• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar

My Woodworking Site

woodworking tips & tricks


  • Home
  • Woodworking 101
  • Woodworking Tips
  • Legal Pages
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use
  • Contact

Top Woodworking Tips Straight From The Pros

By The Carpenter

Working with wood can create a vast array of products which can be used throughout your life. You can build a bench for your yard, a crib for your baby or a desk for your office. No matter what you plan to build, the tips found in the following paragraphs will help you get the job done.

Don’t neglect sanding your wood. Sanding may be tedious, but the quality of your workmanship will suffer if you leave the scrapes and nicks where they are. Not to mention, those scratches and nicks absorb more stain and paint, making them stand out more, and making your work look shoddy.

You can use tape to catch excess glue. If you want to prevent oozing glue stains along joints, try clamping pieces together without using any glue. You just put tape on your joint, and then cut along it using a sharp blade. Separate your pieces, and then apply glue. After that, clamp them to each other again. Your glue will ooze on the tape instead of the wood. You can peel off the tape before your glue dries.

Clean your saw’s teeth before cutting lumber. To thoroughly clean your saw blade dip a shop rag into a little acetone and wipe the blade thoroughly. Additionally, using a piece of sandpaper that has a fine grit will remove any sap or gumminess from your skill saw’s cutting blades.

Dust can ruin the finish of any woodworking project. Keep dust away from your projects and workbench by vacuuming it up. If you blow or brush it away, it will just land somewhere else, likely back on your project. Also, use a damp cloth to wipe all surfaces before you begin top-coating, or staining.

If you are trying new skills, make sure that you practice on some wood that has no value, like some scraps. You don’t want to waste an expensive piece of wood before you know exactly what you are doing. Once you have mastered your new skills, you can move to a better piece of wood.

Always follow the owner’s manual when using one of your woodworking tools. Not knowing the manual’s recommendations can result in injury or failure of your tool, and you surely do not want either of these to happen to you. If you have not yet read your manuals do so right away!

You should know how to work with wood while using hand tools as well as power tools. If you are doing one quick action, it may be in your best interest to use a hand tool, but if you are completing a larger task, power tools will save you a lot of time.

If you are working with wood, it can be very dangerous to have a messy workshop. Do everything you can to keep your work area clean and well-maintained. Every time you are done with a specific tool, out it away before you get another. It may seem like this is time consuming, but you won’t have any reason to clean up later.

Always remember the rule of measuring twice and cutting once. You are human, which means that mistakes are inevitable. However, you can prevent measurement mistakes from turning into cutting mistakes when you measure two or three times. That is going to spare you serious waste, not just in terms of wasted wood, but also money and time.

Now that you know so much about woodworking, and how to do it better, you can choose any project which tickles your fancy and tackle it with confidence. Once you are able to get that job done, you’ll find the world is your oyster. Dream big and achieve greatness!

Filed Under: Woodworking Tips

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Primary Sidebar

Categories

  • Woodworking 101
  • Woodworking Tips

Featured Posts

Beginners: Essential Fundamentals to Woodworking

Always Place Safety First in Any Woodworking Tasks

Key Health Concerns To Keep In Mind When Woodworking

Differences Between Hardwoods and Softwoods

Common Misconceptions in Woodworking

Popular Tags

1/2 inches applying glue bird feeder Blog carpenter square crosscut guide cutting laminate drafting square dry fit dry fitting dull blade dull blades extension cord extra spring gel stains golf tee grade indicates grade refers grade wood particle board perfect height power sander power tools safety equipment sanding block sanding blocks scrap plywood scrap wood screw holes size nail spray adhesive stair gauge stair gauges stair jacks tain conditioner tile square tin snips utility knife wood shop woodworking business woodworking project woodworking projects woodworking shop woodworking skills workbench height

Copyright © 2021 ยท mywoodworkingsite.com