Furniture Cabinet making 2015 06, Budownictwo

[ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
//-->&cabinetmakingD E S I G N • I N S P I R AT I O N • P R O J E C T S • T E C H N I Q U E S • T E S T S • N E W S • E X C E L L E N C EFurnitureHybrid JoineryCreate perfect jointswith style and strengthBox hingewith hasp& stapleSolutions for runninga big project from asmall workshopShort cutsHistorically accurate detailsThe 17th-century axemanThe Saw Dr will see you now Festool shelf pin drilling jigUnit 2, Sovereign Business Park, Joplin Court, Crownhill, MK8 0JP MILTON KEYNESTel: 01908 635 000, info@ukfelder.co.uk, www.ukhammer.co.ukCombination machineC3 31 ComfortCOMBINATIONMACHINE +STARTER-SET••••••••••4.0 HP (3.0 kW) motorFormat sliding table 2000 mm1100 mm outrigger tablePrecision mitre index system1300 mm crosscut fence for outrigger tablePlaner fence tilts from 90° to 45°Surface planer table length 1400 mmPlaning width 310 mmRemarkably user friendlyAllows rapid retooling6.718,055.390,00Ø 315 mm, Z 48Save up to 1.328,05 £ excl. VATUniversal saw bladeCutterhead set+Universal cutter head(steel made)+AF 12 dust extraction extractorwith dust bag quick change systemWELCOME TO FURNITURE & CABINETMAKINGRethinking green woodworkingPHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF PETER WOODWelcome to...It’s hard avoiding stereotypessometimes when you tacklecertain aspects of woodworking.Through the prism of a largelyunimaginative public perception,green woodworking is somethingthat rustic folk do to pass the timewhen they’re not down the allotment,Morris dancing or listening to folkmusic. That could all be about tochange, however, as more and moreof us discover the attraction ofmaking things from scratch fromnatural materials using the mostbasic of hand tools.At a well-known tool auctionrecently, I noticed a chap biddingalmost exclusively for draw knives,axes and other green woodworkingtools. We were fi rst acquainted morethan 20 years ago so I already knewhim as a dealer. After the obligatoryexchange of pleasantries, I quizzedhim over his purchases. “Can’t getenough of them,” he said “reallypopular with the office lot wholove playing around in the woodsat the weekend.” By this, I think hemeant that his customers were notcollectors and by the sounds of it,not professional woodworkers, either,but recent converts to the craft.Skills to learnIt doesn’t matter which route you taketo get into woodwork – eventually weall end up in the same place, just notall at the same time. As long as thereis a skill to learn, we’ll remainPeter Follansbeeinterested and if you’re not intoI’ve heard it said that the increase in16th-century joinery today, then yougreen woodworking is in part downwill be tomorrow – or maybe even byto the rise in interest in survivalthe time you’re through with this issue.I’ve yet to succumb to the Windsortechniques. If that sounds a littleexperience myself. That day will comeextreme, you can take it down aand when it does, no doubt I’ll be betternotch to the more genteel activity offor it. For now, though, my contributionbushcraft – the kind popularised bythis month is part of a team effort thatBear Grylls and Ray Mears. Refi nemakes the most of the resources youthings even further and inevitablyhave on your doorstep to tackle projectsyou’ll come face-to-face with PeterFollansbee as we did this month. Peter that wouldn’t usually get through thetold us a while back that, over a period door – quite literally, in some cases.Throw in a little Japanese joinery andof a couple of decades, he practicallya quick visit to the saw doctor, and youresearched himself into a corner fromwhich the only escape was to teach his should be prepared for anything.way out.In the process, he’s built up anarmy of followers eager to master theseskills and understand the simplicityof their function to create beautiful,Derek Jonespractical objects.derekj@thegmcgroup.comwww.woodworkersinstitute.comF&C2321ContentsIssue 232 June 2015EDITOR Derek JonesEmail: derekj@thegmcgroup.comTel: 01273 402843DEPUTY EDITOR Tegan FoleyEmail: teganf@thegmcgroup.comDESIGNER Oliver PrenticeGROUP EDITOR – WOODWORKING Mark BakerEmail: markb@thegmcgroup.comSENIOR EDITORIAL ADMINISTRATOR Karen ScottEmail: karensc@thegmcgroup.comTel: 01273 477374ILLUSTRATOR Simon RodwayCHIEF PHOTOGRAPHER Anthony BaileyADVERTISING SALES EXECUTIVERussell Higgins, Email: russellh@thegmcgroup.comADVERTISEMENT PRODUCTION & ORIGINATIONGMC Repro Email: repro@thegmcgroup.comTel: 01273 402810PUBLISHER Jonathan GroganPRODUCTION MANAGER Jim BulleyEmail: jimb@thegmcgroup.comTel: 01273 402810PRODUCTION CONTROLLERrepro@thegmcgroup.comCIRCULATION MANAGER Tony LoveridgeMARKETING Anne GuillotSUBSCRIPTIONS Helen ChristieTel: 01273 488005, Fax: 01273 478606Email: helenc@thegmcgroup.comPRINTED IN THE UKStephens and George Print GroupDISTRIBUTION Seymour Distribution LtdTel: 020 7429 4000Furniture & Cabinetmaking magazine (ISSN 1365-4292)is published every four weeks by Guild of Master CraftsmanPublications LtdSUBSCRIPTION RATES (includes p&p)UKEurope Rest of World12 issues £51.00 £63.75 £71.4024 issues £102.00 £127.50 £142.80US subscribers visit www.lightningpublications.com forsubscription rates in USD $.Cheques made payable to GMC Publications LtdCurrent subscribers will automatically receive a renewalnotice (excludes direct debit subscribers).Post your order to: The Subscription Department,GMC Publications Ltd, 166 High Street, Lewes,East Sussex BN7 1XU Tel +44 (0)1273 488005,Fax +44 (0)1273 402866 Email: pubs@thegmcgroup.comWebsite: www.thegmcgroup.comViews and comments expressed by individuals in the magazinedo not necessarily represent those of the publishers and nolegal responsibility can be accepted for the results of the useby readers of information or advice of whatever kind given inthis publication, either in editorial or advertisements. No part ofthis publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval systemor transmitted in any form or by any means without the priorpermission of the Guild of Master Craftsman Publications Ltd.© Guild of Master Craftsman Publications Ltd. 2015Problems finding F&C? Call Tony Loveridge, ourCirculation Manager, on 01273 477374 or email himat tonyl@thegmcgroup.com Alternatively, save upto 20% on the cover price by subscribing. Visit www.thegmcgroup.com/publicationsWoodworking is an inherently dangerouspursuit. Readers should not attempt theprocedures described herein withoutseeking training and information on thesafe use of tools and machines, and all readers shouldobserve current safety legislation.Projects & Techniques21Light & shade –17th-century styleIn this extract fromMake a Joint Stool from aTree,Jennie Alexander and Peter Follansbeedemonstrate two brilliantly simple techniquesto recreate authentic 17th-century mouldings28Japanese joints – part 5John Bullar continues with his seriesand this month looks at the gooseneck joint ina number of variants3544Create hybrid joints using Japanese methods – see page28 for the full article.Front cover image by John BullarWooden box hingewith hasp & staplePete Simpson shows how he made and fittedwooden hinges to a boxRouter planes:the joiner’s helperRouter planes are nothing like their electriccounterparts. Ditch the cord and start makingsome very tight fitting joinery, as Anne BriggsBohnett explainsDesign & Inspiration48The saw doctor will seeyou now16In the workshop withPeter FollansbeeCarrying on from the last issue, Mark Harrelltackles the next stage of bringing your sawback to life – disassembly and cleaningWe speak to Peter Follansbee, whospecialises in 17th-century joinery5361Cutting it down to size4274Our correspondentKieran Binnie talks about the effectof ‘community’ in the woodworking craftsand its positive impactHow can you make a piece offurniture twice the size of your workshopand still get through the door? With alittle help from your friends, that’s howPractical router jigs – part 2The apprentice’s notebookHaving learnt all the necessary skills,we are now ready to learn how to set up atraditional bench plane, ready to make thosefirst shavings, Waters & Acland student JimCooper demonstrates hereChris Yates completes the handholdjig from the last issue and also makes astopped rebate jig66Festool LR 32-SYS shelfpin drilling set80Under the hammerThis month, we take a look atanother prized lot from Bonhams’ recentFine English Furniture and Works of Art saleGeoffrey Laycock puts this speciallydesigned shelf pin drilling set from Festoolthrough its paces and sees whether it’s worthall the fuss!2118Don’t forget thereare plenty more articlesand discussionsto be found on theWoodworkers Institutewww.woodworkersinstitute.com2F&C232www.woodworkersinstitute.comYOUR F&CContentsPurveyor of FineHand Tools& Accessoriessince 2004Cabinet Making ToolsLie NielsenBlue Spruce ToolworksClifton, Auriou, StarrettRon Hock, VeritasBenchCrafted, BarrThomas Flinn, Ashley IslesJapanese Saws & Chisels35YourF&C1LeaderDerek Jones welcomes you to this month’sissue ofF&C4News & eventsA round-up of what’s going on in theworld of furniture8F&CUKWood/Stone Carving ToolsPfeil, AuriouFlexcutWoodturning ToolsRobert SorbyHamlet Craft ToolsFinishes + BooksFine CabinetwareBrusso HardwareSharpening SuppliesToishi Ohishi, ShaptonDan’s Whetstone CompanyNorton Pike, TormekBooks & DVDsLost Art PressAstragalLie Nielsen ToolworksAn open invitation for furniture makersto let us know what you’re up to…10Editor’s choiceHaving trouble sourcing the righttool for the job? Derek Jones sets aboutidentifying the essential tools and equipmenton offer this month2672Next monthGet a peek at what we’ll be bringingyou in issue 233Workshop libraryMark Langston reviewsThe FurnitureBibleand Derek Jones looks at a book onthe great planemaker John Green as wellasClassic American Furniture28All of the aboveand much more atwww.classichandtools.co.ukHill Farm Business Park,Witnesham, Ipswich,Suffolk IP6 9EW48www.woodworkersinstitute.comTel: (+44/0) 1473 784983sales@classichandtools.co.ukF&C2323 [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]

  • zanotowane.pl
  • doc.pisz.pl
  • pdf.pisz.pl
  • quentinho.opx.pl






  • Formularz

    POst

    Post*

    **Add some explanations if needed