September 9, 2010

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.

Woodworking in America Conference registration is now open

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Click on the image above to go to the General Menu.

Registration is now open for this conference, brought to you by the Editors of Popular Woodworking and Woodworking Magazine. Click here to go to the Registration Desk.

From the main page:

A new kind of woodworking
event you won’t want to miss!

Join the country’s top craftsmen and toolmakers as they offer hands-on workshops, exclusive demos, expert techniques and much more at this brand-new event brought to you by Popular Woodworking and Woodworking Magazine.

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About the Conference
This is your exclusive chance to receive face-to-face instruction from some of the best woodworkers in the nation and try out the latest tools.

Registration is now open. Sign up now!

Sign up quickly, as the Conference is filling up. I hope to see you there!
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Relevant links:.
Woodworking in America, my May 25 post

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My entry to the Lumberjocks / Popular Woodworking Bookcase Challenge

The Bookcase Challenge is now official!

Lumberjocks, in partnership with Popular Woodworking, have given us this brand-new challenge: Design a bookcase we could build in our shop, win, and get published in Popular Woodworking Magazine!

From Martin’s announcement at Lumberjocks (also click on this link to learn other details about the Challenge, and Challenge Rules):

“This time it’s all about the bookcases. Everyone needs them. Are you ready to design a bookcase that catches the eyes of Popular Woodworking’s editors, establishes you as a paid and published author and presents your design to thousands of fellow woodworkers? I’ll bet you are.”

And in Glen Huey’s own words at the Popular Woodworking blog entry about this Challenge:

“The winning original design will be published in Popular Woodworking magazine. We’re talking a full-out article, not just photos of the best design shown in a gallery. You’ll become a published contributing author – a fully paid contributing author – with your own byline.”

If I can do it, YOU can do it, too. So, go to Lumberjocks and, if not yet a member, sign up, and make your entry to the Challenge as a blog entry.

You can view my entry, the first entry made in this competition, by clicking here. Let me know what you think of my simple barrister bookcase design, by leaving a Comment.

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