woodbrains
Established Member
Hello,
It must be so reassuring, living in your world, wherever that is!
Statement 1 is totally untrue. There are numerous ' efficincies' that can be employed, that result in a structurally sound but sloppy looking outcome.
Statement 2 is true and by making it, you are actually endorsing that efficient can also be sloppy if you apply logic. Many things that are efficient are also neater implies that many things that are efficient are also not neater.
Bruised shoulders on mortices can be a result of speed, it takes less time to take less care here. The joint does not suffer structurally so why spend the time? Similarly, over cut dovetails get the job done without compromising the strength. We see them all the time on piece work in antique furniture.
If you actually mean doing everything correctly with speed, you are just meaning 'well practiced'. You start doing things slowly but correctly and get better with practice. Starting fast and ending up with a sloppy job wastes materials and you might never get neater anyway. You don't try to run before you can walk.
Besides, I agree with Charles, aspiring to work like a piece worker has nothing to recommend it.
Mike
D_W":25tcr4z4 said:1) efficient isn't sloppy. Sloppy is sloppy.
2) a lot of the things in woodworking that are efficient are also neater .
It must be so reassuring, living in your world, wherever that is!
Statement 1 is totally untrue. There are numerous ' efficincies' that can be employed, that result in a structurally sound but sloppy looking outcome.
Statement 2 is true and by making it, you are actually endorsing that efficient can also be sloppy if you apply logic. Many things that are efficient are also neater implies that many things that are efficient are also not neater.
Bruised shoulders on mortices can be a result of speed, it takes less time to take less care here. The joint does not suffer structurally so why spend the time? Similarly, over cut dovetails get the job done without compromising the strength. We see them all the time on piece work in antique furniture.
If you actually mean doing everything correctly with speed, you are just meaning 'well practiced'. You start doing things slowly but correctly and get better with practice. Starting fast and ending up with a sloppy job wastes materials and you might never get neater anyway. You don't try to run before you can walk.
Besides, I agree with Charles, aspiring to work like a piece worker has nothing to recommend it.
Mike