Tom, thank you for this. I was a solicitor until I got a flu injection. 3 weeks later, I lost my hearing, the use of my hands and from the knee down. It has taken years to start to function physically. When the doctors asked to describe something I had always wanted to do, I said woodwork - girls weren’t allowed to do woodwork/metalwork when I went to, secondary school! What I am trying to say is that I am stubborn and will do everything I can to try an learn enough woodwork to please myself. The specialists and physios think that working with hand saws and planes will be very good for my recovery. So here I am. My mental health suffered terribly while I was very I’ll as opppsed to just “ill”! I am quite reclusive in person, so I have to get help fromYT or these forums. unfortunately my father was someone who had never met a tool that liked him, so it’s all learning by myself. It mseems a lot of this will be easier when I know how I work. I am very greatful for your insights, as it gives me ideas for myself. Do you mind if I contact you through PM for advice, or just through here? Cheers, RobynMy comment about the frame saw is just an observation,
and no doubt there maybe some who have one on the wall behind them,
but it should be evident whether they use it or not.
I wouldn't go as far to say that there is any singular channel out there,
that caters for nearly everyone.
For a hobby, hand focused workshop, a lot may depend on your strengths and
your procurement of timber, and the work you wish to do.
Change one of those things to suit yourself in particular, and you might have some
conflicting views, different methodology, or other ways of doing things, split vs saw etc...
I can give you my personal take to try and explain
My supply of semi precious iroko timber is from skips, so have to fill and laminate timbers which is more faff than most folks need to do, i.e wouldn't deem softwood
as worth this kind of work involved,
and have a big emphasis on hand planes, and the bench for efficiency and techniques sake, and also time/fatigue wise.
Some folks with machinery i.e what someone equipped with half of Cosman's machines might own,
might deem this the most work should they be getting slabs by the truckload.
I don't need to remove vast amounts of precious material, so might be a bit of a waste of space for a hobbiest to own a P/T
Likewise the same sorta thinking can be said for hand work also.
Along with a bandsaw, which I originally sought out to resaw guitar soundboards and make a bench beforehand, lol!
I've got a tablesaw since, as I always have particular rebating cuts to remove putty, which cannot be reasonably done in the time I wish to spend by hand.
If I happened to find some alternative cheap timber worthwhile of utilizing,
I might have say, put particular effort into getting a planer thicknesser, or even by hand ala Follansbee! but as I don't have a supply of trees nor planks which I've stumbled across, I have no need to delve down that route...yet!
I've certainly got enough timber to keep me going, a decades worth of collecting, so I can cross that path of needing timber and delving differing paths in time.
Other folks might not have a stash of material, so a forever plodding clear path might not be as influential on the tools.
So it may also be a case of what/who you happen to stumble across in the mix also, might slightly influence what you end up doing,
and get what you wish to know from whoever the horse who's talking is, provided you can actually verify what the end result is.
All the best
Tom
Thanks - I will use him if I get saw that need to be resorted and/or sharpened. Thanks very much for the referral. RobynI have used Jakob in the past via post, he does fine work.
Tom, thank you for this. I was a solicitor until I got a flu injection. 3 weeks later, I lost my hearing, the use of my hands and from the knee down. It has taken years to start to function physically. When the doctors asked to describe something I had always wanted to do, I said woodwork - girls weren’t allowed to do woodwork/metalwork when I went to, secondary school! What I am trying to say is that I am stubborn and will do everything I can to try an learn enough woodwork to please myself. The specialists and physios think that working with hand saws and planes will be very good for my recovery. So here I am. My mental health suffered terribly while I was very I’ll as opppsed to just “ill”! I am quite reclusive in person, so I have to get help fromYT or these forums. unfortunately my father was someone who had never met a tool that liked him, so it’s all learning by myself. It mseems a lot of this will be easier when I know how I work. I am very greatful for your insights, as it gives me ideas for myself. Do you mind if I contact you through PM for advice, or just through here? Cheers, Robyn
Wow, Tom, too much for me to respond too right now. Tomorrow is really busy, so it will be Wednesday before I get back to this! Cheers, RobynSorry to hear of this Robyn, that sounds very tough going!
I couldn't say if I'd be worth talking to, as I don't have much experience with handsawing
as I rarely cut any joinery, nor dovetails, and I don't really think I have a philosophy that makes sense.
Slightly way off subject novel for folks to skip....
Not that I don't intend to do more handsawing.... eventually, just that I've got psoriatic arthritis or some sort, along with fatigue and whatnot, so have slight OCD for anything non efficient,
A huge contradiction for someone who does things with laborious tediousness like plugging old timbers occasionally.
Not that I envision myself doing that forever, just scrimping for now.
Never made wooden things worth talking about, and anything I do, is work on the workshop to make it more hospitable. (yet I don't really have a suitable warm environment for working)
Being in a rented place, never know how long you've got.
I intended to have a setup where I could have a lot of flexibility in that sorta sense, but just about now at this stage, after decade of collecting lol
Most of that is timber, which Isn't a problem as it will disappear eventually,
and my machines have a place now, since most of the timber is slightly toxic /a sensitizer to work with, with an auto immmune thing I wouldn't want it to be all over me, so I don't use the tablesaw often,
The large 24"bandsaw, isn't that bad by comparison, even without extraction.
(briefly had a 20" lemon prior, bought originally for luthiere purposes, dustier by comparison, before even getting into hand tools,
....until I heard Steve Maskery mention dovetails and Rob Cosman!
This at the same time when my luthiere DVD Mentor John Mayes,
had gotten very ill from the sawdust, so that put an end to wanting to make dust
anymore.
After using hand planes I wanted skill rather than sanding jigs.
Is that enough contradictions or what?
Just plodding along really, and can write a list of things needs doing before any
woodworking,. I just can't make plans anymore, as I'm too much of a flake.
Welcome to discuss matters via PM conversation , but I think an open discussion might benefit others, as there's lots of folks who have various ailments and likely have something to add.
end of the OCD sickley wannabe woodworking novel of contradictions.
Just sayin I have no experience in a conventional sense of buying timber
and being efficient with hand tools in this regard.
I only have a fine crosscut panel, and two backsaws that I've sharpened and used.
No fine dovetail saws, as I need some files, and thats down the road yet before I do any of that.
I think the subject of sawing is possibly the most personal of all compared to any other tools.
A "show us your saws" thread might be quite revealing and interesting in that sense.
Tom
Tom, thank you for this. I was a solicitor until I got a flu injection. 3 weeks later, I lost my hearing, the use of my hands and from the knee down.
A “pull saw” being a Japanese saw or some thing different? Actually it’s my biggest fear that no matter how much I practic, I won’t be able to make straight cuts!! Time will tell.As a confirmed wood butcher, I left sawing alone for many years as I couldn't make a straight cut if my life depended on it. At around 50, I tried a pull saw, OMG, what a revelation.
Hi Craig,Good grief Robyn, how awful.
But you are the second person I have heard had bad reactions from a flu injection. The other was a good friend and walk leader, Nik - really strong and fast walker. His flu injection about 16 months ago attacked the nerve sheaths in his lower spine, and has left him wheelchair bound for the rest of his life.
Apparently these dreadful reactions are exceptionally rare (1 in a million), but that is no consolation to you or my mate Nik.
Craig
I now have both Japanese and German made pull saws. They have the same teeth profiles, parallel not offset like my heirloom Record Ridgeways and Spear & Jacksons.A “pull saw” being a Japanese saw or some thing different? Actually it’s my biggest fear that no matter how much I practic, I won’t be able to make straight cuts!! Time will tell.
If the saw is correctly set and sharp it will cut straight. The only challenge is to get it started heading in the right direction and that challenge is the same for both western and Japanese saws.A “pull saw” being a Japanese saw or some thing different? Actually it’s my biggest fear that no matter how much I practic, I won’t be able to make straight cuts!! Time will tell.
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