pcb1962":1f48x3c4 said:
Joking aside - that's about it. Almost everything else is optional, and down to personal preference.
If you're starting from scratch, then before you put ANYTHING in the workshop, paint the walls and ceiling white. It really helps to make the most of any natural or artificial light - of which there should preferably be plenty.
After that - build a couple of sawhorses, a bench with a decent vice, and some way to store tools neatly so that all of them are accessible immediately, some form of storage for screws, pins, glues, finishes and the usual odds and ends, and somewhere to store timber for the project in hand and useful offcuts - only the really good offcuts; ditch most, or you'll be waist deep in twelve months.
One thing that's very rarely mentioned, and really deserves to be, is SPACE. Having a place to stand the job you're working on and work all round it really makes a BIG difference to speed and efficiency of working (or restrict yourself to making nothing bigger than a jewellery box).
Machines? By all means fill the workshop with lovely machines you might use once a year, and have to perform a limbo dance to get at, but better to restrict yourself to two or three that will genuinely save work. A planer-thicknesser, maybe a bandsaw; but as soon as you install ANY machine, you'll need a good dust extraction set-up. That's quite a bit of space gone - hence the 'essentials only' approach. Worth asking if you can do it with hand-held power tools rather than a fixed machine - they're easier to store.