Strona startowa
Flawiusz Józef - Historia Żydowska, Pisma chrześcijańskie i pokrewne, Józef Flawiusz
File Cabinet - 2 drawer Lateral File cabinet with matching printer cabinet, Woodworking Plans
Fine-Home-Building-25-Years-of-Great-Building-Tips-Malestrom, Building and Architecture
Formative Texts in the History of Zen Buddhism, @Buddhism
Fragment traktatu welawsko-bydgoskiego z 1657, Historia, Prawo, Traktaty, Umowy, Kroniki, Teksty Żródłowe
Film polski - streszczenie, historia filmu polskiego po 1981r
Fine Gardening - Grow Healthier & Easier Gardens (2015), !!!Materialy Eng
Farago&Zwijnenberg (eds) - Compelling Visuality ~ The work of art in and out of history, sztuka i nie tylko po angielsku
Fałszywe dokumenty Gorbaczowa. Kilka faktów o Katyniu, Historia
Furet F. Prawdziwy koniec rewolucji francuskiej, Historia Francji
  • zanotowane.pl
  • doc.pisz.pl
  • pdf.pisz.pl
  • okiemkrytyka.xlx.pl

  • Fine Woodworking 014, papermodels, historica

    [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
    Fine
    111
    George
    Nakashima
    ]ANUARY/FEBRUARy
    '1979,
    No.
    14 $2.50
    ood
    There's a wealth of infornation and ideas
    Our readers tell us they regard
    Fine Woodworking
    more as a reference resource than as a
    magazine because of the timeless and hard·to·find nature of its contents. And because there is
    so
    much material to cover (new
    ideas and techniques pop
    up all the time)
    we don't intend to
    repeat ourselves editorially. All thirte�n back issues are now available and you can have a
    complete set for your shop.
    Winter
    1975.
    Number
    1-The Renwick Multiples. Checkered Bowls, Tramp Art,
    Hand Planes. Carving Design, Decisions, Woodworking Thoughts, Marquetry Cutting,
    Which Three?, Library Ladders, A Serving Tray, Stamp Box, All in One, French
    Polishing, Birch Plywood, Bench Stones.
    niture, Chain-Saw Lumbering,
    Rip Chain, Getting Lumber, Sawing
    by Hand, Gaming
    Tables, Two Contemporary Tables, Wooden Clamps, Elegant Fakes, Aztec Drum,
    Gout Stool, Two Tools, Measuring Moisture, The Flageolet, Young Americans.
    Winter
    1977.
    Number
    9-Repair and Restoration, Designing for Dining, Tall
    Chests, Entry Doors, The Right Way to Hang a Door, Drawer Bottoms, School Shop,
    Health Hazards in Woodworking, Basic Blacksmithing, Carving Cornucopia, Carving
    Lab, Routed Edge joint, Shaker Round Stand, Cutting Corners, Small Turned Boxes,
    Unhinged.
    Spring
    1976.
    Number
    2-Marquetry Today, Split Turnings, Eagle Carvings, Hand
    Dovetails, Mechanical Desks, Textbook Mistakes, Antique Tools, Spiral Steps, Gustav
    Stickley, Oil/Varnish Mix, Shaker Lap Desk, Chair Woods, Back to School.
    Summer
    1976,
    Number
    3-Wood, Mortise and Tenon, The Christian Tradition,
    Hand Shaping, Yankee Diversity, Plane Speaking, Desert Cabinetry, Hidden Drawers,
    Green Bowls, Queen Anne, Gate-Leg Table, Turning Conference, Sttoke Sander, Fur­
    niture Plans.
    Spring
    1978.
    Number
    10-Two New Schools, Wooden Clockworks, Hammer Ve­
    neering, Claw and Ball Feet, Block-Front Transformed, Hot-Pipe Bending, Furniture
    Galleries, A Two-Way Hinge, Laminated Turnings, Chain-Saw Carving, Circular Saws,
    Louvered Doors, Small Workbench.
    Summer
    1978.
    Number
    ll-Harpsichords, Spinning Wheels, American Wood­
    carvers, Drawers, Turning Spalted Wood, Scratch Beader, Leather on Wood, Notes on
    Finishing, Building Green, Parsons Tables, Hanging a Door, Pencil Gauges, Dulcimer
    Peg Box, Tiny Tools.
    September
    1978.
    Number
    12-Community Workshop, Greene and Greene,
    Holding the Work, Scandinavian Styles, Tambours, Stains, Dyes and Pigments, Spindle
    Turning, Cleaving Wood, Whetstones, Sharpening, Cockleshell, Dust-Collection
    System, Sanding, Used Machinery, Wooden Wagon.
    November
    1978.
    Number
    13-Making Ends Meet, Scientific Instruments of Wood,
    Making a Microscope, The Harmonious Crar, Laminated Bowls, Preparation of Stock,
    Tung Oil, Relief Carving, Roll-Top Desks, Shaped Tambours, Cylinder Desk and ook­
    Case, Basic Machine Maintenance, Portfolio: A.W. Marlow, End-oring jig, Scale
    Models, The Purpose of Making, Lumber Grading, On Workmanship.
    Fall
    1976.
    Number
    4-Cabinetmaker's Notebook, Water and Wood, Hidden Beds,
    Exotic Woods, Veneer, Tackling Carving, Market Talk, Abstract Sculptures from
    Found Wood, Workbench, Ornamental Turning, Heat Treating, Mosaic Rosettes,
    Shaped Tambours, Buckeye Carvings, Hardwood Sources.
    ITI
    e n

    Y5
    ::�::�
    h
    t
    ::
    l
    �:�:�::::::�:::�
    o
    ::
    d
    �:
    :
    :
    :
    d"
    below
    .
    Spring
    1977.
    Number
    6-The Wood Butcher, Wood Threads, The Scraper, Califor­
    nia Woodworking, Bent Laminations, Dry Kiln, Expanding Tables, Two Sticks, Stacked
    Plywood, Two Tools, Pricing Work, Going to Crar Fairs, Colonial Costs, Serving Cart,
    Woodworking Schools.
    Summer
    1977,
    Number
    7-Cooperative Shop, Glues and Gluing, Winter Market,
    Three-Legged Stool, Lute Roses, Bowl Turning, Wharton Esherick, Doweling, Spalted
    Wood, Antiqued Pine Furniture, Solar Kiln, Carving Fans, ending a Tray, Two
    Meetings, Index to Volume One.
    To order the back issues, send us your name, address and payment along with a list of what
    you want. Each back issue is
    $2.50
    postpaid. Connecticut residents add
    7%
    sales tax. Make
    in the back issues of Fine
    Woodworking
    Fall
    1977.
    Number
    8-0ut West, Steam Bending, Triangle Marking, Painted Fur­
    Winter
    1976.
    Number
    5-Stacking, Design Considerations, Keystone Carvers, Car­
    case Construction, Dealing With Plywood, Patch-Pad Cutting, Drying Wood, Gothic
    Tracery, Measured Drawings, Wood Invitational, Guitar joinery, The Bowl Gouge,
    English Treen, Shaper Knives.
    Publisher
    Paul Roman
    Editor
    John Kelsey
    Art Director
    Roger Barnes
    Contnbuting Editors
    Tage Frid
    R. Bruce Hoadley
    Alastair A. Stair
    Consulting Editors
    George Frank, A. W. Marlow
    Fi
    ne
    q
    i
    n
    g
    "
    1979,
    NUMBER
    14
    JANUARy/FEBRUARY
    Assistant Editors
    Laura Cehanowicz
    Ruth Dobsevage
    Production
    JoAnn Muir, Manager
    Deborah Fillion, Art Assistant
    Barbara Hannah, Darkroom
    Nancy Knapp, Typesetting
    DEPARTMENTS
    4 Letters
    14 Methods of Work
    Advertising
    Janice A. Roman, Manager
    Lois Beck, Vivian Dorman
    &
    Answers
    34 Adventures in Woodworking
    by George Frank: Fernan banks on ammonia
    36 The Woodcraft Scene
    by Richard Starr: Guitarmaking school
    39 Events
    27 Questions
    Advertising Representative
    Granville M. Fillmore
    Marketing Representative
    John Grudzien
    E.
    Ando, Manager
    Gloria Carson, Marie Johnson
    Cathy Kach, Nancy Schoch
    Kathy Springer
    Subscnptions
    Carole
    80 Bruce Hoadley:
    Wood has to breathe, doesn't it?
    82 Editor's Notebook:
    A
    portfolio of recent work
    Mailroom
    Viney Merrill
    Business Manager
    Irene Arfaras
    Correspondents
    Carol Bohdan, John Makepeace
    Alan Marks, Jim Richey
    Rosanne Somerson, Richard Starr
    Colin Tipping, Stanley N. Wellborn
    ARICLES
    40 George Nakashima
    by John Kelsey: For each plank there's one perfect use
    47 Lester Margon's Measured Drawings
    48 Tapered Lamination
    by Jere Osgood: Slender curves can still be joined
    52 Improving Planes
    by Robert Foncannon: Eliminating common problems
    55 Restoring Bailey Planes
    by George C. Gibbs
    56 Box-Joint Jig
    by Patrick Warner: Router template indexes cuts
    58
    Five Chairs: One View
    by Robert DeFuccio:
    A
    critique
    World Globe
    by Steven
    A.
    Hartley: Jig cuts segments for hollow sphere
    Koa Table by
    Ben Davies: Cove cuts emphasize joinery
    Incised Lettering
    by Sam Bush: Boldness is better than puttering
    Bolection Turning
    by Thomas J. Dufy: How to inlay around a bowl
    Air-Powered Tools
    by Lyle Laske: What's available and where to get it
    Polyhedral Puzzles
    by Stewart T. Coin: Sculptural art that comes
    apart
    Design Sources by
    Cary Hall: Conventions stand in for genius
    Have a Seat
    61
    65
    66
    69
    70
    75
    77
    8
    4
    l
    ht 1979 by The Taunton Press. Inc. No reproduction
    without JXrmission ofTh� Taumon Press, Inc. Fin� Woodworking is a r�gist:r�d trad:mark ofTh� Taumon Pr�ss, Inc.
    ISSN 0361·3453. Subscription rats: Uni{:d States and po �ions, S12 for on� year, $22 for cwo years; Canada, $14 for
    on� y�ar, $26 for cwo years (in U.S. dollars, pl�:); oth�r countries, $15 for on: y�ar, $28 for cwo years (in U.S. dollars,
    please). Singl� copy, 52.50. For singl� copi�s outsid: U.S. and po �ions, add 25' postag� per issue. S�nd
    r
    is published bimonthly,Jnuary. Much. May,July, Sepu:mbcrand November, by The Taumon Press.
    r
    T
    o
    Cover: Ater they have been air died and
    kzln rie, planks are normaly stored stand­
    ing on end at George Nakashima's work­
    shops. Th e ones on edge, fo regoun, are
    about
    5
    .
    wide and too long to stand up ­
    niht,
    despite
    16-ft. cezlings. More about
    Nakashima on page
    Inc., Newtown,
    06470, Telephone (203) 426·8171. Second-class postage paid at Newtown.
    M
    06470 and additional
    mailing ofices. Postal Service Publi:uion Number 105190. Co?yri
    T
    Subscription
    06470. United Kingdom. L7 .50 for one year. payable to The Taun­
    ton Press; mail to National Wcstminst�r Bank, PO Box 34, 15 Bishopssat�, London, EC2P 2AP. Address all corrson­
    d�ncc to th� appropriat� dep.nm�nt (Subscription, Editorial or Adv�msins), Th� Taunton Press. 52 Church Hill Road,
    PO Box 355. N�wtown.
    40.
    06470. PO
    ASTER: S�nd notic� of und�hv�red copies on Form 3579 to Th� Taunton
    Press. PO Box 355. Newtown,
    06470.
    3
    20 Books
    FineWoodworking
    r
    D�pt., Th� Taunton Pr�ss, PO Box 355, Newtown.
    __________________
    There is no need for Drew Langsner's froe club or maul
    ("Cleaving Wood," Sept. '78, pp. 64-67) to be "unavoidably
    expendable." A properly chosen hickory or dogwood root
    maul will endure many years of constant use. It will wear
    down only by gradual pulverization and never by the splitting
    or shattering that is inevitable in stem-wood mauls.
    When you dig up your maul rather than cutting it down,
    you have two important factors going for you. First, the cir­
    cumference is largely composed of the end grain of the
    severed lateral roots ....Second, these lateral roots have their
    origin deep within the root stock, thereby binding the head
    of the maul together.
    To make a maul like this, ind a hickory or dogwood sap­
    ling that is about 6 in. in diameter at ground level. Dig out
    around it, cutting away the side roots with an old ax as you
    go. Hickories will have a long taproot that must be exposed
    by pulling the tree over. Dogwoods tend to have only shallow
    lateral roots ...and are easier to cut loose. Wash as much of
    the dirt and sand of as you can and immediately peel of the
    bark. Rough-shape the entire afair with a sharp hand ax and
    finish up the handle (about a foot long) with a drawknife or
    rounder plane. As always, let it season well before you put it
    to work.
    Mr. Alexander's shaving horse (" Holding the Work,"
    Sept. '78, pp. 46-48) is indeed a fine beast for the chair
    bodger, or the cooper who works with short lengths of wood.
    But if, however, you need a general workhorse that will take
    any length of work and provide maximum holding power,
    please go with a dumbhead horse. The typical dumbhead,
    pivoting much closer to the business end, gives you a me­
    chanical advantage of 4: 1. A bodger's bench, which pivots in
    the middle, gives no such advantage. In addition to holding
    Dumbhead horse
    4
    the short stock of chair work with greater strength, the open
    sides of the dumbhead make life a lot easier when you're
    working with 7-ft long rake stails (handles) or shaving down
    similar lengths of white oak for making splits.
    -Roy Underhzll, Hzllsborough,
    .
    C.
    In Sept '78, you permit a reader on page 10 to threaten you
    with economic sanction. Will you please cut that out? It em­
    barrasses me. There is not an issue of Fine Woodworking that
    doesn't contain a sentence or two which alone are more than
    With Elmer's Carpenter's Wood Glue
    Elmer's® Carpenter's Wood Glue is a
    special wood glue for all your woodwork­
    ing projects. It penetrates well in had
    and soft woods and forms a heat and
    water resistant bond that's stronger than
    the wood itself.
    It's also better because it "grabs" imme­
    diately and dris fast. Yet it allows
    realignment before it sets. So you can
    join surfaces as soon as it's applied.
    s
    non-toxic*, solvent-free for­
    mula and washes off your hands and
    project with water. So you won't

    ®
    :
    I
    get Hght ,pots when you
    111
    stain near glue joints.
    u
    s ount.
    'As deined byFederal HazardousSubstancesAct.
    Eler·s.
    en
    4
    ETTERS
    you don't need a pro's hands
    o
    give it the pro's touch.
    Elmer's Carpenter's Wood Glue is also
    sandable, paintable and gumming re­
    sistant.
    Workbench Price Breakthrough!
    At Last! A Full-Featured Workbench At An Affordable Price
    Until now. quality work­
    benches have usually
    been too expensive or too
    small. This huge
    225
    lb.
    Garden Way Home Work­
    bench offers a
    30"
    x
    60".
    2"
    thick work surface and is avail­
    able direct from the factory at an
    incredibly low price. Made of solid
    rock maple. the Garden Way Work­
    bench not only offers a spacious
    work area. sturdiness and extraor­
    dinary clamping versatility. but is a
    fine precision tool itself that can be
    as useful as having an e<tra "pair
    of hands" helping you in your shop.
    Unique Clamping System
    MADE IN U.S.A.
    1
    "Flip-over" vises provide
    a soUd workstop-yet turn
    over so top of vise is flush
    with ech surface for regu­
    lar vise use.
    a
    sheet of plywood.
    Here Are
    6
    More Impotant Features
    on the Garden Way Home Workbench
    2
    Round dog holes with ro-
    tating bench blocks will
    grip odd-shaed work pieces
    and eliminate most jigs and
    fixtures.
    312/,
    sq. ft.
    (30"
    x
    0")
    of
    worksurface interacting
    with vises ad rotating bech
    dogs lets you hold large
    boards and planks even a
    4
    x
    Now accomplish
    more In your shop
    than you
    ever thought
    possible.
    ••••
    ••
    r--------------,
    TO:
    G.rd.n W.y Hom. Workb.nch
    D.pt.
    91111·W
    c/o G.rd.n W.y
    R
    rch
    V.rmont 05445
    YES,
    please send me free details, specifi­
    cations and prices on the New Garden Way
    Home Workbench including information on
    your auild-it-yourself kits and optional tool well
    and tool drawer.
    Ch.rlott
    _______________
    Addres,
    Uqe
    ot-.-rd fas-
    tening sys
    t
    em
    -
    s
    ecurely
    clamps all workbench com­
    oents together with steel­
    to-steel connection.
    4
    He
    X
    2
    Pweful vise .ssembly­
    vise comonents are thick
    welded steel, with 9" x 18"
    laminated hardwood faces.
    3
    Round do
    g h
    oles-n
    ot
    squa re-let you add dog
    holes where you need them.
    Name
    ______________
    ______________
    Stat,
    5
    AdJust.ble leg levellefl­
    steel leg levellers let you
    easily adjust workbench to
    uneven floor surfaces.
    6
    Avall.ble In kit form
    tool-contains all spe­
    cialty hardware and plans­
    everything you need except
    the wood!
    __________
    __
    __
    _______
    _____
    60H 2" thick
    work-surf.ce- com­
    prised of carefully selected
    maple laminates which are
    glued ad
    30H
    Cit,
    otd
    with three
    I,"
    dia. steel rods for extra
    reinforcement.
    Zi,
    .
    J
    5
    Holds Projects Dozens of Ways!
    Our own "flip-over" vise design. interacting with strategically located round
    dog holes provide secure clamping for a wide variety of projects nearly
    anywhere on the bench surface-even oversized items such as chairs.
    full-sized doors-even full sheets of plywood-can easily be secured.
    1
    [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
  • zanotowane.pl
  • doc.pisz.pl
  • pdf.pisz.pl
  • rafalstec.xlx.pl
  • 
    Wszelkie Prawa Zastrzeżone! Jedyną nadzieją jest... nadzieja. Design by SZABLONY.maniak.pl.