Monday, April 27, 2009

Spring Show and Sale



This weekend, May 1-3, there's a great arts event going on at the Globe Studios in Kitchener. It's their spring show and sale and a number of great artists will have works available for purchase. Jewelry, bookbinding, pottery, painting, sculpture, and photography will all be on offer along with some nice woodworking ;)


This is another spalted slab that is now a little coffee table.


The top is just a beautiful piece of wood. It's hard to capture it in a picture, so why not pop down to the Globe on the weekend!



Monday, April 20, 2009

Cleaned Up Good Wood

So I cleaned up that nice spalted maple slab and it's looking pretty fantastic. It's going to be a bench, but don't worry, those aren't the legs, it's just sitting on my workbench!


These are the the legs!


Curly maple is one of those woods that sort of makes your eyes bug out when you look at it. These pieces of wood are very curly and I think they'll make a great base to the bench. The curl comes from the tree growing in a wavy pattern that when planed causes the light to bounce off and reflect in the striped pattern you see above.

I also just got a whole bunch of poplar today. Poplar in my opinion is quite an under appreciated wood. It can vary in colour from purple to white to green and brown, and it can have streaks and grain patterns that are both unique and beautiful. It's a soft hardwood that works easily and responds well to your saw and chisels. A good wood.


Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Good Wood and a Little Lamp

I picked up some nice wood this afternoon and I'm excited to get working on it. First up is a big spalted maple slab. I've got it sitting on my workbench right now and it looks kind of right...

My electric thickness planer is definitely not wide enough to handle it, so it looks like I get to use my hand planes!

I also got some nice walnut slabs that will make some nice coffee tables.


I also just finished up a nice little fir table lamp. I had found this giant 12x4 piece of fir in a factory where I had my old workshop and had been lugging it around for about a year now. It's a beautiful piece of quarter sawn lumber and combined with a shoji paper screen I think it makes a nice little lamp.



Saturday, April 11, 2009

Walnut Trees

I finished up my first project in my new workshop today, a curvaceous walnut lamp. I really liked working with the walnut, a wood that responded well to my planes and my saws.


Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Shop..ing

This is my new workshop located at the Globe Studios in Kitchener. I just moved in last weekend and I finally got everything sorted and built and ready to go. I'm starting on some lamps tomorrow and I'm finishing off a little shoji cabinet too.

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Respect

I was having a talk the other day with this old Japanese guy that I know, Junji, and it was kind of interesting. I'm a linguistic nut, so I was asking how to pronounce some of the names of the saws, planes, and chisels I use. When I asked him about the word shokunin (which apparently I was pronouncing like an Italian) he said "I like this word shokunin. It is a good word". As a general rule I'd say I like people who have an opinion about the quality of a word. We talked a bit more about the shokunin and shoji, the famous Japanese paper screens and doors. As a westerner you look at the delicate pieces of wood covered in translucent paper and think, "Man, those must be breaking all time...with kids poking holes in them...what a pain those must be". The first thing Junji says is that "you must respect the door"...I mean, respect for a door...how foreign a concept is that! You know though, I like this idea of respecting a door, and I like the idea of building something in such a way that it requires and deserves your respect. It almost forces you to shift your viewpoint, because if you don't you will end up simply destroying the objects in your world. Kind of like a philosophy lesson in a window screen...


This is a Japanese marking knife. The thing that's so special about it is that it's made from two pieces of steel that are laminated together, one hard, and one soft. The cutting edge is made from the hard steel and allows you to sharpen it until it's like a rasor. The soft steel also has its own purpose, providing strength to support the brittle hard steel. On their own neither would make a good blade, but together this technique produces some of the finest cutting tools available.

Apparently after the Samurai were banned in Japan all the top swordmakers were going to be put out of business, but instead of closing up shop they turned to making plane blades and knives for woodworkers. The knowledge gained over a lifetime of forging is usually passed on from father to son in the blade making world, with the family's secrets and special techniques learned through decades of experience handed down. The shokunin respects the skill of the blade makers by respecting their tools and using them to their full potential.

One day I hope to consider myself a shokunin, but it seems I still have a lot to learn. When my new marking knife arrived in the mail yesterday I immediately set about wrapping the blade with cotton twine to make a handle. Japanese tools seem to require a bit of care and attention, you need to set them up first to make them work the best way that they can for you. While wrapping the knife I got in a rush, stopped being smart, and started being stupid. Instead of clamping the knife down I started yanking on the string with one hand while holding the blade in the other...yup, it slips and I end up sitting in the hospital for 6 hours waiting to get four stitches in my knuckle...

Next time I think I'm going to show that knife a little more respect...