condeesteso
Established Member
Was just reading one of my favourite books on our subject, and I had this idea. Between us all we have read many books on our specialist topics. So if we had to create a library where the single best on each major topic was reasonably agreed on (that may get tricky) we'd have a list of the core basic library in our field.
An example is Turning - some months ago I wanted just one book (as a start-point, or maybe just one) and a vast majority said Keith Rowley: Woodturning, a Foundation Course. I have that book and I too would recommend it as a very good starting point.
This could actually become quite useful as a reference for any interest specialism in working wood.
I start by nominating the Keith Rowley, and one more. It may help if you say the topic, then the book, then briefly why (sort of like this) - but do it your way! These ain't rules
Basic Woodturning: Keith Rowley 'Woodturning - a Foundation course'
Easy to read, good pics, very clear, ideal to get you started
Work Benches: Chris Schwarz 'Workbenches'
Because he's done loads of research that means I don't have to. He's passionate and it shows, and he really does use them. Plus he is sensitive to the fact we don't all have a grand to blow on a bench.
I might have sneeked G Hack's hand planes book in, but I've done my one (the KR was a re-recommendation). Someone else will surely nominate that anyway.
If there are differences of opinion, we can have 2 on a topic surely?? It's all meant to be quite casual and useful. Is there a book out there on DC transformers for example?... sorry
see what you think.... and wait til we get to sharpening - oh boy
An example is Turning - some months ago I wanted just one book (as a start-point, or maybe just one) and a vast majority said Keith Rowley: Woodturning, a Foundation Course. I have that book and I too would recommend it as a very good starting point.
This could actually become quite useful as a reference for any interest specialism in working wood.
I start by nominating the Keith Rowley, and one more. It may help if you say the topic, then the book, then briefly why (sort of like this) - but do it your way! These ain't rules
Basic Woodturning: Keith Rowley 'Woodturning - a Foundation course'
Easy to read, good pics, very clear, ideal to get you started
Work Benches: Chris Schwarz 'Workbenches'
Because he's done loads of research that means I don't have to. He's passionate and it shows, and he really does use them. Plus he is sensitive to the fact we don't all have a grand to blow on a bench.
I might have sneeked G Hack's hand planes book in, but I've done my one (the KR was a re-recommendation). Someone else will surely nominate that anyway.
If there are differences of opinion, we can have 2 on a topic surely?? It's all meant to be quite casual and useful. Is there a book out there on DC transformers for example?... sorry
see what you think.... and wait til we get to sharpening - oh boy