
Giving advice is a difficult thing, for me at least. I dont feel that my judgement should be used to replace your own in anything, and that includes woodworking. I definitely found my way in this world by reading as much as I can by as many different people as I can and then just taking my feet and stepping out there. Tackling projects where I feel Im in over my head and learning from them.
There is not one single thing Ive built, ever, that I have felt like I have every aspect mastered. Its important to realize that if you are starting out in this avocation. Realize that everyone started out somewhere simple.
The is one thing, one indispensable thing, that I believe every woodworker should have in their arsenal. A sketchbook or journal. This one thing will take you places you never thought were possible. Leonardo DaVinci was a smart man for many reasons, but I think his brilliance boiled down into the fact that he kept his now famous notebooks or journals. Inside them he packed his ideas, dreams, and studies. He didnt make those notebooks for others to see. (if he had then reverse writing would probably not be one of the amazing things about them) He created those notebooks for himself. They were a testing ground for his many, many ideas.
But like all mythological gods, a Muse is fickle and temperamental They choose their own time of inspiration on their own terms. It can come while you are driving, eating supper, shoveling snow, or participating in your local fight club. (OK so I broke the first rule) Often if you dont capitalize on the inspiration in the moment, the clarity of it gets lost and jumbled
My first real woodworking project. Its a four player chess board based on a regular chessboard plan I found in a magazine. In the end it was nothing more than a bunch of maple and aspen squares glued down to a sheet of 1/4" MDF and framed with red oak. The implications of four people playing chess at the same time intrigued me enough to build this, but to this day I have never found three other people to sit and play with me. |
Concept drawing for a bed side table with sinewy bending legs and Maloof chair joints for the lower shelf. |
"I . . . cant . . . draw,"
to which I respond
"Bullpucky"
A take on a set of bunk beds inspired by some timber frame construction I saw. |
Some sketches for a desktop credenza where I wanted to highlight the the species pine. |
Its like carrying an exterior hard drive for my brain.
Ratione et Passionis
Oldwolf
P.S. As a follow up the great Paul Sellers keeps a series of notebooks / journals. You can read about his take HERE and HERE and keep following over there to see more.
Here I am trying to work out the viability of joinery, grain directions, and carving patterns with a Medieval Hutch Chest that works as a drop front tool chest. |
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