Hi all, after "intending" to learn more about woodwork a year or two back and not getting round to it I'm beginning to make a bit of an effort, and am really enjoying what I'm trying so far.
I've kindly been given some bits of oak and mahogany (the latter being some old bits of parquet floor) and have begun messing with them to practise joints etc.
I've also invested in a rather nice new dovetail saw (Veritas 20tpi) which is a real joy to use!
Now I do have a set of chisels, but they are basically ones that I got cheap from B&Q while doing up the house a few years back ("Magnussen" brand). They don't have bevelled edges so I'm finding them awkward to use for the dovetails I'm doing currently.
I don't have an overall specific type of chisels that I need as such, but I'd like to get some that are better quality than the ones I have, and are bevelled on the sides if nothing else. They'd be for general use though.
Budget would need to be less than £100 really, but I've no idea what's good & what isn't. Are Marples ones worth considering?
Have also treated myself to a kit today so I can use my little mini lathe (Sieg C3) for turning wood, so I can't wait to start trying that! I don't have tools for turning yet though.
It's the wife's birthday later this month and ideally I'd like to make her a simple & small box of some description. It doesn't matter what, but something an amateur could take on. I've got the wood I mentioned, but also a large beam of some hardwood that I think may perhaps also be mahogany (about 10' x 6' x 2' at a rough guess), which I can use bits of.
I'd wondered about using my mill to machine out a piece of this, and a matching lid, then to apply a finish, but using the mill to make it seems like cheating now I'm trying to learn things by hand, so I'm open to suggestions on basic and simple ideas for something.
I do have a router but have only used it once very briefly for a project I got it for so am unskilled with it.
Am pretty well equipped with hand and power tools so generally they're not an issue, but lacking in knowledge/skill on 'proper' woodworking in terms of accuracy/finesse. I don't own a thicknesser or bench router mind, and they seem to be benchmark tools for making stuff in wood.
Appreciate all input either re' chisels, or in respect of a simple box design I could try to make something for "er indoors".
Many thanks!
Jim
I've kindly been given some bits of oak and mahogany (the latter being some old bits of parquet floor) and have begun messing with them to practise joints etc.
I've also invested in a rather nice new dovetail saw (Veritas 20tpi) which is a real joy to use!
Now I do have a set of chisels, but they are basically ones that I got cheap from B&Q while doing up the house a few years back ("Magnussen" brand). They don't have bevelled edges so I'm finding them awkward to use for the dovetails I'm doing currently.
I don't have an overall specific type of chisels that I need as such, but I'd like to get some that are better quality than the ones I have, and are bevelled on the sides if nothing else. They'd be for general use though.
Budget would need to be less than £100 really, but I've no idea what's good & what isn't. Are Marples ones worth considering?
Have also treated myself to a kit today so I can use my little mini lathe (Sieg C3) for turning wood, so I can't wait to start trying that! I don't have tools for turning yet though.
It's the wife's birthday later this month and ideally I'd like to make her a simple & small box of some description. It doesn't matter what, but something an amateur could take on. I've got the wood I mentioned, but also a large beam of some hardwood that I think may perhaps also be mahogany (about 10' x 6' x 2' at a rough guess), which I can use bits of.
I'd wondered about using my mill to machine out a piece of this, and a matching lid, then to apply a finish, but using the mill to make it seems like cheating now I'm trying to learn things by hand, so I'm open to suggestions on basic and simple ideas for something.
I do have a router but have only used it once very briefly for a project I got it for so am unskilled with it.
Am pretty well equipped with hand and power tools so generally they're not an issue, but lacking in knowledge/skill on 'proper' woodworking in terms of accuracy/finesse. I don't own a thicknesser or bench router mind, and they seem to be benchmark tools for making stuff in wood.
Appreciate all input either re' chisels, or in respect of a simple box design I could try to make something for "er indoors".
Many thanks!
Jim