Chris152":1l0jifzl said:
When I look at the cost of wood, I try to compare it to the other things I spend my money on. And given the return the wood gives me, I find it to not be so expensive.
It's sad that the success rate in hobbyist furniture making is so extremely low, based on what I've seen on this forum only a small percentage of enthusiastic beginners will ever complete a straightforward but high quality project like this. And I suspect that sourcing timber is a big part of the explanation.
We've all gotten used to the easy convenience of modern purchasing, where everything is just a click away. Buying hardwood isn't like that, and for many it comes as a shock. But unless you can get out of your comfort zone and fix the timber sourcing problem, then your woodworking hobby will come to a grinding halt.
You can watch all the YouTube videos there are, agonise over this plane versus that, witter on for England about sharpening; but at the risk of stating the blindingly obvious, without decent quality wood you'll never make much progress as a woodworker!
Personally I don't believe reclaimed timber provides the answer. It has it's part to play, but more when you're a few rungs up the experience ladder. At the very beginning stick to "unsorted redwood" from a proper supplier (ie not B&Q), and then maybe a year down the road locate a good timber yard and build up hardwood supplies in different thicknesses of just two, or at the most three, sensible and versatile timbers like European Oak, American Cherry, or Ash.
Mind you, I can say this until I'm blue in the face, it won't make a blind bit of difference. It'll still be the case that for every ten newbies who fetch up on this forum, after a couple of years eight or nine of them will have crashed and burnt without ever having made anything of any substance. That's just the way it seems to go.