I run a shop like I read books. My wife makes fun of me because I never read just one book at a time I read anywhere from three to eight at a time, they are scattered about in different places. I have one or two in the bedroom, one in the living room, one in the bathroom, one in the car, one in the bag I take to work with me. I have always surrounded myself with books, and yes I can keep them all straight and remember whats happening in each when I pick them up. I guess that is just how I tick. In the workshop I follow similar habits, not to the extent of my book fetish, but I almost never have just one project going on. Typically I will have two or three in the works at the same time, all at varying stages. I keep separate notes and plans on each and that helps keep me on track, but it keeps my momentum going. While Im waiting for a glue up to dry on one project, I can be breaking down stock for the next, or placing another coat of finish on whats almost done. This way inertia doesnt stop, I just roll from workpiece to workpiece.
I absolutely do not have the room for that in the Wood Shop Jr. I have to work on one thing at a time. Im either set up for sharpening, or Im not. Im either set up for dovetailing, or Im not. You get the idea. So I face something that I havent really ever had to deal with much in the past. A kind of project hangover. After finishing the Joinery Bench, my mind, at least my rational mind, wanted to jump into work on another project, apparently the rest of me just wanted to recover, get some extra sleep and put my feet up for most of the week. I had lost inertia. My rational mind was desperate by yesterday, how can I get the momentum back?
I decided that what I needed to do was take a little time this weekend and not worry about the projects with the deadlines, but just focus on something simple to kick start the drive again. I needed to spend some time getting reacquainted with some old friends and get to meet a new one. As you may have read, we are moving the family into an apartment building soon, a nice big 3 bedroom apartment not the little 2 bedroom duplex upstairs we are in now, but there will be no space for a shop, no garage, no basement, no cubby hole at the bottom of the stairs. So my father has offered to me the use of his outdoor shed as hes going to move the shop he was using it for to the basement of their house. The plus, I get more room, room enough to set up all the bigger tools I used to use a lot. The minus, Im setting up shop . . . again.
Anyway I went and worked up a little sweat there this morning, and I started by reassembling an old friend. My hybrid workbench combining Chris Schwarzs 175 Dollar Workbench and his take on the English or Nicholson Workbench. If I was a better man, like some bloggers out there, I would have a name for her, but I think I like her just the way she is, I suppose for all the times I said "come on baby," today Baby might as well be her name.
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