Issue 485 Archives - Woodworking | Blog | Videos | Plans | How To https://www.woodworkersjournal.com/weekly-issue/issue-485/ America's Leading Woodworking Authority Tue, 11 Jul 2017 14:04:53 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.0.7 Anne Briggs Bohnett: Woodworking and Farming in Seattle https://www.woodworkersjournal.com/anne-briggs-bohnett/ Tue, 27 Jun 2017 15:20:10 +0000 http://rocklerwj.wpengine.com/?p=38231 Anne Briggs Bohnett is a Seattle-area woodworker and farmer, with an affinity for traditional crafts and traditional styles.

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When Anne Briggs Bohnett moved to the Seattle area from Asia a couple of years ago, not only did she not know anyone locally except for her husband and his family, but she also didn’t know anything about woodworking or farming. Today, just five years later, she manages the woodworking program at Pratt Fine Arts Center, owns and runs a four-acre farm just outside Seattle, writes regularly for Furniture and Cabinetmaking magazine and is currently authoring a book on bootstrap woodworking and farming.

Through a lot of time spent researching woodworking and gardening at her local library, going to local woodworking club meetings, and scouring social media for other “locals” with similar interests, Anne suddenly found herself in the midst of what she describes as a vibrant and inspiring community in Seattle. She found a woodworking and gardening mentor, 96-year-old Frank, who, after 60 years at it, still spends every rainy day working in his woodshop.

Anne, raised by missionaries, spent much of her young life in Asia. She spent time studying at Peking University (the Chinese equivalent of Harvard), then enrolled in a bilingual Bible school in Taiwan. When she moved back to the States, she initially was initially looking for a job that would take her back to Asia, which led to what she describes as an “entry-level, soul-crushing position” where she “hated sitting in front of a computer screen, because I was not wired to sit still. Ever.”

In looking for alternative ways to live and make money, Anne hearkened back to childhood experiences visiting her grandfather in Minnesota in the summer, where she spent much time in his woodshop. “He taught me to hold a hammer when I was three,” she said.

 

She still uses her grandfather’s hand plane on every piece she makes “so that a piece of my grandpa can be in every piece,” she said. In general, Anne likes using antique tools, thinking about the story they hold of the things they have made over the years. She also prefers traditional methods of working and traditional design: rather than creating something trendy, “If I’m going to take the time to make something, I want it to last,” she said.

Of course, some of the traditional methods she uses are created by circumstance: shortly after she and her husband bought the farm where they now live, which came with a shop, the roof in that shop building started to collapse. “I needed to move all the hand tools and things that could rust into the house,” Anne said. “I went from a 1,000 square foot shop into an 8’ x 10’ L-shaped laundry room.”

The farm also provides ample opportunity to practice woodworking. “There’s constant opportunity for projects. The goats are always breaking fences; we need new barn doors or new chicken coops; I just built a greenhouse.”

In Anne’s view, cultivating a garden space on a farm is similar to taking rough lumber and co-creating with nature, as she describes it – and she has an affinity for woodworking, gardening “and other traditional crafts that are somewhat less popular today.”

She also sources that rough lumber locally, with a preference for the walnut, cherry and maple that grow in the Seattle area. The wood is dried in her barn: “sticker drying, with a healthy dose of goat poop on top,” she said.

The walnut for a recent Roorkee chair project was harvested from a tree that blew down in a storm just 20 miles from where she built the chair. Anne also salvaged some branches from the tree for making bowls and spoons.

She built the chair in conjunction with Jason Thigpen of Texas Heritage Woodworking, in part to show off the leatherwork he created. “It was a super fun and challenging project, and we brought both our own unique skill sets to create the finished project,” Anne said.

In general, her favorite projects overall have been those she has created with other people, and she credits much of her success as a woodworker to collaborations, formal or informal, with friends like Jason, Kim McIntyre, Andrea Ramsay, Chris Kuehn and Todd Nebel, all friends she initially met on Instgram. Her favorite project to date is an oak writing desk she built with Jonathan Schwenessen and Caleb Nolen while spending a week with the folks at Homestead Heritage in Waco, Texas.

She has also collaborated with several tool manufacturers to create what Anne calls a “Community Tool Chest”: filled with donated tools, this box lives at Pratt Fine Arts Center, where Anne manages the woodworking shop and classes and is currently working on getting a hand tool woodworking program off the ground. “When I first started amassing more followers on Instagram and subscribers to my blog, I didn’t feel equipped to answer many of the questions I was getting. People would ask me ‘What tools should I buy? What tool should I use for this?’ Here I was, a beginner woodworker myself, just sharing the journey, and far be it from me to pretend to be an expert at anything I wasn’t. So I created the Community Tool Chest, a collection of tools and a list of ‘experts’ I could refer people to when I got questions above my pay grade.” The community tool chest gives the students in all of Pratt’s woodworking classes the opportunity to try out tools that are properly tuned for various tasks as they learn hand tool woodwork.

Community and tradition are both important parts of Anne’s woodworking and her life. Although she brings her own natural abilities to woodworking, she also extremely values those who will help her through projects by connecting through Instagram, email and FaceTime. And, with her woodworking and farming activities, she’s on her way to “my dream job with my dream farm in my dream life.”

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Coffee Can Hose Couplings https://www.woodworkersjournal.com/coffee-can-hose-couplings/ Tue, 27 Jun 2017 15:15:42 +0000 http://rocklerwj.wpengine.com/?p=38285 This reader has found a way to recycle his old coffee cans to upgrade his woodworking shop's dust collection system.

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Don’t discard your metal coffee cans in the 11- to 15-ounce sizes. Here’s a simple upcycle for them in the shop! If you cut off their bottoms and inside top flanges with a can opener, they’re just the right size to form sturdy and smooth couplings between sections of 4″ dust collector hose. They’re useful in a pinch or as your whole-shop solution, and you won’t spend a penny of your woodworking budget on them.

– Phil Hartman
Gunter, Texas

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Getting Use Out of Old Tubes https://www.woodworkersjournal.com/getting-use-old-tubes/ Tue, 27 Jun 2017 14:35:42 +0000 http://rocklerwj.wpengine.com/?p=38282 This reader found a way to use some old bike inner tubes to help keep his workshop a little bit cleaner.

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I cut up old inner tubes into cross sections that make handy, stretchable wraps for power tool cords and lengths of rope. Both bicycle and motorcycle inner tubes of various sizes work well, depending on how large you need the rubber wraps to be.

– Tim Wipperfurth
Minocqua, Wisconsin

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RYOBI ONE+ Hybrid Score™ Wireless Speakers https://www.woodworkersjournal.com/ryobi-one-hybrid-score-wireless-speaker-set/ Tue, 27 Jun 2017 13:01:06 +0000 http://rocklerwj.wpengine.com/?p=38266 Thanks to the capabilities of Bluetooth, the days of running wires between audio controllers and speakers is almost a bygone necessity.

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Thanks to the capabilities of Bluetooth®, the days of running wires between audio controllers and speakers is almost a bygone necessity. And with Ryobi’s new ONE+ Hybrid Score™ Wireless Speaker Set, you can set up a wireless sound system anywhere you need it — in the shop, around the house, at poolside or for yard parties.

This two-piece set (4.3 lbs. total weight) contains one P760 Primary Wireless Speaker and one P761 Secondary Wireless Speaker. By connecting your Bluetooth-enabled device first to a Primary Speaker, you now have the ability to connect up to four additional Primary or Secondary Speakers instantly using SKAA® technology. Note that only five speakers can be connected together within the network, and you must have the Primary Speaker in order to transmit audio.

Each 1.7 lb. speaker features a high-quality driver and passive radiator, so you will always receive clear, robust sound. With up to 150 ft. of SKAA range from a Primary Speaker, these speakers can be placed virtually anywhere in the home or elsewhere and stream through walls and floors. You can control volume levels easily with independent volume control on every speaker, or, control each volume level simultaneously right from your mobile device. The P760 Primary Speaker also features an FM tuner, as well as an integrated auxiliary port for direct connection. The speakers are compatible with any RYOBI ONE+ 18-Volt battery (sold separately), but they also include two AC power adaptors that allow for endless runtime.

Ryobi’s ONE+ Hybrid Score™ Wireless Speaker Set (Model P765) sells for $199. Individual Secondary Speakers (Model P761) sell for $99. See them at your local Home Depot® store, or click here.

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What Kind of Chairs Are These? https://www.woodworkersjournal.com/what-kind-of-chairs-are-these/ Tue, 27 Jun 2017 13:00:37 +0000 http://rocklerwj.wpengine.com/?p=38261 I'm repairing and refinishing these chairs. Can you help me identify their origins?

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Someone asked me to repair and varnish his chairs. I was surprised when I saw what was underneath: springs and strips of metal! I have no idea where these chairs were made or how old they are. I live in Quebec, and the chairs probably were made in Canada. Can you provide any information about them? – Richard Theoret

Tim Inman: Upholstery like this has been used from pre-WW I until today. So, this underpinning is not a very good dating tool. Almost certainly, your chairs can be located in the era of the Grand Rapids furniture heyday. There are excellent books showing the furniture of this time period. One I have in my library that gets a lot of use is “Grand Rapids Furniture: The Story of America’s Furniture City” by Christian G. Carron. Old Sears catalogs would be a good reference, too.

 

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Table Saw Fence System https://www.woodworkersjournal.com/table-saw-fence-system/ Tue, 27 Jun 2017 11:00:21 +0000 http://rocklerwj.wpengine.com/?p=38272 This reader sent in a video of his homemade table saw fence, which he really loves. Watch his video and take a look at some of his drawings.

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I created the easiest, steadiest, strongest, fully functional homemade table saw fence system. It’s really simple and I think that anyone can build it in no time!

– Elias Stratakos

See the Gallery Below:

Click here to see Elias’ video.

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