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Want To Learn Woodworking? These Tips Can Help!

By The Carpenter

Are you able to work with your hands? Do you find measuring to exact dimensions is simple for you? Would you love to be able to create useful products in your spare time? If so, the hobby of woodworking is truly for you. In fact, you might even be able to turn it into a career with the tips below.

Your workbench height is important. To find the ideal height, take a measurement of the distance between your floor and your waist’s midline. This tells you the right workbench height for your needs.

Glue can cause nasty stains on your finished work. You can eliminate stains easily using a piece of tape. First, clamp your wood together without any glue. Put a piece of tape over the joint. Cut the tape on the joint with a sharp knife. You can now clamp the wood together with glue and any excess will ooze onto the tape, not the wood.

If you have loose interior door hinges to work on, you may be able to just use a golf tee to help. Take the door off and remove the hinges, then lightly tap the golf tee into the screw holes. Cut the part of the tees that do not fit into the screw holes before putting the door back in its frame. A golf gee thus provides the screw with something it can grab.

If you find that there is rust on any of your woodworking tools there is a rather easy solution. As long as the rust is just on surface, all you need to do is use a pumice stone on the spot. Be sure to scrub gently, as being too rough can lead to you damaging the tool itself.

If you have any pockets on the shirt you are wearing, remove everything from them before you start working with a table saw. It is very common for objects like pens and rulers to fall from your pocket and get caught in the blade, which can lead to some pretty serious injuries.

If you’re looking for that first woodworking project, how about starting with a simple box? In fact, that’s probably the most popular first woodworking project out there. Buy some cheap wood that you like, and design a box that could work around your home. Maybe it’s for writing utensils, or perhaps it’s for the kitchen? There are a lot of options.

To help your paint and stain brushes stay soft and subtle suspend your brushes in paint thinner. One of the best items to do this is those plastic pop-up baby wipe dispensers. The top of the container will securely hold your brush and also helps prevent your paint thinner from evaporating.

Sanding blocks are essential woodworking tools. You can create easy to reuse sanding blocks of your very own by simply cutting three-quarter-inch scrap lumber into rectangles measuring 4.75 x 4.50 inches. Cut pieces of cork tile to fit each block. Spray both the rectangle of wood and the rectangle of cork tile with adhesive and press them together. Allow to dry, then spray the backside of an entire sheet of sandpaper with adhesive. Place your newly made block on the sandpaper with the cork on the down-side. Allow to dry and then use a utility knife to cut the sandpaper around each block.

Regardless of your current skill level, the tips above should help you improve your technique. Take each into your mind as you use them when you work. If you can integrate them into your current procedures, you’ll find that the time you spend working with wood will improve day by day.

Filed Under: Woodworking Tips

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