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shop notes

Quality.

  • March 23, 2023

Why bother?

The front door clicks and I’m left in the abrupt silence that follows intense activity, a theatre after a performance, while the boards are still warm and the floor is yet to be swept. The kitchen floor is peppered with scrambled egg in a frankly remarkable radius. For a creature that can barely hold a ball, toddlers have incredible throwing arms.

Making my way along my commute – 15 steps from the back door to the workshop, ignoring for now the scattered toys, half eaten apple slices that have been stuffed between couch cushions, books anywhere but the bookshelves – I slide up the roller door to be greeted by the sweet, cancer causing smell of hardwood dust.

Around the walls are tools, jigs, templates, bits of wood too precious to discard but too useless to do anything with, all covered in a thin film of dust that is utterly impossible to eliminate in a small workshop.

On my whiteboards I review the ‘I should have been a doctor’-scrawled notes that remind me where I left off the last time I was in here. I can’t remember when that was. I should date my notes.

Depending on where I am in the process you might find my workbench stacked with rough-shaped parts, stickered so they don’t warp. You might find have a finished piece drying, hopefully dry enough to move. You might find drawings and pieces of MDF covered in pencil, overlapping lines from revision after revision. Or you might find a colossal mess: piles of shavings and dust, tools, screws, power cables and busted chair parts that I didn’t have the strength to clean up. The cleanliness of my bench is an excellent indicator of my mental state.

Today the bench is pristine. A commission was just completed and now it’s on to a new design for an exhibition in November. Last year I spent over 300 hours designing and making a chair that sold for $2700. This year I’m making two chairs. Let’s see if we can hit the $10 an hour mark this time.

Two years ago I abandoned a well paid, undemanding career to make a living making Quality furniture. My days, nights, thoughts and dreams, are consumed with the desire to create. Something. Anything. Writing. Designing. Making. I desperately try to carve out time in that most sacred of places – the workshop – time that is so easily wiped out by medical appointments, grocery shops or toddler time at the library. But in my head, even when I’m making dinner, folding nappies or chasing a toddler with a toothbrush, I am still aching to make.

Making Quality furniture is not a logical thing to do. I’d make far more money cleaning houses. Or worse, making MDF kitchens in a factory. Why bother with this ‘Quality with a capital Q’ stuff when it seems, at least at first glance, that the market doesn’t care? Why struggle over the mountain of effort that costs me another chunk of my sanity? That 99% of people still wouldn’t see if you pointed it out to them? Effort that will almost certainly be unprofitable? Effort that may well absorb what little profit there could be, with the sharp sword of the tyranny of financial necessity constantly hanging overhead?

It’s a small number of loonies who can bear to live and work this way, surely. But I’ve done the other way, working a dreary job, making low quality and ultimately meaningless work that sucked my soul, my creativity and my confidence, all in exchange for a bit of money.

I can bear it now because I’ve lived the other side of the coin. And I want to be able to look back on at least half a life filled with meaning and purpose. Half a life devoted to adding something beautiful to the world. Half a life where I can honestly say I finally learned how to live without compromise.

Getting Good

  • January 11, 2023

A New Year’s Resolution

I grew up in a household where neither parent held a university degree. But being a bright lad, it was expected – nay, demanded – that I’d go on to university. Which after a brief stint as an apprentice mechanic – the horror – I did.

What was it that changed my mind? Well, getting fired for breaking a Mercedes didn’t help. But what made 16 year old me go to sixth form college, instead of to another trade? Was it my mother’s incessant nagging? My father’s stern disappointment? Nope. I watched the movie ‘Road Trip’ and decided to go back to college so I could eventually go on to university and bang someone as hot as Amy Smart.

That is absolutely true, and one of the earliest life goals that I ticked off.

I went down the path that will be familiar to so many professional woodworkers that I know. I embarked on a professional career that paid very well and made me very fat and very miserable. One day I picked up a chisel – actually that’s not at all true, I picked up some plywood – and made a bookshelf. And things escalated.

I do not have a 7 year apprenticeship in a dark Northern European workshop behind me. I didn’t intern at some fancy school like Rowden (even if I wanted to, which I do, I can’t afford it anyway). In fact, I haven’t done so much as attend a weekend short course.

I am what people refer to as “self taught”, which is nonsense. I have an expansive woodworking library and far more hours logged on YouTube than I care to admit. (One of those is for learning the right way to do things, one of those is for learning the worst possible way to do things.)

But in a profession where you actually have to put tool to wood at some point, the only real way to learn is to do.

Which brings me to the subject of this sputum: I suck at blogging.

I read with great envy the superb blog at lost art press, and how easy it seems for CS and MF to churn out top tier writing on a daily basis. And so I avoid jotting down my own thoughts, because it’s such a struggle to do so.

A friend of mine who has a deep and intractable love affair with electrons has been visiting the workshop to learn some hand tool skills. Specifically, he wants to learn to hand cut dovetails.

When getting him set up for the first time he marvelled as I grabbed a panel saw and ripped a 1000mm length board in an arrow straight line. My first paid woodworking job was 9 full size doors made from blackbutt. To save money I bought the wood in the rough, and at the time all I had was a few hand tools: a couple of ancient Disston saws, a couple of ancient Stanley planes, and some cheap chisels.

“If you’d ripped 270 linear metres of blackbutt by hand, your sawing would be a marvel, too.”

Point is, my sawyering is ripper. And that’s because I have hand sawn more in one job than most woodworkers will do in several lifetimes.

CS and MF are career journalists. Doubtless they’ve written more words than most will ever read. Which would explain the apparent ease by which they churn out gold nugget after gold nugget.

If I’d written 270 linear metres of blog posts, my writing would be a marvel, too.

So here’s my new year’s resolution: to be as good at blogging as I am at sawing in a straight line. I make no apologies for the wavy lines along the way.

Project Summary: A Red Gum Chair

  • January 6, 2023

The first thing any non-woodworker does (and some woodworkers, too…) to decide the quality of a piece of furniture is to run their finger tips across its surface. “Ahhh“, they affirm, “smooooooth.”

The decision is instantly made: this piece is categorised as ‘good’.

The human finger tip is a remarkable thing, capable of detecting a change in a surface equivalent to the depth of a fingerprint ridge: somewhere in the region of 0.2 to 0.4mm. As far as I’m aware there is not yet any robot with this level of sensitivity.

But how to make wood smooth? How to achieve the seemingly impossible task of flattening a surface to a tolerance of 0.2mm? In an ideal world this would be done with a cutting tool. Cut wood is a wonderful thing, and a handplane in the right hands, and on the right wood, leaves a glassy finish that no other method can compete with.

With the right wood. Some woods are… disagreeable. Unfortunately these woods are often the most interesting to look at. It’s the figure that causes the beauty, and the problems. The changes in grain direction that result in a highly decorative piece also mean that any time a blade runs over it a smooth surface will be left where the grain is going the right way, and a torn surface will be left everywhere it goes the opposite direction.

Sometimes this can be tamed with a finely set plane with a steep blade angle. I have a smoothing plane of my own making with a mouth (the gap between the blade and the hole it pokes out of the bottom) of 0.3mm, and a bed angle of 55°. A standard metal bench plane might have a mouth of 2mm or more, and has a bed angle of 45°. These differences allow the plane to hold down the shaving as the plane severs it from the surface, and usually results in a smooth, glassy finish regardless of what the grain is doing.

But some wood is so cranky that nothing works. This Red Gum was the most difficult wood to work that I’ve ever encountered.

What I wanted for this chair was the legs be shaped with a tapered chamfer. This would reduce the apparent bulk of the legs without removing much material, leaving it at maximum strength while appearing to be delicate and fine. I’m a sucker for a tapered chamfer.

The chamfer creates a hard shadow line that draws the eye, while reducing the visual bulk of the legs. They catch the light in a way that a rounded edge will not. At any time the size of the feet you’ll see can be as little as 12mm. The actual width of the leg is closer to 50mm. It’s a nice trick to stop something looking blocky without making it weak.

But I couldn’t make it work with cutting tools. All that figure comes at a price, and that price is sanding.

It would have been quite easy to shrug, say ‘not today’, and use an electric router to round over all the edges. But this would have been an inferior option, and just didn’t sit well with the mental image I had of the finished piece.


“Finishing” a piece means more than just spraying it with lacquer and calling it done. Finishing is about creating a smooth, flat and level surface for the ‘finish’, whether that’s oil, wax, lacquer or shellac, to sit on. And this surface needs to be perfect, or the finish medium will highlight every one of the makers’ inadequacies. It . . .  is . . . very . . . time consuming. And, above all, sanding is boring as all hell.

Ones mind tends to wander. When it’s going well my mind settles on reliving my University sporting triumphs. That doesn’t last long, because there weren’t many. When it’s going badly I relive the regrets and mistakes of my life. There are more of those. That girl I treated badly when I was 19, and still feel guilty about. That abusive ex screaming at me in line at the airport. ‘This is Your Life’ as a slideshow of pain and misery.

When you’re sanding your way up through the grits you have to pay very careful attention to scratches. Each jump in grit – from 80 to 120, to 180, to 240, to 320, to 400 and on, the objective is to remove the scratches of the previous grit. You must follow the grain, because if you cross it you’ll rip fibres in half, exposing the end grain which will absorb finish and reflect light differently to the edge grain, and stick out like a sore thumb.

You need bright, raking light to see your shitty work. The low angle of the light highlights all the scratches you’ve missed. Because the labour of sanding requires, nay demands, perfection, I become obsessive over every flaw. When I get like this my self talk takes my father’s voice. “You moron. You’ll amount to nothing.” It’s amazing how some memories echo around your head, and more amazing still, the activities that trigger them.

I worked every surface over and over again, wearing through my finger tips, literally bleeding for my art. But when I was done I sat back and gazed upon my work, finally pleased with something I’ve done. My father piped up again. “You arrogant shit”. Some people can’t be pleased.


I began to apply the finish. Trying something new on a finished piece is almost always a mistake, but I’d done some test pieces with offcuts and genuinely thought it would work.

Aussie Oil is a fantastic product, one I’ve used on small items many times with beautiful results.

With three coats applied I was done for the day. I hung up the buffing pad to dry, put all my tools away, swept the floor and shut off the lights. My workshop has no windows so I was plunged into pitch darkness. I lifted up the roller door and the low evening sun streamed in.

I took a moment to savour the view: my bench with my tools hanging behind it, my bandsaw tucked away to the side to make room for the assembly table, and an almost halo light emanating off the chair I had just completed, angelic in its

“What the FUCK IS THAT?!”

I stood dumbstruck in disbelief at what I was seeing. I’d been sanding, sanding, sanding and sanding for 11 hours. The beautiful evening light captured perfectly the bumps and undulations I had left on the top of the backrest. I had sanded this chair to within an inch of its life. I had lost my damn finger tips. I ran my fingers over the back, willing it to not be true. I couldn’t feel a thing. Yet in the right light, and with the still wet finish, there it was, plain for all to see.

Resilience is a character trait that is essential to success in this (or really, any) business. And not one I have much to speak of. My crest was fallen. My ex’s voice piped up again. “You’re a fucking loser.”

I shut the door, and didn’t open it again for 5 days. 5 days of rumination. 5 days of ducking my wife’s questions on when I’d be taking it to the gallery. I knew what I would have to do, but just didn’t want to do it. I would have to scrape the finish off the entire thing and start sanding. Again.

When I finally summoned the courage to roll up the workshop door the finish was cured and dry. And I was underwhelmed. What had seemed to promising on the test piece had failed to materialise on the chair itself. It lacked the lustre I wanted, and was doing very little to highlight the extravagant grain I’d struggled so much with.

Oil finishes are easy to fix when there’s a problem. But Aussie Oil isn’t a normal oil, like Tung or Linseed. It is a mystery blend that contains ethanol and dries almost as fast as shellac, so I had no idea how it would respond to further applications after being sanded back. And given its lacklustre performance I was hesitant to blindly apply more and more layers and just hope for the best.

In the end I refinished the entire chair with Blonde Shellac, my usual weapon of choice, and I’m very glad that I did. The shellac brought out the grain and lustre that I was looking for. Catching light in all the right places without losing the feel of the wood.

I learned many things from finishing this chair: that sanding encourages tunnel vision, that seeking perfection is a fools errand, and that the combination of the two is not good for my mental health. I learned the value of a card scraper, which is faster and more effective than sanding at levelling a surface. I learned the importance of really checking before I race through to the end. I learned that even when there’s a major problem, all is not lost. Finally, I learned not to rush the finish process.


The Studley Tool Cabinet Build Part 1

  • January 6, 2023

The Contents

What makes it a *Studley* Cabinet?

There are hundreds of fine examples of a tool cabinet, both wall mounted and standing.

Rob Cosman has an enourmous standing cabinet that houses everything but the kitchen sink. Andy Rae has a beautiful and famous standing cabinet that houses his hand tools.

But neither could be called Studley inspired. So what makes a cabinet a Studley Cabinet?

  • Visual Density

  • Layering

  • Artistic Flourishes

  • Proportion

Visual Density

Visual density has the be the most important. It’s the staggering amount of stuff that’s immediately striking. And when you consider that it’s also a functional tool cabinet for a working man it makes it all the more remarkable that all of these tools are readily accessible.

Looking at Andy Rae’s by contrast, the doors are quite sparse. There’s large spaces between chisels on the racks, between the marking gauges and screw drivers. In an area roughly the same size Any Rae has about 20 tools, and Studley has about 150.

Layering

Next up is the layering, with use of fold down/up/away racks. There are none in Andy Rae’s. Rob Cosman’s bench chisel rack folds up to reveal a carving chisels rack. But because the bench chisel rack has a solid back, it doesn’t contribute to a feeling of density.

One of my favourite – and most mind blowing, for me at least – features of the Studley cabinet is the skeleton racks for holding tools, but allowing a view to the next layer. The Studley cabinet is the only place I’ve seen it.

Artistic Flourishes

Finally, there’s the embellishment.

There are zero – zero – examples of tool cabinets with this kind of artistry. Without the immense density of inlays, ebony accents and contrasting colours, the Studley cabinet might be just another tool rack.

Artistic Flourishes

My carcass will be made from QLD Silver Ash. I went to the lumber yard to get some Ironbark, a lovely deep reddish gum not unlike the mahogany that Studley’s is made from. And what shone like a beacon was a stack of shimmering blonde Silver Ash. I’m not normally one for light woods, but this immediately caught my eye. So, blonde wood it is.

The accents will be provided by ebonised woods (I do not possess the budget for ebony) and bits and pieces of my beloved Red Gum, my favourite wood (and I have mountains of offcuts to find a use for…) will be used for toggles and dividers to contrast with the black and blonde.

Proportions

The Studley cabinet is actually quite small. 19 1/2″ (about 500mm) wide when closed, and 39″ (about 1000mm) tall. When opened it makes a roughly 1000mm square, about 120mm deep.

I’ve decided to make mine to the same dimensions, with the same space allotted for drawers.

In my mind, it just wouldn’t be a Studley cabinet without following this form. And the limitations of the size will force some ingenuity with the tool holders.

$10 Dovetail Chisel

  • January 6, 2023

Ode to a ham-fisted oaf

Tragedy hath befallen the Lunniss Furniture workshop. One of my beloved, and *expensive* (important later) Japanese chisels snapped.

Now I must iterate that this was entirely my fault. Japanese chisels – in fact, most Japanese edge tools – are two piece of steel laminated together. The top is a soft steel, and the back is a very hard and very thin layer that forms the cutting edge.

The soft steel makes it easy to create a razor sharp cutting edge freehand on waterstones. However, the hard layer is brittle. And I was getting impatient and wailing on a 6mm chisel with a 1kg lump hammer. Lesson learned.

I agonised over rushing out to buy a replacement, but there are two factors at play: I have on order a set of the finest chisels money can buy (watch this space), and Japanese chisels are not inexpensive. I am loathe to drop real money on a stopgap.

I tried restoring the chisel by breaking off the broken bit and grinding a new bevel, but I was left with the stubby end of the chisel which was too thick to fit into the narrow corners of a dovetail.

So I did something rash, and splashed out the princely sum of $10 on a Stanley POS* chisel.

After grinding the bevels so they’re narrow enough to clear the sides of a dovetail (with, I will admit, zero care) and honing at 25∘, fuck me dead if it isn’t the best cutting chisel I’ve ever used. I’m currently questioning everything I thought about life.

So I did the same to the 18mm chisel, with much more care that time around.

I can scarcely believe how well these cut. They’re but ugly and I definitely could have done a prettier job, but it really isn’t worth the time when a half-arsed job produces results like this.

So yeah. If you’re in need of some dovetail chisels, instead of spending $180 on a Japanese chisel, there’s always the $10 option.

The Studley Tool Cabinet

  • January 6, 2023

An Obsession


I recently went on my honeymoon, and to occupy my woodworking brain while a few thousand kays from my tools I took two books with me: Honest Labour, and Virtuoso: The Tool Cabinet and Workbench of HO Studley.

I didn’t read a single word of Honest Labour. To say the Studley Tool Cabinet captured my imagination is a savage understatement. I pored over this book obsessively, at every spare moment, just trying to fathom the depth of skill required to conceive of, and execute, this obscene piece of functional art.

And, of course, the wheels started turning about making my own Studley Cabinet. Especially when I reflected on this monstrosity: a ‘prototype’ (unfinished) that I’ve been looking at ever since I got sick of rummaging around in a chest every time I needed something.

Clearly something needs to be done.

‘Just get it done’.

The usual advice from other woodworkers is that a professional has no time to waste on extravagant shop fixtures: just get it done, and get to work. I get it. I don’t have time to waste on extravagant shop fixtures.

But tool chests of old, while usually innocuous on the outside, were fabulously over the top on the inside:

These elaborate and intricately designed chest interiors served as a portfolio to a shop master: this journeyman has some skill, and something to prove it. So investing the time and effort into elaborate marquetry was not a waste, as it led directly to employment.

But wall hung tool cabinets, for some reason, seem to have escaped this sort of treatment. Most examples I’ve found – both modern and old – are best described as… utilitarian.

I chose these examples because they represent some truly excellent craftmanship. None of them are “bad” by any means. Well, apart from mine. In fact, a couple are rather good. Yet none come close to artistry of the Studley Cabinet. Every time I look at these now all I see is wasted space and a lack of imagination. Which is hilarious, because my own example is the worst offender of the half-arsed “just get it done” mentality.

So, if I invest $30,000 of shop hours into a tool cabinet, will that time be wasted, or will it signal to potential clients that they’re in good hands? Time will tell.

In the absence of a showroom, all I have to show prospective customers is photographs and a flash business card. Hopefully this will provide something they can touch, and perhaps impart a fraction of the awe that the Studley cabinet imparts on me.

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