Online Extras from FWW Issue #282
Links and videos mentioned in Fine Woodworking issue #281Online extras from FWW issue #282
Video: Shop Tour: Michael FortuneLongtime contributing editor and world-famous woodworker and designer Michael Fortune builds his pieces in a remote area a couple hours from Toronto, Canada. In this video, Michael gives our own Ben Strano a personal tour of his workshop and studio. |
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Video: How to Use Hide GlueNo other glue has hide glue’s quick tack, easy cleanup, and transparency to stains and clear finishes. In this video series, furniture maker and restorer Patrick Edwards demonstrates how to use this natural glue to apply veneer, rub on glue blocks, and secure inlay in minutes – all without clamps. |
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Video Workshop: Hanging Wall Cabinet with Michael PekovichFWW creative director Michael Pekovich builds a small cabinet that packs in a lot of techniques. It has dovetailed case construction, through-mortise-and-tenon joinery, a dovetailed drawer, and a frame-and-panel door, and a decorative kumiko panel. In this series, while demonstrating how to build the cabinet, he teaches woodworking techniques that can be applied to building any piece of furniture. |
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Video: The best ammonia for fuming white oakAmmonia is usually found in three strengths– household, janitorial, and industrial. In this video, we compare the results using each type for fuming white oak. |
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Video Workshop: Fitting the dovetails and routing to the baselineIn this episode, Mike Pekovich uses an early version of his dovetail workstation to clean up the baseline with a router, and pare the pins to a perfect fit. |
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Article: Using a Router at the LatheIn this article, courtesy of the American Association of Woodturners, expect turner John Lucas shows how he uses a banjo-mounter router table to ass decoration to spindles, bowels, and ornaments. |
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Article: Strong Stunning SideboardChris Gochnour’s sideboard combines usefulness, strength, and beauty in a contemporary case piece. |
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Article: Upholstering a Slip SeatWith a little knowledge and practice, most woodworkers can produce a slip seat that will do justice to the finest furniture, according to Don Taylor. |
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Watch This: How to Stop TearoutA fascinating look at tearout by two wood technologists, Yasunori Kawai and Chutaro Kato, who studied plane irons and how they cut wood. The two looked into three variables: grain direction, depth of cut, and how far back to set a chipbreaker.
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Article: Brian Newell: Krenov-inspired cabinets and beyondIn this gallery, Anissa Kapsales shares some of her favorite pieces made by one of her favorite makers, Brian Newell. |
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