The Woodwright's Guide: Working Wood with Wedge and Edge | 
enlarge | Authors: Roy Underhill, Eleanor Underhill Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press Category: Book
List Price: $35.00 Buy New: $23.83 You Save: $11.17 (32%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 2 reviews Sales Rank: 157449
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 250 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.8 Dimensions (in): 11.1 x 8.7 x 0.8
ISBN: 0807832456 Dewey Decimal Number: 684.082 EAN: 9780807832455 ASIN: 0807832456
Publication Date: October 8, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: INTERNATIONL SHIPPING!!! SHIPS from 5 locations based on your Zip Code and availability! (PA TN IN OR SC) *-* Gift Quality *-* Orders Processed Immediately! - We get your book to you Very Quickly!
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Product Description For thirty years, Roy Underhill's PBS program, "The Woodwright's Shop," has brought classic hand-tool craftsmanship to viewers across America. Now, in his seventh book, Roy shows how to engage the mysteries of the splitting wedge and the cutting edge to shape wood from forest to furniture.Beginning with the standing tree, each chapter of The Woodwright's Guide explores one of nine trades of woodcraft: faller, countryman and cleaver, hewer, log-builder, sawyer, carpenter, joiner, turner, and cabinetmaker. Each trade brings new tools and techniques; each trade uses a different character of material; but all are united by the grain in the wood and the enduring mastery of muscle and steel. Hundreds of detailed drawings by Eleanor Underhill (Roy's daughter) illustrate the hand tools and processes for shaping and joining wood. A special concluding section contains detailed plans for making your own foot-powered lathes, workbenches, shaving horses, and taps and dies for wooden screws. The Woodwright's Guide is informed by a lifetime of experience and study. A former master craftsman at Colonial Williamsburg, Roy has inspired millions to "just say no to power tools" through his continuing work as a historian, craftsman, activist, and teacher. In The Woodwright's Guide, he takes readers on a personal journey through a legacy of off-the-grid, self-reliant craftsmanship. It's a toolbox filled with insight and technique as well as wisdom and confidence for the artisan in all of us.
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| Customer Reviews:
Fascinating #6 November 2, 2008 This, the sixth in Underhill's Woodwright series, is more tool and process oriented than the others. I really like this one for its practical teachings.
I do have an axe to grind, however. The Product Description above says "A special concluding section contains detailed plans for making your own foot-powered lathes, ...." Aah, I thought, I'll finally get plans for building that treadle lathe Underhill has been teasing me with for five books. If you, like me, think "detailed plans" will give you true shop drawings, lists of materials, and instructions that, if you follow them will give you a working lathe at the end; then you, like me, will be very disappointed. He does give you more than in the past, but be prepared for much head scratching and trial and error. If I do go ahead and try to build one, I'm going to make sure I have at least three of everything on hand.
Over all, this is perhaps his best book yet. I just don't understand why he's so stingy with his plans.
He's captured my imagination again!! October 26, 2008 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
"It's just a piece of wood, but let's see what your axe handle has to say." (p.4) From the opening sentence of St. Roy's latest tome exudes the essence of Underhill, both myth and man. As a young boy, my grandfather had me chopping wood for my breakfast, and the only thing I remember my axe handle saying were words not fit to use here, but when Roy visits an axe handle, it suddenly springs to lively discussion, relishing it's job in the Feller's hands. And therein is the first thing I learned from this book; he (historically speaking) who is a "Feller" is not necessarily the good old boy on the next bar stool at some back-road greasy spoon diner, but is in fact he who fells trees. Aha!
Underhill's most recent work is self-admittedly a re-visitation of his prior books (of which I have all, somewhere in a box...) It is organized in such a way that we follow woodworking from the forest all the way through the joiner's work with stops along the way to learn the tools of the craft and to take surveys of the bodger's art, timber framing, ship building, and wood turning. Written in Underhill's inimitable and inevitably right-brained style, it is laced with the imagery and humor we've come to be addicted to. The reader finds himself mired in nostalgia, picturing himself in colonial breeches and turning the spiral auger to drawbore a mortise and tenon joint in huge oak beams, while the author himself is chipping away at a nearby beam with an adze and explaining, "Of the 23 known woodworking puns, a fair share involve the adze." (p. 19.)
We work wood because we love wood and we love making things with it. Underhill has given proper acknowledgment to the fact that most of what is covered in this book is not hobby, but mankind's way of life not so long ago. For Underhill, the Wooden Age hasn't quite come to an end, and as I read this latest Woodwright's episode, I begin to feel that perhaps it hasn't ended for me, either. For any of us who find any joy at all in transforming wood, this is mandatory reading. I defy you not to let your imagination wander!
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