Clark Kellogg talks about the schools of Krenov and Korn and how they affected his woodworking career, plus the zen of letter-carving, and why he’s so popular on Instagram.
Part 1 – March/April Issue of Fine Woodworking Magazine #253
Part 2 – Noisey bandsaw throw out bearings
Part 3 – Sliding compound miter saw direction of cut
Part 4 – Clark Kellogg Interview
Part 5 – Jointer that stops cutting after twelve inches
Part 6 – Recommended push sticks
Part 7 – All time favorite technique of all time
Every two weeks, a team of Fine Woodworking staffers answers questions from readers on Shop Talk Live, Fine Woodworking‘s biweekly podcast. Send your woodworking questions to [email protected] for consideration in the regular broadcast! Our continued existence relies upon listener support. So if you enjoy the show, be sure to leave us a five-star rating and maybe even a nice comment on our iTunes page.
Listen to Previous Episodes
- Shop Talk Live 103: All Time Favorite Furniture of All Time… for this week
- Shop Talk Live 102: The New Guy From Nashville
- Shop Talk Live 101: Cherry is No Substitute for White Oak
- Shop Talk Live 100: Matt is out of control, plus a mystery guest
- Shop Talk Live 99: Waterstone Detectives
- Shop Talk Live 98: Mike’s Stick Trick, and the Fabric of Matt
- Shop Talk Live 97: The Guys are Toast
- Shop Talk Live 96: Tablesaws and Tool Tests
- Shop Talk Live 95: Looking Back Fondly
- Shop Talk Live 94: A Fond Farewell
- Shop Talk Live 93: Nick Offerman’s Dream Shop
- Shop Talk Live 92: Please CLOSE the Bathroom Door
- Shop Talk Live 91: Best Way to Destroy Furniture
- Shop Talk Live 90: Gorilla Glue for Fine Furniture
- Shop Talk Live 89: Workbench Wisdom
- Shop Talk Live 88: Marquetry Master Craig Thibodeau
- Shop Talk Live 87: Shop Talk Live Moving to Video
- Shop Talk Live 86: Furniture Maestro Chris Gochnour–Part II
- Shop Talk Live 85: Furniture Maker Chris Gochnour
- see all episodes
Comments
This is the first time I've ever watched the Shop Talk Podcast. You guys look terrible. Just like a wood worker should, just like I do. Keep up the great work.
"The things I make might be for others, how I make them is for me." Tony Konovaloff
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