For Christmas of 2007, I gave my nephew a train play table. I had looked at some of the commercial products, and I wasn’t pleased with how sturdy they were for their $300 price tags. I suppose I have to concede that they were designed for flat packing but they just didn’t hold up well …
This was my second furniture project, also in 2007 and also done partially in a course at the Living Arts Centre. It’s mostly the same as my first table except that this one has a split top and a removable leaf. In practise, we never use the leaf, but we do have it… This is …
This is the first piece of furniture I built back in 2007 as part of an introductory furniture class I took at the Mississauga Living Arts Centre. The instructors were local pros Kelly Couture and Britt Olauson. The main goals of the class were to be comfortable with typical woodworking machinery, learn basic safety and …
This was my first crosscut sled, also from 2007. I say was, because I was never happy with the squareness of its cuts and decided to “recycle” its parts. With a big hammer. Actually part of this sled is hanging above my lathe now – the bottom of the sled became the back board of …
I built a simple out-feed support for my Ridgid TS3650 table saw back in 2007. It is made of some poor quality paint grade maple ply that I got from a local home centre. I say it’s poor quality because the face veneers are de-laminating in places, and it had an incredible number of voids. …
I wanted a way to check the alignment of my table saw blade relative to the mitre slot, because I wasn’t satisfied with the method that the saw’s instruction manual proposed. The manual said to use a combination square lined up against the side of the mitre slot, extend the blade of the square so …