May 17, 2012

First review: Moxon’s ‘The Art of Joinery’, with Commentary by Christopher Schwarz

'The Art of Joinery', by Joseph Moxon with commentary by Christopher Schwarz. Image copied from Woodworking Magazine's RSS feed.

I received my copy of this book yesterday, and I have already speed-read it twice. Now I can take my time, and leisurely absorb every concept and word I missed the first two times.

My verdict, in one word: Terrific! If you use hand tools, and you wonder how they were used 330 years ago, The Art of Joinery is a book you want in your woodworking library.

Christopher Schwarz does a brilliant job updating the text to something we can read in this century. Furthermore, his Commentary provides insight into Moxon’s explanations and thought. More importantly, Schwarz provides some insight where Moxon did not. For hand tool users, this book is a re-discovery of ‘stuff’ worked 330 years ago.

From the RSS feed:

… I decided I should get Moxon out of my system before I started wearing powdered wigs to work. So I’ve re-published Moxon’s sections on woodworking, which he calls “The Art of Joinery,” and I tried to make it accessible to a modern audience.

… This is not an academic work. It’s an attempt to make a very important woodworking book accessible to craftsmen today. So why should you read Moxon?

… Well if you are interested in hand work, it’s fascinating to see what the tool kit of the time was like and how it was used. I developed a deep respect for dividers after reading Moxon, and I find myself using them more in my work. It might make you rethink your sharpening lubricant. Or even how you use a block plane…

For me, personally, came the satisfaction to learn that it is OK to use the jointer plane “upon the traverse” (that is, cross-grain). That is exactly what I did when I flattened my workbench top. And that was the first time I used a hand plane for such a huge job. Thank-you, Joseph Moxon, and thank-you, Christopher Schwarz, for bringing this book into this century, and for making sure I was reassured in my technique.

One mental image remains: Christopher Schwarz in Berea, wearing a powdered wig.

Episode 27. The prayer kneeler – Part 2: Construction tips


In this episode I share some of the machining I did on the kneeler. In particular, I provide tips to allow you get better results from your project builds:

  1. How to get perfectly even spacing of the the folding legs within the upright legs.
  2. My preference of using a jig saw to cut the boards a little oversize.
  3. Using a cut list for your project.
  4. Matching grain during edge glue-ups, for best project appearance.
  5. Adjusting the router table fence to the router bit using a straight edge.
  6. Always dry-fit the project before any additional machining requiring free-hand routing, or routing assisted with an edge guide.
  7. Edge-gluing boards:
  • Pre-set the boards on the clamps
  • Line up the boards for best grain match, using a carpenter’s triangle
  • Tightening the clamps: Light pressure at first, always checking the edges for proper alignment, tighten some more, and repeat

If you have any comments about these tips, or would like to have additional explanation, please either 1) Post a Comment right here on the blog, or 2) Send me an e-mail at sandal_woods@bbwi.net . I will reply to you, using my best resources. Thanks!

Rob Cosman’s 3-minute 42-second, tails-first dovetails

AMAZING! A Rob Cosman video on YouTube…

This is Rob Cosman’s tails-first, 3-min. 42-second response to Frank Klausz’ 3-minute pins-first dovetails. It appears to me that Rob’s turned out great.

What do you think?

I will shoot for this quality with my dovetails. I think it can be done… even if it takes me a few more years of practice. After all, I prefer to cut tails first, too.

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