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Most woodworkers think they are buying what they need and have never used a proper workbench. Ernie Conover explains why.
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This reader's project incorporates some clever "interactive" functionality and plenty of storage.
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Recently, a reader wrote in to get some advice about building a chair. Our answers took decidedly different approaches to a larger and broader topic of building chairs.
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The second half of the 20th Century has seen a gradual decline of the workbench. Here's a look back at the zenith of bench design.
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Woodworker's Journal staff members turn to a certain favorite hobby when the holidays come around. Here are some of our projects given as gifts this year.
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Over this past year I found myself orchestrating the filming of DVD series. I also nearly had a nervous breakdown. How did this happen? It's a long story...
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Tim Knight shares how American holly came to be known as the Christmas Wood and Poor Man's Ebony
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With the holidays in full swing, here are a couple of holiday tunes we recently ran across on Micro Fence's website to help keeps spirits bright.
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Here's a look at what you'll find in our January/February 2012 issue.
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It's not exactly news that Sandor is a ukulele nut. Here he looks a little deeper at his affinity for this great instrument and its relationship to woodworking.
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The unique drawer joinery, two-tone wood and clever integration of the drawer pulls into the faces bring some clever touches to an already-impressive piece.
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A couple of years ago, a question arose within the pages of Woodworker’s Journal concerning the origination of “Masonite®.”
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Staining and Dyeing
Although color change is its primary function, stain can also intensify
or diminish the grain of the wood, depending on the type of wood and
the type of stain you use. Therefore, it is important to understand how
different types of stains work. |
Skill Builder: Box and Finger Joints
One of the easiest ways to cut clean and tight-fitting box joints is
with a table saw, using a dado blade and a sliding jig. You can build
your own box joint jig by adapting your saw's miter gauge, or
you can buy one ready-made jig, like the Rockler box joint jig. |
Skill Builder: Finishing Flow Chart
I'll expand on the finishing flow chart first published in the July
2005 issue of Woodworker's Journal by adding full descriptions of each
step in the process. The end result, if you keep them all, will be a
complete finishing primer. |
Rubbing Out: The Final Step to a Great Finish
You can rub out all types of film forming finishes, including shellac,
lacquer, oil based varnish and polyurethane, waterbased coatings and
catalyzed or conversion coatings. There are three strong reasons for
doing so. |
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Coloring Redux: Glaze and Toner
Another common method of adding color to wood after it has been
sealed is with glaze. You can use glaze to highlight carvings or flutes, create
sunbursts and cameos, turn a painted surface into antique white, add
age to wood, or even create patterns like fake wood grain and marble. |
Sealers and Pore Fillers
Strictly speaking, any finish that forms a film on wood can be used as
a sealer. Some coatings are so good at this task by themselves that
they are called "self-sealing" finishes. Other finishes are not, and
they benefit from special sealers. |
Skill Builder: Hand Cut Mortise and Tenons
If you're doing woodworking on a shoestring budget, you'll be happy to
know that the only tools you need to cut tight-fitting mortise and
tenon joints are a square, knife and marking gauge, a fine-toothed saw,
and couple of sharp chisels and mallet. |
Wipe-on Finishes and More

Most
coatings are formulated to work best with a particular type of
applicator, but some work nicely with more than one. Knowing which
coatings favor which application techniques can help you get better
results. To that end, here's a rundown of the various common finishes
and some of the best application strategies for each. |
Making the Most of Your Router Bits: The Butterfly Spline Bit
At first glance, the Butterfly Spline Bit seems like a very simple and
limited use tool. But look closer and you can find a lot of useful
applications for these splines.
The bit cuts a butterfly profile, essentially two dovetail keys joined
at the smaller width. |
Making the Most of Your Router Bits: Dish Carving Bit

There are many projects that require the milling of pockets. Antique
game tables nearly always had dished-out areas for candles and game
chips. Signmakers often raise letters by removing the background
around them, and all sorts of serving trays, bowls and stands are
dished out to provide a rim for keeping things in. |
Making the Most of Your Router Bits: Glue Joint Bit

Gluing boards together to form larger panels is something of a mystery
to novice woodworkers. Boards don't line up properly, and clamps can
tend to force the edges out of alignment. Boards may have a slight bow
along their length and just try to get a clamp into the middle of your
panel to fix it. There is a wide array of joining systems out there to
help, but my personal favorite is still the Glue Joint router bit. |
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Making the Most of Your Router Bits: Not Just a Door Bit
I used to teach router table classes and the most popular part was,
hands down, making cabinet doors. Virtually every bit manufacturer
offers door making bits in several profiles. These come in a set, where
the mating profiles are two separate bits, and a single bit form, where
both cuts are contained in one bit. The bit I'm using is the single
cutter type. |
Making the Most of Your Router Bits: Sash Bit
Many manufacturers make sash bits, but most are designed as 'stub'
tenon bits, working more like a stile and rail door set. The Freud set
is designed to make long tenons in the joint connections, making a
vastly stronger window. Because of this, the bits require a bit more
work, but the extra effort is well worth it. |
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Belt Sander RacesWoodworker's Journal Magazine gives you an up-close view of the 2011 AWFS Fair Belt Sander Races, one of the most popular events in the show. |
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