
How did you get started with woodworking?
Do you remember your first project? What was it?
What advice would you give to people interested in getting started with woodworking?
How did you get started with woodworking?Woodworking can be an incredibly fulfilling hobby. It allows you to work with your hands and create things on your own, instilling a sense of pride in your work that not all hobbies can match. Getting started with a woodworking hobby may seem a bit daunting at first, especially when you think about the cost of various pieces of woodworking equipment. Fortunately, it’s entirely possible to start small and build up to bigger things as your skills and budget allow. Guide to Starting a Woodworking Hobby
How did you get started with woodworking?Woodworking can be an incredibly fulfilling hobby. It allows you to work with your hands and create things on your own, instilling a sense of pride in your work that not all hobbies can match. Getting started with a woodworking hobby may seem a bit daunting at first, especially when you think about the cost of various pieces of woodworking equipment. Fortunately, it’s entirely possible to start small and build up to bigger things as your skills and budget allow. Guide to Starting a Woodworking Hobby
Borne into it from Woodcarvers to Aborist-Orchardists...among other professional arts within the family......How did you get started with woodworking?...
Yes...but the first wasn't my own project. It was my Mothers carving tools...Next would have to be for a Japanese Carpenter that specialized in Tea House Garden woodworking and landscaping. All I did was carry tools, hold "things," and watch silently I was 5 and 6 years old......Do you remember your first project? What was it?...
Always start with the basics and traditionally...Its the only way to truly learn wood from the foundational level......What advice would you give to people interested in getting started with woodworking?...
Our teacher in trade school told us how to tell how good a carpenter is - count their fingers.I was 4. My grandfather was building a bookcase. I took two pieces of scrap and nailed them together. He always kept that cross in the drawer of the bookcase.
I never got along well in HS shop class, except while learning to use the different pieces of equipment that my grandfather never had. My shop is still very meager compared to most, but I get along for the most part. I keep telling myself "someday I'll have...." A new table saw is coming this Spring I hope.
Advice? Stick to basics and good techniques until you have them mastered. And, keep your fingers on your hands where they belong.
nstead, I Developed an interest in philosophy and went on to get a four year degree and then graduate from law school. I spent 18-years in college and apartment life, without access to shop space. I had nothing more than a plastic toolbox with a hammer, drill and a circular saw.
I bought a house and shop space in 2017, and here I am.
My Dad was into renovating, but the first real project I participated in was building a 9m houseboat. The first I did on my own was also a boat, a 2m hydroplane (with a 25hp motor LOL).View attachment 370871
How did you get started with woodworking?
Do you remember your first project? What was it?
What advice would you give to people interested in getting started with woodworking?
I got my start being around my grandfather who was a career woodworker coming here at the age of 12, alone, fleeing communism. He was my hero and to this day I can close my eyes and see, and smell his shop. I know where each machine was, and where he stored his hand planes. I do not remember the specifics of all the little jobs I did with him. My first job I did all on my own was my first Wood Shop project when I made a pine dry sink. The teacher was not for it as most of my classmates were making simple shelves. I spent a lot of time after school getting it done on time for the semester. I had a construction business from when I was 17 and at about 25 started an architectural millwork business. I made a lot of custom doors, entry, passage, carriage house, french, as well as fireplace mantels and anything a normal shop would not do, such as convex doors. The best advice I would give someone starting out is do not ever buy a tool until you have a specific need for it. Then, get the best you can afford. All my tools and equipment were paid for out of my business. My shop is set up completely different from a guy who just does cabinets. His shop is set up different from a guy who does turnings. Finally, always enjoy the fact that the more you think you know, the more you do not know.View attachment 370871
How did you get started with woodworking?
Do you remember your first project? What was it?
What advice would you give to people interested in getting started with woodworking?
Watch a lot of this old houseView attachment 370871
How did you get started with woodworking?
Do you remember your first project? What was it?
What advice would you give to people interested in getting started with woodworking?