.Wood

.Bird Carving

.Tools

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.Aids

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.Making Patterns

Please send me _ _ copy(s)


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1301 Pr inceton A.... .
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C;,y

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35

continued/rom page 35

srnem TeY~
~ Plan -$12.00
~ Includes full-size patterns for horse,
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38 other designs in 8'hx 11, full
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A book you 'll want to keep . and
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Plan - $8 .50
Full-size patterns
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MC & VISA ACCEPTED

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five minutes I had built a table that would


havemade Fred Flintstoneproud. Suchlittle things reminded me how ancient the
woodworking craft is, and how, when
taken out of a modem and money-oriented
context, it again can be a thrilling
experience.
As I evaluate the future direction of my
career and life, I realize that there are no
easy choices, only complex and radical
ones. If! had the last eightyearstodo over,
would I have let a different occupation
choose me, thus freeing me to work wood
solely as a hobby and a passion? If today I
was considering going from amateur to
professional status, would I keep my shop
and ambitions more modest, intimateand
simplified than I have let them actually
progress? In today's market I suspect the
woodworker must choose either "small is
beautiful" economics or takethe quantum
leap to a well-capitalized, productionoriented factory. As with so many things,
the middlegound isthe toughest. Is it at the
shops falling in between large and small
where bankruptcies and divorces most
often happen, where tired, quietly
desperate woodworkers plod on
unhappily?
I have finally made my peace with
Krenov and his disciples. Don't do wood
just for the money, gentle reader: it willkill
your soul. I don't think I'm quite ready to

Use our templates and your


router and template Quides to
make perfect inlays In record
Name:
_
time . Butterflies can be used to
lock joints or as decorative accents. Diamonds are used to
CITY '
STATE ZIP
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remove defects in otherwise
good lumber.
_ _ pr(s) Butterfly template @ $13.49
Templates come in pairs; one
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_ _pns) Diamond Dutchman template @ $13.49 cuts the hole. Sizes can be
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Make check or money order payable to:
guides.
A fast, inexpensive and acDa Template Co.
curate way to make these com367 Estrella St.
mon inlays. Complete with instruction sheet.
Ventura, CA 93003

36

Pacific Woodworker

auctionoff my equipmentto instead grow


beans beside a pond. Yet there is an imbalancein mylife, and somethingmust be
done. Will I fall in love with my work all
over again, or will my sojourns in the
woods of the Olympic forest help me to
find some other answer . . .?

Bill Famsworth is a custom cabinet/furnituremaker andownerof Lens& Hammer


Woodworks. 4349Leary HbyNW; Seattle,
~ 98J(JJ. Replies to The Fourth Corner
and information of interest to woodworkers intheNorthwest should be sent to
Bill c/o Pacific Woodworker, PO Box
4881. SantaRosa, C4 95402.

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(213) 545-6174 Telex : 181872

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December/ January 1984

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1415J 540-6247

37

Works in Wood '83


Oregon's Williamette Valley Woodworkers
Organize Annual Event
by Paul Gerhards

The Willamette ValleyFine Woodworking Association held its first annual Works
in Wood exhibit last July 10-12 at the Hilton
Hotel in Eugene, Oregon. Judges were
guild members Elliot Grey, Steve
Gellman, Brad Isles and Frank Mitchell
along with Ken Deierenger and University
of Oregon Craft Center director Tom
Urban.
According to Elliot Grey, the Association was formed in January, 1983 for the
purpose of sharing knowledge among its
members. The Association has no officers
as such, but Elliot has taken the leadership
role. "I'm the pusher," he says.
The four current guild members are professional woodworkers committed to
superior quality woodworking. Their intent is to develop ideas, learn marketing
skills and educate clientele to what is
available from the group. The latter is one
of the key reasons forrhe show.
Also, the Association will offer ongoing
workshops covering bending, carving,
drawing and other phases of the profession . For more information about the
Association write Elliot Grey at 25494
Hall Road, Junction City, OR 97448or call
(503) 998-8Z71.

Steve Gellman's walnut high chair is 40" tall.

38

Pacific Woodworker

Cherry desk, also by Elliot Grey.

Elliot Grey's cherry sideboard ofdovetail


construction features his "trademark";
sculptured handles which appear to have
grown out of the wood. He achieves the
effect in two ways. For small pieces. such as
drawers. he uses eight-quarter stock out of
which the handles are truly sculptured. For
the doors. Elliot first laminates the boards.
then saws out a two-inch strip, turns it on
edge and sandwiches it between the separated
pieces, giving him enough stock from which
to sculpt the handle.

Frank Mitchell describes his walnut clock as a


"very low-tech" project, despite the fact that it is
accurate to plus or minus a few seconds a month.
Bushings and hubs. as well as the escapement
pallets, are oflignum vitae. Shafts and hands are
brass. The rims ofthe face and gears are made
from seven layers of walnut cut so thin they were
bent without steaming. "The rim ofthe main
gear will support my 250 pounds with almost no
flexing ," Frank says.
It took 300 hours to makethe clock after five
years ofresearch ofstandard clock-making to
perfect his technique. "The thrust of the design is
reliability and replaceability," comments Frank.
All parts, including the teeth. are easily
replaceable. Theentire clock can be disassem bled in just a few minutes, then quickly
reassembled.

all photography on these pages by Hugh Barton

December/January 1984

39

Brick Laid Counter Tops


continued f rom page 30

quickly clean the face side. Next, release


all clamp s, flip the assem bly up on edge ,
and clean the press and underside of the
growing panel. Also clean the corners
where bricks 1 and 3 will meet, so that no
hard glue bead forms, which would prevent future br icks from fitting properly.
Finally, reclamp the structure and pull
bricks 5 and 6 together end to end with a
pipe- or I-beam clamp before applying
final edge-to-edge pressure.
For aliphatic and PVAC glues, 30 to 60
minutes is sufficie nt time to allow before
openin g the press and beginning to glue
bricks 1 and 3. Repeating this procedu re,
in one day's time 10feet of counter 181/ to
241/wide can be completed. At the end of
the day's session, edge clamp any uncured
counter left hanging over the ends of the
frame.

Any number of different designs may


result from this type of assembly, depending upon the brick-lay format chosen. The
idea is to get that first row done ; because
then your format is established and the rest
of the assembly becomes self-evident.

Patrick Warner is a part-time


designer/craftsman. He specializes in
framed ware (tables and chairs), framed
and panel ware (desks, doors, and beds).
and casegoods. He tea ches router
technology at The Cutting Edge store in
San Diego, California.

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WOODS

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EXOTIC WOODS: Bocote, Blackwood, Cocobolo, Ebonies, Lignum


Vitae, Rosewoods, Snakewood,
Tulipwood, others. Logs, planks,
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Portland, OR 97229. (503) 2926579.

FOR SALE: Stanley combination


plane 13-050. With 18 cutters
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Bdft. Call Joel at (408) 426-0810.

THE TOOL GUY - Used tools


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#98 and 99 side rabbet - $80.
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call for appointment or come by.
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Ney St., San Francisco, CA
94112.

TEAK LUMBER/ PLYWOOD


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324-3612.
TEAK lumber, 3/4 to 12/4, widths
to 21 in., dried timbers and turning stock. Buy direct from loggers. Below normal wholesale
prices. (714) 675-4759. Wildwood
Timbers Co., 1350West Bay Avenue, Newport Beach, California
92663.
CLASSIFIED ADS get results!
Submit your ad to Pacific
Woodworker TODAY!

SHAPER 3/4" spindle, 3 HP motor with 2 sets of collars. Ready


to pick up and use. $150. Call
Gary (415) 333-4070.
10" ROCKWELL " UNISAW" .
3 hp, 1ph, w/5' T-Square fence.
Well maintained. $1,700. Includes
8" carbide dado set & two 10"
60 tooth carbide blades in excellent condition. (415) 333-5873.
eves.
ROCKWELL STATIONARY sander. 6 x 48 belt and 12" disc
combination, numerous belts and
discs. $700. (415) 333-5873 eves.
OLD, all metal Sears 3-wheel, 9
inch bandsaw. Complete with
some spare parts and blades.
Ideal for foot treadle drive or
small motor. $50. Call Ray Levy,
at (408) 475-6326.
FOR SALE CHEAP - 1 V2 HP, 3
phase motor (A.O. Smith) Very
good qual ity. Would consider a
trade. Cal l Sandor, (408) 4298389.

SANDERS, ROUTERS, JIGSAWS,


PLANERS. RYOBI - World's
largest Diecaster. SPECIAL One HP plunge router $88 ppd.
Free catalog add $1 postaae.
Master Craftsman, Dept. 1205,
Box 307, Xenia, Ohio 45385.

WOOD PRODUCTS
MAKE TOYS - Plans, Kits :Hardwood Wheels, Parts, Dowels
Catalog $1.00 - Cherry Tree
Toys, Belmont Ohio 43718.

Classified Market Information: Rate: 25 cents per word, minimum of 25 words. Payment must accompany all classified ads. Border, $3.00. Deadline for ads for Issue 17 is December 20, 1983. Pacific
Woodworker, Box 4881, Santa Rosa, CA 95402 (707) 525-8494.

December/ January 1984

41

,,Through-Lay' ,
A Pacific Woodworker Profile of
Kathy Blair
by Mary A. Cristy
Creati vity, sensitivity, imagination , and
a penchant for doing her own thing-Kathy
Blair has put these together in her unique
design s and techn ique as well as in her
lifestyle .
. " I gue ss it took me a long time to find
what I reall y wanted to do," Kathy says
with an infectious grin. Formerly, Kathy
was a physical education teacher, a sailor,
house painter, scuba diver, and cabinet-

maker. She has written a cookbook for


vegetarians, cruised and lived on boats,
composed her own music for the guitar,
and plumbed the waters of the West Coast
from San Diego to Baja . But today "her
own thing " is woodworking.
" I was up on top of a fifty-foot mast on a
sloop , sanding, and thinking: "This isn't
where I want to be."

Now, with partner/h ou se mate Jim


Frandine, a computer programmer who
shares her mania for woodworking, Kathy
is at last where she wants to be.
While Kathy claims to have small talent
for drawing , she nevertheless manages to
create exquisite art pieces and original
designs. She has developed a unique
"through-lay" technique (see box) among
other innovations.
Kathy feels she and Jim totally complement one anothe r. Jim likes to organize
their well-equipped shop and does the
heavy projects around the house, leaving
Kathy free to work on her art pieces .
There is a noticeable absence of sawdust
and clutter in the airy, well-lit 20 ' x 24'
garage workshop . Kathy credits Jim with
the shop's neat appearance. "He installed
vacuum hoses on all the tools, and on the
dust collection system designed by Woodtool. The motor is outside in a sound-proof
box." Though Kathy is quick to indicate,
"The neighbors are really good about their
proximity to humming tool s." " I' m
basically a power tool person ," Kathy continues. A full complement of tools includes
a menacing-looking re-saw bandsaw that
enables Kathy to make her own plywood.
"Commercial plywood has veneers that

Kathy adjusts lightpreparatoryto using her


scroll saw to make cut-outsfor her through-lay
work.

photography by Christine Falke

42

Pacific Woodworker

are too thin ," she explains. So Kathy


creates a wood "sandwich," book-matches
the outside pieces, and ends up with a
warp-proof product that is ideal for the
portfolios she makes to sell.
How doe s a fragile -looking young
woman who professes to havea weak wrist
(though Jim says she whacks a mean racquet ball!) get started in what has been
traditionally a masculine stronghold?

"In San Diego I took a Junior College


woodworking course," Kathy explains .
" My first project was a solid mahogany
door with stained glass inserts ." From
there she proceeded to kitchen remodeling, making cabinets out of oak and teak ,
learning by doing. "I don't read books on
woodworking, though perhaps I should ,"
she says. "I prefer to experiment, giving
myself room to discover, to tum the un-

expected and surp rise myself with what


happen s spontaneously."
An abiding interest in the organic led to
working with exotic woods. Bubinga, koa,
ebony, purpleheart, Osage orange, and
padauk are some of her favorites. Since the
woods are by nature richly colored, she
has only to combine them tastefully to
make warm sunsets, butterflies, flowers,
scroll s, and a myriad of other patterns.

Through-lay Technique

to the discovery of new techniques.


One such innovation is her " throughlay" work-an outgrowth of her vision of
patterns that go all the way through a piece
rather than being merely surface decora tion or inlay. In through-lay, the inside of a
box is a mirror-image of the top.
This result she accomplishes by preci sion sawing, and mating the pieces to their

counterpart cut-outs. Skillful cutting on a


scroll saw lead s to perfectly matched
pieces.
.That Kath y suc ceeds admirably is
apparent in the flawless results.

" Playing" in the shop allows Kathy time


for following the creati ve meanderings of
her imagination. Often she finds this leads
Lap Desk has through-lay butterfly hinges in
Osageorange. Koa, purpleheart,padauk, and
incensecedarcomprisethe top, edges. and bottom. Dovetails and splines hold it together.

December/ January 1984

Jagged lightningdesign of ebony through-lay


and spotted maple. Joints are dovetailed.

43

Like many fine artists , Kathy wrinkles


her nose at the necessity of marketing even
as she acknowledges it. To date, word of
mouth recommendations have brought a
fairly steady stream of commissions for
desks, decorative plaques, boxes, portfolios, and lap desks.
"The lap desks were Jim's idea. We
decided to do a colIection for Christmas
presents. Instead of the two weeks planned
for, it took us two months ," admits Kathy.
While she works with an eye to what is
. marketable, she is aware that having fun
and designing whimsies is equally gratifying and often just as profitable. Thus, she
designs "squiggle puzzles" (akin to jig-saw
puzzles) and "pop-ups" which began with
an idea based on a colIapsible camping
cup. Kathy looked at the cup and adapted
the principle to her scroll-sawed hearts and
pyramids (one takes a flat board and
creates a three-dimensional shapej-rkids
love them!"
In a wide array of projects, nary a nail is
evident. Splines and dovetails lock parts
together sleekly, and are sanded silkysmooth.
A desk she and Jim designed and built
together has been displayed in Palo Alto's

prestigious Los Robles GalIery, and was


exhibited for several weeks at the Wood
Tool Center in Mountain View,along with
several other of Kathy's projects. Though
Kathy prefers to exhibit in galIeries, she
was planning to enter an upcoming woodworking show. Exhibitions bring commissions wherever her work has been shown.
Gourmet cooking, biking to shop , and
working on her guitar music consume
much of Kathy's time. But a minimum of
24 hours a week is mandatory for the
woodworking, which continues to lead her
into ever new and fascinating explorations.

Desk top ofpadauk. Bird'seye and tigerstripe


maples wereused throughout. Features curved
legs, angled drawerfronts. and specially crafted
pulls.

With Jim Frandine-who hopes eventually


to make woodworking a full-time
operation-she seems to havehit a winning
combination.
"I realIy do need to spend more time
marketing, though," she promises herself.
Somehow you get the feeling that this will
not be a problem. Many-faceted Kathy
seems to have found in her woodworking
the "better mousetrap" that will cause the
world to beat a path to her door.

Jim and Kathywork together, using the sander


they built from a kit to smooth a portfolio cover;
hoses are pan oftheir dust-proofing.
photography by Christine Falke

44

Pacific Woodworker

Living with Murphy

How To Fix Mistakes


by Charles Harris

"If anything can go wrong, it will ..

No matter how carefully we work with


wood, we inevitably encounter unforeseen
problems somewhere along the way. How
we cope with these setbacks often determines our final results as well as the personal satisfaction gained from
woodworking.
The best cure for woodworking glitches,
of course, is a little prevention: think
thrice , measure twice, cut once . Unfortunately, time restraints, irregularities in
the wood itself and use of improper tools
are all too common in our imperfect
world. The question is not so much how to
avoid errors, because Murphy will strike ,
usually when we are least prepared; the
question is how do we handle problems
when they occur.
When faced with a serious problem, the
neophyte woodworker either pretends the
difficulty doesn't exist or doesn't matter, or
he throws up his hands and checks out the
TV listings. A more experienced woodworker acknowledges the error, and takes
some steps to see that that particular
problem does not reoccur. And far from
pretending the problem doesn 't exist , the
experienced . woodworker will immediately consider ways to get out of the situation. Let's look at some ways professional
woodworkers have handled visits from
Murphy.
Larry Lawlor made a slight slip in his
excellent cherry and maple chest of
drawers (see Pacific Woodworker Issue 15,

December/ January 1984

"

p. 22). As he cut the first exposed dovetail


on the top of the chest, he cut on the wrong
side of the pencil outline. The hole for the
dovetail was wider, by the width of the saw
kerf, than the dovetail itself. But instead of
scrapping the top and starting over, Larry
cut a set of thin shims of contrasting wood ,
and neatly fJ.J.led the gap. He then cut all the
other dovetail s the same way, so that the
shims appear to be part of the design of the
chest , and not the correction of a minor
error.
Sometimes it's the wood itself that
throws a curve at the woodworker. While
preparing another chest , Clyde Jones of
Mendocino, California encountered a
worm hole in an otherwise excellent piece
of koa. What seemed to be a tiny hole on
the surface of the wood turned into an obvious blemish when resawn. Abandoning
the piece was out of the question; koa is
just too scarce . So Clyde carefully enlarged the imperfection and inserted a
moon-shaped plug of contrasting ebony.
The black crescent moon now forms an
element of the design of the chest, not a
plug filling an ugly worm hole .
How do you handle your mistakes or
problems? What innovative and interesting
solutions have you evolved for surmounting these difficulties? Send your
ideas to Pacific Woodworker, Box 4881,
Santa Rosa CA 95402. The best answers
will be awarded special prizes and printed
in future issues of Pacific Woodworker.

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furniture kit s
Fine hardwood s
Brochure $1.00
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RETAIL VENEER
Clipping & Jointing
$2.50 sample kit available
(refunded with first order)
Send for free price list.

45

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46

Box 4881
Santa Rosa, CA 95402

#14: College of the Redwoods


Woodworking Program, Plywood Computer Cabinetry, Woodworking in Hawaii, Craft Shows,
Mag-Pad Test Report.
#13: Women in Woodworking,
Curved Marquetry Panels, California Crafts Show, Finishing Tips,
Pelican Carving, Part 2, Northern
California Woodworkers Association.
#12: Carving a Peli can in the
.Round, How to Miter and Bevel,
Bud Vases, Henniker Versatile
Saw, Butte County Woodworker's Association, De C ristoforo .
#11: Woodcarver Bill Horgos,
Laser Woodworking, Wood Finishes, Mail Order Woodwork, ing, Router Guide, Part 2.
#10: Router Guide Part I, Wood
Box Design, Interviews with Bobby Briggs and Clay Johnston,
Sealacell test report.

#9: Wood Sculptor Ed Lombard,


Mendocino and Del Mar shows,
Tsumura Saw Blade, Wood Staining.
#8: Establishing a Woodworking Business, Amazonian Hardwoods, Rockwell Sander test report.
#7: Interview with Sam Maloof,
woodworking in Maui, restaurant
woodworking.

-~ ~Volume 1, Issues 1-6, complete


set $5.00, while supplies last.
Table Saw guide, Wooden Boxes,
Sanding Belt cleaner test report,
Chair Design, Rima Sharpening
Jig Test report, Profiles of sculptor Lucius Upshaw and carver Bill
Booras, Stanley dovetail fixture
test, special issue on dust, noise
prevention, tests of Carter band
saw guide and Milwaukee electric
chain saw.

Pacific Woodworker

neiosiertese ~

a sponsor, corporate or private, that could


help provide a more formal setting for an
Since its inception at Fort Mason in late
April of 1983 the Northern California exhibit and sale. The track record has been
Woodworker's Association has been laying established: we are capable of producing
careful groundwork for how to best serve large scale exhibitions and no one can deny
the impact of a large showing. By showing
its potential membership. There have been
many meetings to work out a direction and in a large group we can collectively make
focus for this regional association. The one the public more aware of our products and,
point that has been stated over and over is . hopefully, benefit us as business people. I
the importance ofthe local woodworking would appreciate any feedback on this
associations and NCWA's relationship to topic and if anyone out there knows of
someone who might be interested in sponthese groups. It is our aim to encourage the
starting oflocal associations as well as sup- soring this type of project, please have
them get in touch with me.
porting the existing ones.
C. Stuart Welch, President, NCWA
NCWA'S role can be most effective in
facilitatingprojects that encompass several
Treasurer's Report
or all of the local groups. Our group structure is set up around these types of projects
NCWA has applied to the Internal
with chairmen in the areas of marketing, Revenue Service for an Employer Identishows, seminars and communications. fication Number, the first step in obtaining
Plans are ongoing in all of these areas.
tax-exempt status for the NCWA. The
I would at this time like to address the question of whether to be Profit or Nonarea of shows. As many of you may know Profit or both is still under discussion by
our planned show in February has been the officers.
canceled. In my opinion this may be a
A dues structure has been adopted
mixed blessing. There has been much which it is felt will be supportive of the
discussion about whether the trade show local organizations. Members of local
format is a good way to exhibit and sell associations will pay $20 annually for
handmade furniture. Many of you may NCWA membership and non-members of
know that our sales figures at the Fort local organizations will pay $35. Persons
Mason show were poor, with most of the desiring memberships should send their
sales happening in the under $500 price money to the NCWA at PO Box 832, Marrange. The competition from Loud Tool shall, CA 94940.
Demo's and lack of adequate publicity may
A number of participants in last year's
havecontributed to this low sales figure. It show at Fort Mason have still not sent in
is my feeling, however, that setting has a the additional $15assessment; individuals
great deal to do with the results. Perhaps a are still owed over $500 for telephone bills
more fruitful tactic may be to link up with and raffled items. The money that has

President's Report

come in to the NCWA to date has gone to


pay all of the other costs of the show, and
there is $155.00in our treasury now. Those
who have not sent in their $15are urged to
do so, and donations are being accepted to
help cover the remaining accounts payable.
Tom McFadden, Treasurer

Show Committee Report


Regrettably, the Working Wood show
originally scheduled for February 1984
has been canceled. In spite of this setback,
there is an ongoing effort to get our third
show together, either as part of a trade
show or in a gallery. We need sponsors for
these events, so anybody with ideas, space
for a show, and/or money can make contact. Don't delay!
Mike Laine

Marketing Report
This summer the NCWAexecutive committee discussed several plans for expanding the client base of woodworkers. First,
a center for clients seeking woodworkers
will be established, possibly in a retail furniture store. Advertising for the center will
include Yellow Pages ads. This program
will also be available to local associations.
Call Chip Galusha at (415) 822-4250 for
details.
Also, we'll prepare press kits to be
distributed to the media in an effort to
create publicity for the services available
to the public from the woodworking
community.
Chip Galusha

Beginning with this issue Pacific Woodworker will include the NCWA official news.

December/January 1984

47

WORLD'S GREATEST
COLLECTION

Wood Types

of

OLD FASHIOIED
Furniture Parts,
Hardware, Fittings & Supplies

CATALOGUE
sent upon receipt of $2.00

19th CENTURY
Hardware & Supply Co.

by David Paul Eck

Alder

Readily Available,
Often Overlooked

P.O. Box 599 Dept. B


Rough & Ready, CA 95975

Alder is a deciduous tree found abundantly in the Pacific Northwest, northern


California, and Canada . Although classified as a hardwood, it is one of the softer
hardwoods. A fast growing wood, alder
thrives in wet ground and shady areas; it
most often grows straight and tall, searching for availablesunlightamong firs and
hemlocks. Alder can be identified by its
smooth grey and white splotched bark and
its ovate shaped leaves.
When air-dried, alder ranges in soft
colors from pinkish-white to warm tan.
Color variation does exist within single
air-dried planks, but the variation is a gentle one within a rather narrow color range.
Alder does not display any dramatic color
figuration, nor is there any distinction between sapwood and heartwood in color or
texture. When kiln-dried, alder loses most
of its subtle coloring. Kiln-dried alder is
usually an undistinctive even light tan,
uninteresting in color and figure.

WOODWORKING BOOKS EXa.usJVRY


Frequent catalogs issued. For one-time only

subscription charge send $1.50 to:

R. SORSKY
BOOKSELLER
Box P2
3845 N. Blackstone
Fresnq , Calif. U.S.A. 93726
Member Americen Booksellers Aaan .

48

With this issue, Pacific Woodworker


begins a regular column on wood types.
Our new Contributing Editor, David Paul
Eck, is a furn iture maker in North Bend ,
Washington. whose work is shown in
galleries on the West Coast. He also
teaches handjoinery and furniture construction in Bellevue, Washington.

What alder lacks in visual interest ,


however, it makes up for in workability. It
machines and saws easily (although alder
will " fuzz" if tools aren't sharp), seems
relatively stable and strong, and receives
'most any finish without a fight. For these
reasons (and also becauseit is plentifuland
hence cheap) alder is used extensively in
millwork and production cabinets,
primarily as face-framing and door parts.
Often used in conjunction with other
woods that possess greater visual interest,
the alder can be stained easily to match
finer wood. Alder is also foundextensively
in production upholstered furniture. It is
softenough to allowfastening devicesto be
driven into it, but strong enough to hold
them firmly without splitting. When purchased in low grades, alder becomes extremely cheap, makingit a goodchoicefor
furniture -making in which no wood is
exposed.
Becauseof its widespreaduse in production cabinets and upholstery framing,
alder does not have much acceptance as a
fine wood among craftsmen. However,
air-dried alder can provide a welcome
change amidst the drama of color and wild
figure typical of many exotic woods. The
soft, subtle coloring of alder can beattractive when used with care, and a sensitive
craftsmancan tum this common wood into
a warm, friendly material for many forms

Pacific Woodworker

__._-

STACKING BOOKCASE!
BARRISTER'S BOOKCASE!!
LAWYER 'S BOOKCASE!!!
Whatever you call
it ...you can bu ild
this beautiful
bookcase with
stack ing shelves,
each w ith its own
glass door that
lift s up and slides
back.
No spec ial hardwar e requ ired .

3 shelf unit

Step-by-step
p lans - detailed
illust rati o ns.

37 "w x 44-1 /4 " h x


12- 1/ 2"d
You have t he tools.

Order Plan 004

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(tab le saw and


route r) All you
need is the plan II

Send check or money order to :

Abou t Time Plans , Dept. P12-3


7707 Aurora N. ! Seattle, WA 98103
Brochure $1.00 - refunded with order.

/9&3 Jos. Frlvnllll

The author sblanket chest ofalder.

of furniture. Under the stroke of a sharp


handplane, alder best displays its soft,
shimmering surface; achieving a fine
finish by sanding alder is difficult, since
the wood is so soft it tends to fuzz under
abrasive pressure.
As for a finish, alder smiles through
shellac. A clear shellac does not darken or
blotch alder as does a clear oil, and shellac
will leavethe gentle color variation intact.
A simple wax finish would be a nice alternative to the shellac.
Another reason why the West Coast
craftsman might ser iously consider alder
is simply its local availability. It is plentiful , and can be easily chainsawn or
milled by local sawyers and then air-dried

by the crafts man . Less desirable planks


can be consumed as a secondary wood,
such as for drawer si es and bottoms,
backs and the like.
Another advantage of alder's abundance
is the availability of spalted , stained, and
crotched material ly ing about in the
forests, left as waste from logging and
firewood cutting. The value of these
" disfig ured" wood s should not be
overlooked , since they can serve nicely as
counterpoint material in the form of door
panels and drawer fronts. Some might even
be suitable for turning or carving.
If used with care , alder's potential as a
fine wood for the West Coast woodworker
is great. Alde r is certainly a wood that
deserves a closer look .

RING MASTER
" Th e second new idea
In power woodworking
to come along In 100 years "

Cut Perfect Rings In AnyWood...


any angle.any size up to1'lhick. 12'diameter.
Cut tIaIwood into angle
or stroight-edged rVlgs.
stock the rings and create
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SHAP...Justglue. SCJ)(j
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Cal Oah Lumber Co.


SUBSIDIARY OF

FORESTMANAGEMENT, INC.

- Featuring California Black Oak. White Oak


Pacific Madrone Tan Oak
And Other Indigenous Hardwood

BRUCEHALL
Marketing
Representative

Cal Oak Road, P.O. Box 689


Oroville, CA 95965
(916)5341426

S
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December/ January 1984

I
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Ring Master. Inc. Dept. E


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Please send me complete facts obout the AU NEW
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~------------------------49

Books . . .
From Gazebos to Kitchen Cabinets

Reviews by Alan Marks


Gazebos and Other Garden Structures
by Janet and Richard Strombeck, Sun
Designs, P.O. Box 206, Delafield, WI
53018, 1983, $7.95.
A unique offshoot of the revival of interest in things Victorian , this engaging
book consists entirely of illustrations. It
contains fifty-fivepage-size pencil renderings of roofed wooden garden shelters
commonly called gazebos, but known
variously as summerhouses, screen
houses, belvederes, pavilions, kiosks,
bowers, arbors, pergolas, gloriettas,
teahouses, temples, grottos and pagodas.
Anyone with even the slightest smattering of romanticism in his veins should find
these structures irresistably charming, in-

50

timate retreats in the shade of which a


panoramic garden view may be enjoyed in
complete safety from rain, falling twigs
and insects, or any number of Nature's inevitable bombardments. The authors have
included as well a few sketches of birdhouses, feeders, arbors, and what they
term "strombrellas,' smaller decorative
structures shadi g particular outdoor
activities provided by swings or hammocks, picnic tables, sandboxes, etc.
The sketches seduce the eye with their
delightful blend of accurate line drawing
and loose, spontaneously-textured
shading. With a technique perfectly suited
to subject matter, the illustrations sell the
product superbly. But instead of detailed
plans for each, the book offers plans only
for the gazebo shown on its cover and for
two bird feeders. Plans for the other
gazebos, strombrellas, and arbors may be
ordered from a complete list on the back
inside cover; however, you may expect to
pay up to four times the price of the book
for a set of these plans! Birdfeeder plans
cost less.
The book offers no written construction
advice. I would have welcomed concrete
suggestions for developing sketches into
working drawings and/or some general
building hints. An index of undimensioned
"floor plans" for the major structures is included, but these plans provide scanty information. There is no other collection of
gazebo illustration available, however, so
if you want to select and build your dream

gazebo yourself you'll need this book plus


a I.ot of architectural drawing savvy or
you'll need to buy this book and then order
the publisher's drawing. From there you
will either have to be a good all-round
carpenter or need to hire one.

Building Your Own Kitchen Cabinets


by Jere Cary, Taunton Press, Inc., Box
355, Newton, CT 064'70, 1983,$11.95.
Here we haveat last a long-needed book
of concise, practical information. With its
help you can indeed equip your own
kitchen and save a bundle in the process.
(A friend of mine recently ordered custom
cabinets for his unpretentious kitchen to
the not so modest tune of six thousand
dollars.)
This book, excellent in its thorough approach to its subject, provides easy to read

Pacific Woodworker

As I Was Building a Gazebo . . .


Finial Ball, Made To Order

by Jeff Taylor

illustrations and scads of tips and helpful


advice throughout its 137 pages. A separate
reference chapter describes construction
of special jigs, some of them ingenious
time-savers.
Jere Cary ha s, however, neglected
altogether the lastest fashion in cabinetry,
" European" cabinets. These have no face
frame s and use special concealed hinges
that can be adjusted in and out and up and
down. They have a number of advantages
over the conventional cabinetry the aut hor
teaches us to build.
It might be well to mention in passing a
book on custom cabinetry due for publication this spring by Roda1e Press. It will
feature color photography and will deal
with the subject from an overall aesthetic
angle. To me, Cary's book seems devoid of
inspirational qualities. It has no photographs and you won't find in it any examples of fine cabinet work to fire your
imagination and ambitions. Rodale's book
with color photography will also include a
section on construction , though mo st
probably it will be less complete than
Taunton's. The two should complement
each other nicely.
It is a pleasure to be able to say about
this, the only book currently available in its
category, that I don 't see how it could be
significantly improved upon with regard to
pure technical expertise.

December/January 1984

I was bu ilding a gazebo under contract


for some ve ry nice , if somewhat indecisive, clients of mine. As I was applying the finishing touches on the balustrade,
my clients came to me with "a small
change." They wanted a finial ball at the
top of the con e-shaped roof, ju st like the
one in a picture they 'd found (unfortunately) of a 200-year-old gazebo in New
England . Not hing small , eit her: a great
big finial ball was what they had in mind,
an oval globe eight inches in diameter,
resting on a foot-high pedestal.
My little lathe was simply too small to
handle such a job, and buying a finial ball
was out of the question, I discovered. Two
millwork shops had no idea what I was
talking about ; the first finally offered to
custom-tum to my specs for the outrageous
sum of $75, and the second suggested I
paint a bowling ball white.
A newspaper item caught my eye,
however. A nearby town had just outfitted
a new wood shop in its high school . I went
to see the instructor with the following offer : I'd teach a " lathe seminar" lasting one
class period in return for using the school's
machine, which was truly gigantic . I would
explain set-up, safety procedures, and
techniques to his students, and then tum
my finial as they watched . He didn't know

what it was that I wanted to make until I


drew it for him , but he was tickled with the
idea and invited me to come in the next day.
After purchasing a two-foot chu nk of
cedar beam with no visible checks and
only one small knot from a very confused
lumberyard-they had to cut it offthe end
of a twelve -foot piece-I went to the school
and gave my lect ure as I prepared the
stock, and the n began turn ing my piece.
The wood worked nicely, and at the end of
an hour I was done.
Even though the students couldn't figure
out what I'd do with a giant pawn, as one
of them called it, they admired the finished
product. The instructor, glad to have a
chance substitute, invited me to use any of
the machines in the shop if my own were
ever unequal to a task-provided of course
that we followed the same format as our
earlier deal.
Most high schools have indu strial-sized
eq uipment in excellent condition, and
ge nerally will only require you to carry
your own insurance as well as signing a
liability waiver. But for the woodworker
whose tools are designed for m~erate
sized jobs, such schools are an accessible
option for the occasional oversized
project.

51

Bill Biesemeyer with some ofhis T-Square saw fences (see page 22)

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(see page 46)

Charles Davis s music stand. One ofthree pieces


Charles Davis had in the show, this music stand
employed bent lamination techniques and a lacquer fi nish.
(see page 26)

Address correction requested.

Pacific 'Wood worker


P.O. Box 4881
Santa Rosa, CA 95402

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