mickthetree
Established Member
I have a stack of woodworking and related books. I just find each and everyone so interesting.
Until I finish all of these other jobs round the house and get my work space sorted, I'm filling my time sorting out old tools, designing pieces to make and reading as much as I can.
So far I have (and have read cover to cover more than once)
Understanding wood - Taunton Press
Collins complete woodworkers manual
The book of boxes - Andrew Crawford
The Complete Illustrated Guide to Joinery - Taunton Press
The Book of furniture making - Collins
The Woodwork book - John Makepeace
Box Making Doug Stowe
The Workbench - Taunton
I got the Hamlyn book of woodworking for christmas. Its a classic example, a general woodworking book covering much the same stuff as many of the others, but EVERY book I read has a little tip, hint, snippet or alternative way of doing a task that the others dont have, so I never dismiss a book (or judge one by its cover I guess) ;-)
I would really like to learn more about general design. I've always been interested in Art Deco if there are any books relating that to wood work too.
So any books you can recommend I would appreciate.
The more I learn, the more I realise I know nothing!
Until I finish all of these other jobs round the house and get my work space sorted, I'm filling my time sorting out old tools, designing pieces to make and reading as much as I can.
So far I have (and have read cover to cover more than once)
Understanding wood - Taunton Press
Collins complete woodworkers manual
The book of boxes - Andrew Crawford
The Complete Illustrated Guide to Joinery - Taunton Press
The Book of furniture making - Collins
The Woodwork book - John Makepeace
Box Making Doug Stowe
The Workbench - Taunton
I got the Hamlyn book of woodworking for christmas. Its a classic example, a general woodworking book covering much the same stuff as many of the others, but EVERY book I read has a little tip, hint, snippet or alternative way of doing a task that the others dont have, so I never dismiss a book (or judge one by its cover I guess) ;-)
I would really like to learn more about general design. I've always been interested in Art Deco if there are any books relating that to wood work too.
So any books you can recommend I would appreciate.
The more I learn, the more I realise I know nothing!