phil.p":2ye3lr3e said:
Keep a mirror in your workshop for WHEN you get something in your eye.
And probably a bottle of eyewash.
Few years back, me and the lads were at Haitch Q and one of the managers said we were due to go on an 2 day IOSH course the following week.
Robin: "Eye wash!
Bleedin' Eyewash! How can there be a whole bloody course for
eyewash! You just hold your head back and pour it in your eye! Why do we have to go on a bloody
2 day course for it?"
You couldn't make it up. Window cleaners. I'd write a book but no one would believe it. Genetic Risk Assessments. What colour is Red Oxide Paint then mate? Rats Eggs (Don't even ask.) The Coriolis effect on water going down plug holes is a particular favourite and still ongoing.
Beginner's tip for Very Beginners
by a Beginner. Stop measuring where possible and mark instead. Use a jig, a story stick, a bit of scrap wood, dividers. Probably more to it than that but it's a good start.
Can I have two more for me when I first started?
1) Expensive tools can't buy skill no matter what you believe, might make it easier but not so much they justify their price tag for a beginner which
only comes with doing. Make do, get the basics right, sharp and lean. Avoid the tool slope till you know what you need and
why you need it. Spend the money you saved on wood.
2) Be structured.
I've managed to
completely disregard 2) lol. I'm happy, I enjoy my hobby. Would I be a better woodworker if I was more organised. No doubt. Would I have learnt such varied stuff. Hmmm, dunno. I'd have learnt more about woodwork no doubt. I see it as a step by step journey. If you have a distinct aim or target then maybe yeh. Organisation and structure and diligence is key. Want to enjoy learning lots of stuff in the few hours you have off. Who knows. :wink: