A
Anonymous
Guest
Well, I was cutting some mortices and the thought occured to me (mentioned in MikeW's post) that I was not actually enjoying it.
Well, one might say "so what?".
I don't do woodwork for a living (thankfully) and my furniture making is simply for fun. Yes fun.
I was cutting the mortises on my hollow chisel mortiser as they are biggish (2"*4"*2") and I didn't really fancy chopping them out by hand. I did clean them up by hand and cut the 5 degree face for the wedges with a mortise chisel and that was fun.
Do people still take time to develop skills or is it simply a machine set-up exercise? Hand-cut DTs are the most satisfying skill I posess, but routing them leaves me cold.
I am not talking about table saws and the like (who enjoys ripping long boards by hand?)
So the following questions spring to mind (I cannot really answer them for myself),
1. Have cheap and plentiful power tools taken away the fun (and/or skill) in hobbiest woodworking? or the opposite?
2. Are people looking for a finished item for their satisfaction or enjoying the actual process of the build?
3. What satisfaction is there to be gained from a power tool set-up type of exercise (or do people tend to combine power and hand tools? - if so, in what proportion?)?
Well, one might say "so what?".
I don't do woodwork for a living (thankfully) and my furniture making is simply for fun. Yes fun.
I was cutting the mortises on my hollow chisel mortiser as they are biggish (2"*4"*2") and I didn't really fancy chopping them out by hand. I did clean them up by hand and cut the 5 degree face for the wedges with a mortise chisel and that was fun.
Do people still take time to develop skills or is it simply a machine set-up exercise? Hand-cut DTs are the most satisfying skill I posess, but routing them leaves me cold.
I am not talking about table saws and the like (who enjoys ripping long boards by hand?)
So the following questions spring to mind (I cannot really answer them for myself),
1. Have cheap and plentiful power tools taken away the fun (and/or skill) in hobbiest woodworking? or the opposite?
2. Are people looking for a finished item for their satisfaction or enjoying the actual process of the build?
3. What satisfaction is there to be gained from a power tool set-up type of exercise (or do people tend to combine power and hand tools? - if so, in what proportion?)?