2009 Class Schedule

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Build a Side Table with Kelly Mehler


March 2-6
Cost $800 - Includes all materials - 1 space available
Skill Level - Open to all

In this foundational class you will build a small side table. The side table has proven to be a popular project for both new and experienced woodworking enthusiasts. The side table class focuses on foundational skills including basic joinery, drawers, gluing, machine and hand tools use, all valuable skills used in nearly all woodworking projects. The piece that you create is adaptable to a variety of uses and can fit into many kinds of home or office decors.

 

 

 

The highlights of this class are:

Handouts and daily demos will give you step-by-step instruction and tips for successfully completing your side table.

As in all our small classes, you will work at your own pace and will receive lots of individual attention.

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adamc_toolchest

18th Century Tools & Techniques with Adam Cherubini New!

Cost $460 - includes materials
March 20-22
Skill Level - Open to all

 

If we were able to step back in time, and walk into an 18th century cabinet shop, what tools would we find? Would they be familiar to us? If the master of that shop pressed us into service, would we know the names of the tools? How to use them? Adjust them? Would he nod approvingly, or shake his head as we worked?

18th century cabinet maker Adam Cherubini will dissect period estate inventories listing cabinetmakers' and joiners' tools to illustrate what tools were commonly used during the 18th century. In class, students will examine antique tools as well as accurate reproductions of period tools to learn how they work. The focus will be largely on saws, planes and chisels.  In addition to learning which tools were present in the period, students spend hands-on practice time each day learning how to adjust and use them.

About the instructor:

Adam Cherubini is a professional cabinetmaker who works entirely by hand. He has been twice recognized by Early American Life Magazine as one of the best traditional artisans in the country. In addition to building furniture, Adam also makes replica hand tools in the 18th c. style and serves as a contributing editor for Popular Woodworking Magazine. Read more about Adam and his work at his website: www.adamcherubini.com or his blog www.artsandmysteries.com. Craig Stevens recently interviewed Adam. You can listen to that interview as a pod-cast here: http://blip.tv/file/1149497

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European Relief Carving with Nora Hall


Cost $460- includes all materials
March 27-29
Skill Level - All levels

Old-style ornaments such as leaves, scrolls, shells, flowers, grapes, etc. will be utilized as a means of explaining classic European carving styles. The main area covered will be relief carving. Carving in-the-round, chip carving, and letter carving will also be included.

Initially, each student will become familiar with the seven basic tools by carving a simple design. Nora will work individually to perhaps suggest a second project and a third and so on. If time permits, high relief carving will be introduced.

Throughout the course, much one-on-one guidance will be given to ensure that correct technique is followed. Demonstrations and discussions will occur frequently, perhaps to stress a particular concept or to address students' questions.

This workshop is open to experienced and to novice carvers, with the outcome being that, at the end, each participant will have learned to achieve both quality and higher levels of productivity and proficiency through the techniques learned.

Students are welcome to bring their own tools; or, tools can be supplied by the instructor.

We invite you to join us for this very special opportunity to work with Nora.carved cradle


About the instructor:

It was Nora Hall’s life dream to become a wood sculptress when she was growing up in Amsterdam, Holland during the difficult years of World War II.  Nora’s father, master woodcarver Johannes Leereveld, encouraged his daughter to attend the art academy in Amsterdam, which she did for one year. This brief study laid the foundation for an apprenticeship with her dad that continued for many years.

In the 1950’s, Nora left her native country and raised her family in the United States. In the 1970’s Nora began teaching classical-style carving methods to U.S. students of all ages.

Over the years, Nora has had the pleasure of having her work commissioned by the BMH Synagogue in Denver, US West, Hugh Hefner, Gibson Guitar, and numerous private collectors. She has also had her work and life featured in such magazines as Fine Woodworking, Woodshop News, Colorado Homes and Lifestyles, and Woodworker’s Journal.

Nora is still teaching and carving today, moved by her love of the craft she wants to share it with as many people as possible. We are thrilled to have her teach at the school! Visit her website at www.norahall.com

 

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Greenwood Chair Making with Brian Boggs

March 30 - April 9 - 3 spaces available
Monday-Saturday & Monday-Thursday
Cost $1585 - includes all materials
Skill Level - Intermediate

Greenwood chairmaking offers a very enjoyable entry into steam bending techniques, turning, and hand tool mastery. In this class, Brian will teach students how to design for comfort and create the support tooling to build fine chairs with precision.

Chairmaking is often thought of as one of the more challenging arenas of furniture making.  While the demands of the craft are undeniable, this class can do a lot to teach you how to approach chairmaking using a process that is broken down into very manageable steps. From steam bending, hand shaping and turning, to seat weaving and finishing, there is a whole lot of fun to be had in this two-week class. With the amount of time available in this class we will be able to build a splayed leg chair.

One thing that Brian likes to emphasize in all his classes is that it is what you learn in class rather than the product you take home, that has the greatest value. Therefore, as a part of this class you will create a chairmaking manual that will guide your future chair projects at home. Such a manual has been essential to managing quality control and efficiency in Brian's shop and I think you will find it a highly valuable tool for any woodworking project you hope to repeat. Even if you change the design considerably the next time, the basic framework of how you went through the process last time will help you hold on to the lessons you learned in earlier efforts. Keeping a record of how you work will greatly help you develop your processes and skills as a woodworker.

You will go home with an assembled chair, the outline of a process manual, and very likely a few new friends as well.  So come join us in creating this enduring and comfortable chair.

About the instructor:

Brian Boggs has been making chairs in Berea, Ky for 22 years. His work has been featured in numerous museums and galleries nationwide as well as over a dozen books. He has written several technical articles for Fine Woodworking and Woodwork Magazine and has been teaching workshops around the country since 1988. While many of his chairs adorn the homes of the well-to-do, a large portion of his work is purchased by other woodworkers. Sam Maloof, Christian Becksvoort, Garrett Hack, Tom Lie-Nielsen, Kelly Mehler and many others have recognized Brian's work not only as fine work and good design, but a good value as well. Brian brings to his classes a unique mix of technical problem-solving as well a as a good sense of efficiency. Visit his website at www.brianboggschairs.com.

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Sidetable

 

barton_plate

Basic Chip Carving with Wayne Barton New!

April 18-19
Cost $335 - includes all materials and tools
Skill Level - Open to all

Basic chip carving classes are designed for those who have little or no carving experience. This class concentrates on how to properly sharpen tools, the basic techniques of chip carving, and executing essential patterns and designs, with an emphasis on how to create borders, grids, rosettes, lettering, and free form ideas.

About the instructor:

Wayne Barton is an American-born professional woodcarver who lives in Park Ridge, Illinois with his Swiss wife, Marlies. He was first given an interest in woodcarving at the age of five under the tutelage of his Norwegian grandfather. Wayne took his formal training in Brienz, Switzerland, the woodcarving center of that country.

Wayne Barton is the author of four best selling books. Setting the industry standard, he developed the finest and the most popular chip carving knives among carvers today. He also developed and pioneered the very popular ceramic sharpening stones. Learn more about Wayne Barton and his work at waynebarton.com

 

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Sidetable

 

planesPlane Making: Wooden Molding Planes with Larry Williams & Don McConnell

April 27- May 1 - 1 space available
Cost $780 - includes all materials
Skill Level - Intermediate

For many woodworkers, there are few more gratifying experiences than producing their own tools. With hand tools and traditional techniques, we'll each make a pair of #8 hollow and round planes that share the features and function of those made by the best plane makers of the past.

We'll explore the history of molding planes and their evolution. While molding planes appear simple they're highly evolved with often subtle features that make a difference in their use. Our planes will incorporate important details that enable greater utility and agility.

There are many easily learned skills involved which also transfer to other aspects of woodworking. We'll learn dependable and repeatable sharpening techniques that apply to profiled tools like those used in carving and to more common straight edged tools like bench chisels and bench planes. Each participant will also learn to easily and accurately heat treat tool steel for the planes produced in this project and for future needs.

You'll gain experience with tools you may not have used before. Floats will enable you to work deep into places you can barely see into and to do it accurately. Gimlet bits will allow you to "steer" hand-bored holes exactly where you want and need them.

We'll end by surveying some basic techniques of using hollow & round planes to produce classic molding profiles. You'll be able to experiment with creating a few traditional moldings with your new planes and to try out a few dedicated molding planes as well.

You'll leave the workshop enabled by new skills, fresh knowledge, confidence and a pair of hollow and round planes you'll be able to use to enhance your future work.

About the instructors:

In 2006, Larry Williams was honored with the "Living Treasure" award from the Arkansas Department of Cultural Heritage for his efforts in reviving the traditional craft of making wooden planes. Lie-Nielsen recently released Larry's DVD on plane making. Larry worked in architectural woodworking for 25 years and began experimenting with plane making in the late 1970's. His work and articles have been featured in a number of woodworking books and magazines. Larry is a partner in Clark & Williams, who produce traditional Western-style wooden planes.

Don McConnell made his first wooden planes in the late-1970's while building furniture in the cabinet shop of the Ohio Village. He continued his plane making activities over the following years while building custom furniture in traditional styles and undertaking one-of-a-kind architectural woodwork including carved elements of geometric handrails.  His work has been featured in several magazines and exhibits.  A former contributing editor for Popular Woodworking magazine, Don is also co-author of Hand-Saw Makers of Britain.

More than 300 Clark & Williams planes are currently in use in the Conservation and Historic Trades Departments at Colonial Williamsburg.

Visit their website at www.planemaker.com

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molding_techniquesUsing Wooden Molding Planes with Williams & McConnell New!

May 2-3 - 1 space available
Cost $350 - includes all materials
Skill Level - open to all

Learn how you can enrich your furniture projects, with complete freedom, through the use of hollows & rounds, and a few associated hand planes. Begin by gaining a familiarity with the "vocabulary" of classical moldings, their characteristics, uses, and designs. Learn to design your own classical moldings which are informed by proportions and principles found in the classical orders, also with an eye toward the tools used to create them. This will be re-enforced by hands-on experience designing, laying out, and executing several classical moldings. Along the way, we'll discuss the selection, tuning, sharpening and use of a variety of molding planes. Skills and knowledge which you can take home to your own shop.

Finally, we will explore ways in which these classical techniques and tools can be used to enhance more contemporary furniture projects to personal taste. The emphasis will be on learning to add visual and tactile interest, while manipulating the visual weight and relationships of various elements of your projects. Enabled by this skill and knowledge, the "profiles" of your projects need be limited only by your imagination.

About the instructors:

In 2006, Larry Williams was honored with the "Living Treasure" award from the Arkansas Department of Cultural Heritage for his efforts in reviving the traditional craft of making wooden planes. Lie-Nielsen recently released Larry's DVD on plane making. Larry worked in architectural woodworking for 25 years and began experimenting with plane making in the late 1970's. His work and articles have been featured in a number of woodworking books and magazines. Larry is a partner in Clark & Williams, who produce traditional Western-style wooden planes. More than 300 Clark & Williams planes are currently in use in the Conservation and Historic Trades Departments at Colonial Williamsburg.

Don McConnell made his first wooden planes in the late-1970's while building furniture in the cabinet shop of the Ohio Village. He continued his plane making activities over the following years while building custom furniture in traditional styles and undertaking one-of-a-kind architectural woodwork including carved elements of geometric handrails.  His work has been featured in several magazines and exhibits.  A former contributing editor for Popular Woodworking magazine, Don is also co-author of Hand-Saw Makers of Britain.

visit their website at www.planemaker.com

 

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Basic Finishing with Teri Masaschi

May 11-15 - 3 spaces available
Cost $780 - includes materials
Skill Level - open to all

In this 5-day class you will learn a large variety of finishing processes as practiced in the non-industrial furniture shop. By the end of the course you will know how to fill grain, apply dyes, pigments, and chemical stains, and put on hand-rubbed varnish, shellac, and oil finishes. Work on each of these techniques is done on your own sample panels (provided for you), and you may bring special pieces of your own wood to experiment on if you wish.

Through lecture and demonstrations, Teri explains everything from wood preparation to final rubbing out processes. This includes selection of proper abrasives, sanders, and fillers; layering of colorants; bleaching, glazing, and brushing; French polishing; and techniques for rubbing the final finish to perfection. You will leave with a better understanding of the range of choices for finishing your furniture projects from now on.

The week is loaded with daily handouts, hands-on practice, a lot of discoveries, and lots of fun!

masaschi book

About the instructor:

Teri Masaschi started as an apprentice with a Fine Arts dealer in New Hampshire at the age of 14. Since that time she has spent a lifetime restoring, conserving, building/rebuilding and finishing antiques. Teri also finishes for woodworkers who use her expertise to finish their work. Other than a period of 7 years working at Woodworker's Supply as manager and specialist for the finishing products, Teri's career has been a straight line of creating fine finishes, writing about finishing and passing on some of her 36 years of knowledge through teaching.

Teri is the author of a newly-released book, Foolproof Wood Finishing, published by Sterling Press.

 

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Continuous Arm Windsor Chair with Curtis Buchanan New!

May 25-30 - 2 spaces available
Cost $795
Materials fee $190
Skill Level - Intermediate

In this class you will use green wood straight from the log to build a Continuous Arm Windsor armchair using traditional hand tools. The back and spindles will be riven from oak and shaped with a drawknife and spokeshave. The graceful continuous arm will be steam bent. Seats will be carved from easter white pine using a scorp, travisher and scrapers. Legs and stretchers are pre-turned from hard maple. This six day course taught by one of America's premier chairmakers contains a wealth of information about hand tools and traditional chair making. Come prepared to work hard and learn a lot! Windsor chair

 

 

About the instructor:

Curtis Buchanan makes his Windsor chairs in much the same way they were made 200 years ago. His small, one-man shop is located in the heart of Jonesborough's Historic District. Buchanan has published numerous articles on chairmaking and has taught in many craft schools both here and abroad. He is a co-founder of GreenWood, a community-based sustainable forestry initiative in Latin America. His chairs are in the permanent collection of the Tennessee State Museum and the Southern Highlands Craft Guild. They also reside in the Tennessee State Governor's Mansion and Monticello, the home of Thomas Jefferson. Visit Curtis's website at curtisbuchananchairmaker.com

 

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Turning for Furniture Making with Nick Cook

June 8-12 - 2 spaces available
Cost $710
Materials $85
Skill Level - Open to all

This class is designed for woodworkers interested in adding turned parts to their furniture projects. Students can expect to learn, practice and execute the techniques for making most of the turned parts that may be found in a piece of furniture.

The projects you create will include matched table legs, bun feet, finials, drawer pulls, a table lamp, a small 3 legged stool and a larger four legged stool.

We will start with an introduction to the lathe, safety, turning tools and sharpening techniques.  Students will learn to sharpen their turning tools, and will practice proper cutting techniques.

You will practice a variety of cuts and learn to make the basic shapes required for spindle turning.  Some faceplate work will also be included. We will also discuss stock preparation, layout techniques and how to create duplicate parts.

Nick will discuss and demonstrate:

Each student will have their own lathe for the week. Don't miss this special class with an amazing amount of skill practice and lots of enjoyment!

About the instructor:

Nick Cook is a full time production turner producing a wide variety of gift items, one of a kind bowls & vessels as well as work for furniture makers and millwork contractors. He spends much of his time teaching both individuals and groups throughout the country. He has done workshops for woodturning groups in Australia, New Zealand and England. He has also participated in the national woodturning symposiums in England, New Zealand and the US. He is a founding member of the American Association of Woodturners and has served as vice president and conference coordinator. Nick was named the 12 th honorary lifetime member of the AAW. He has written numerous articles for various woodturning publications including Woodworkers Journal and American Woodworker. He is a contributing editor for American Woodturner. Visit his website at www.nickcookwoodturner.com

 

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Choosing and Using Hand Tools with Andy Rae New!

June 15-19
Cost $775 - includes materials
Skill Level - All Levels

This is an engaging 5-day hands-on class for learning hand tool use, sharpening, and tune up. Andy will walk you through the world of woodworking hand tools and their use. You will learn about everyday furniture makers tools, from marking and layout tools to chisels, saws, and planes. You will discover how to look for good tools, and where to shop for bargains and gems.

During class, we'll look at tuning up tools, both old and new to make them perform at their peak, from cleaning old tools and flattening surfaces to adjusting and lubricating key parts.

You can expect a lot of hands-on experience as Andy shows you proper chisel techniques, how to develop the necessary hand-eye skills for sawing precisely to a line, and how to make fine shavings with confidence from a properly tuned hand plane. You will make a traditional bench hook to aid in using your handtools.

Finally in order to bench-test and develop your skills, you'll also build a dovetailed box with a sliding lid. Sawing and chiseling the dovetails will be done by hand, as will fitting and planing a solid-wood bottom and top.

Highlights of the class are:

About the instructor:andyraeportrait

Andy Rae has been working wood for nearly three decades, designing and building furniture as well as teaching and writing about the craft. He has written over 100 articles for woodworking magazines. Andy worked in the shops of George Nakashima and Frank Klausz during his formative years, then opened his own design/build studio, making furniture as well as architectural build-ins. His woodworking studio is isolated in Asheville, North Carolina. He currently publishes an online blog for Taunton Press at www.taunton.com/finewoodworking.

Any Rae has authored five books, including Choosing and Using Hand Tools (Lark Books, 2002)   Visit Andy at philmechanicsstudios.com

 

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Hand-Cutting Dovetails with Kelly Mehler


June 27
Cost $175 - includes materials
Skill Level - Open to all

Find out that this preeminent joint is well within your grasp! This most beautiful, useful, and long lasting joint will be our focus for this daylong hands-on class. You will learn methods that may be difficult to read about but which become very doable with hands-on instruction.

 

Here's what we'll do:

By the end of the day, you will have a good foundation for successfully adding hand-cut dovetails to your woodworking repertoire.

This is a good preparatory class for the Blanket Chest class and the Chest of Drawers class.

 

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Hand-Cut Dovetailed Blanket Chest with Kelly Mehler


June 29-July 4 - 1 space available
Cost $795
Materials not included
Skill Level - All levels

It is a Blanket Chest! It is a Tool Chest! It is what you want it to be as this project represents one of the most enduring pieces of heirloom furniture. These chests are often passed down in families for many generations. The best historical examples are made with hand cut dovetails since this is, without a doubt, the best joint for preserving the integrity of the chest over time. Your own hand cut dovetailed chest will become an instant heirloom of which you are be the proud creator!

In this class you will build a beautiful Blanket Chest of a dimension that suits your needs. The chest is made of solid wood panels for the case, top, and base. If time allows, an interior structure and small interior drawer can be added.

The main emphasis of the week will be case construction using hand cut through-dovetails. You don't need prior dovetail experience for taking this class, but my Dovetail Class will give you a head start and can-do confidence. You will learn the techniques needed to build this chest successfully through one-on-one instruction and demonstrations during the week. At the same time, you will acquire skills that are broadly applicable to other pieces that you may wish to make in the future.

You can expect to learn:

Enjoy the small class size and lots of personal attention while making a beautiful project of enduring quality.

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Cabinet Making with Nancy Hiller
Cost $710

Materials $165
July 13- 17
Skill Level - All

This course will give an overview of basic design and construction techniques applicable to cabinets that can be freestanding or built-in for kitchen, library, living room, office, or bedroom.  You will practice the techniques learned by making a versatile freestanding cabinet suitable for use as a small kitchen island or room divider.  
Basic construction will be plywood with face-frame, end, and back panels of solid wood, using traditional frame-and-panel techniques.  The sample cabinet will exemplify the use of hardware currently available (both internal—e.g., full-extension drawer slides—and external, including decorative hinges and pulls.)

The course will cover techniques of drawer and door construction and fitting, examples of finish techniques, and a discussion of materials available for use as counters.  Students will take home a partially-completed cabinet ready for finish.

About the instructor:

Nancy trained in traditional furniture making in England at the Isle of Ely College, near Wisbech. (City & Guilds of London Certificate.) She then worked for Roy Griffiths, a Slade-trained designer, at Crosskeys Joinery and for Millside Cabinetmakers near Royston, Hertfordshire, and briefly in the carpentry shop of the Imperial War Museum.

In the late 1980s, having worked for two furniture businesses in America, she returned to school to pursue intellectual interests at Indiana University, Bloomington, earning bachelor's degrees in Religious Studies and Peace Studies, followed by a master's in Religious Studies specializing in ethics. Having decided not to go on and pursue a doctorate, she found her way back into her original field of work, cabinetmaking. Nancy has operated NR Hiller Design since 1995. Her work has appeared in Old-House Interiors, Style: 1900, British House and Garden, Victorian Homes, Indianapolis at Home, American Bungalow and Fine Woodworking magazines. Visit her website at www.nrhillerdesign.com.

 

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federal card tableFederal Card Table with Glen Huey New!

July 27 - August 1 - FULL ...email to be waitlisted
Cost $790 - Student provides materials using the provided cut list
Skill Level - Intermediate

The most popular pieces of furniture built during the Federal period were card tables. Many shapes and designs were built, but the half-round form was the design of choice.

This table is based on a fine example of Southern, Federal craftsmanship built in Baltimore circa 1795 – 1810. The original table is part of the Colonial Williamsburg Collection. In this class you’ll construct a modified table with many of the same characteristics used on the original. This piece has many practical uses in your home and is destined to become furniture treasured for generations to come.

The focus of the class will be on the bricking of the front apron; simple veneering, inlay of string, banding and patera, multiple joinery techniques and period construction details.

You can expect to learn:

Join us for a fun-filled, informative, woodworking-packed week building the quintessential Federal period masterpiece. There is a lot to learn and many of the techniques can be adapted to your other projects.

About the instructor:

Glen Huey is an Ohio native who built his first piece of reproduction furniture - a Sheraton Bed - at age 14, with his father's help. Glen is a Senior Editor with Popular Woodworking and Woodworking magazines and has authored three furniture books including Glen D. Huey’s Illustrated Guide to Building Period Furniture. He currently builds furniture out of his shop in West Chester, Ohio as well as teaching woodworking classes and conducting seminars for woodworking groups around the country. Glen’s focus is primarily 18th & early 19th century furniture.

 

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Introduction to Relief Carving with Mike McCarthy


August 15-16 Cost $310 includes materials
Skill Level - All levels

 

If you are looking for that extra "something" that makes your work stand out, consider learning to carve. Learn the basic techniques of relief carving by adding carved elements to a picture frame. Once you have finished this class, you will be able to add these elements and other decorative motifs to picture frames, mirror frames, furniture and more.

In this class you will learn:

Join Mike and others for a pleasant weekend of learning and practice.

About the instructor:

Mike McCarthy started carving with his grandfather at the age of 8. Mike graduated with a degree in Fine Art from Bellarmine College with an emphasis on wood carving 1989. Mike has taught sculpture, relief carving, architectural carving, chip carving and other classes for the Louisville Visual Art Association and Woodcraft. Mike also carves for other furniture makers to help their pieces stand out from the crowd.

Mike's work is in both private and public collections.


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Hand Tool Skills for the Woodshop with Mario Rodriguez

August 17-21
Cost $750
Materials Included
Skill Level - open to all

No one argues that hand tools are essential for successful woodworking. They allow the woodworker to invest their work with unusual and personal details. Hand tools take up where machines leave off. And the practice of using handtools can be very satisfying; no noise, less mess.

         
This workshop will explore the traditional range of handtools available today and examine how they can be used to extend a woodworker’s range.  The class will spend a generous amount of time on sharpening; the most critical aspect of tool preparation.  If a tool ism’t sharp, its performance can’t be properly evaluated. 

Then time will be spent conditioning and fine-tuning a range of hand tools; from saws to planes, and chisels to scrapers.  The class will also examine tool design and modification.

Finally, students will perform a series of exercises and small projects to test tool effectiveness and develop hand tool skills. Your old, restrictive attitudes about handtools will be changed, replaced by new ideas and exciting possibilities.

About the instructor:Mario

Mario Rodriguez returns to Kelly Mehler’s School of Woodworking with over 30 years in woodworking as a builder/maker, teacher, and writer.

After receiving a BA in Art and Applied Design from H H Lehman College, he began a 4 year apprenticeship with the Carpenters & Cabinetmakers Union in NYC and received his NY State certification in 1978.

After graduation and working in the field, Mario established his own shop in Brooklyn, NY serving the areas leading architects, designers, and collectors. His shop handled projects that included: new construction, renovation, millwork, furniture restoration and refinishing, architectural woodwork and fixtures, and furniture reproductions.  His work has been featured in: Architectural Digest, Country Living, House Beautiful, Metropolitan Home, Hudson Valley, McCalls, Fine Woodworking, and the NY Times
     
Mario has taught in the Restoration Department at the Fashion Institute of Technology in NYC for almost 18 years, as well as the leading woodworking schools in the country. 
     
From 1992 to 1997, Mario directed the Warwick Country Workshops from a small barn behind his Federal period farmhouse. These specialized classes were devoted to traditional hand tool topics, such as: hand cut dovetails, carving a ball-&-claw, hot glue veneering, and planemaking.  Today, he still speaks at regional woodworking organizations and clubs
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Handsawing Weekend with Mario Rodriguez New!

August 22-23
Cost $350
Includes Materials
Skill Level - Intermediate

Saws are often considered the tool of last resort.  In fact, they are indispensable for the many finer aspects of building beautiful furniture. Woodworkers should be informed about the types of saws available to them, and their application in order to get the most from their woodworking.

In this two-day class, students will examine the design and manufacture of saws used in woodworking; from rip and cross-cut handsaws, tenon and dovetail saws, to coping and veneer saws. The course will also cover the tools, jigs, materials, and techniques for modifying and sharpening your saws, as well as proper and effective sawing techniques.

As a practical exercise, participants will sharpen and modify an inexpensive dovetail saw and a veneer saw.

About the instructor: Please see above



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Sidetable

 

Woodworking Machinery and Hand Tool Fundamentals with Kelly Mehler New!


August 31- September 4
Cost $785
Includes Materials
Skill Level - all

The goal of this basics hands-on course is to help provide a solid woodworking foundation to the beginning woodworker. In this class you will learn essential hand and machine tool skills. These are the foundational skills that all woodworkers should have but often miss.

Hand tools and hand tool skills are a necessary and rewarding part of woodworking. The woodworker's basic hand tools are chisels, hand planes, scrapers and handsaws. In this class we will cover the choosing, sharpening, tuning and use of each tool. You will learn easy to use sharpening techniques and options for setting up a sharpening station in your shop. Once your hand tools are sharp you will learn and practice how to use your hand tools correctly, safely and efficiently.

The jointer, planer, tablesaw, mortiser, drill press and router are the primary power tools in the woodshop. You will learn how to use each of these machine tools safely and properly as well as how to tune and maintain them. Important information such as choosing the right blades, adjusting guides, setting knives, and eliminating snipe are just a few of the things that you will learn during the week.

Finally, you will put all of your new skills together while building a small cherry end table. This is an important class for any woodworker and it will provide a solid foundation to build on.

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spice_chestBuild a Spice Cabinet using 18th Century Tools with Adam Cherubini New!

September 14-19 - FULL ...email to be waitlisted
Cost $770
Wood partially prepared $100
Skill Level - Intermediate

This is a great opportunity to spend 6 days with Adam Cherubini! He will guide you in building a classic Philadelphia style Spice Cabinet with hand tools. Focusing on traditional carcass joinery, the goal in this class is to help you develop the skills required to make carcases by hand quickly and efficiently. Students will be expected to have some basic skills with western hand saws and planes. Moldings will be planed and also scratched out. Foot turnings will be optional and can be done during spare time. Students will finish some but probably not all of the drawers during class. Options for replica hardware are listed in the "participant information" below.

About the instructor:

Adam Cherubini is a professional cabinetmaker who works entirely by hand. He has been twice recognized by Early American Life Magazine as one of the best Traditional Artisans in the Country. In addition to building furniture, Adam also makes replica hand tools in the 18th c style and serves as a contributing Editor for Popular Woodworking magazine. Read more about Adam and his work at his website: www.adamcherubini.com or his blog www.artsandmysteries.com.

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Sidetable

klauz_boxFrank Klauz Dovetailed Mahogany Jewelry Box New!

September 28- October 2
Cost $825
Materials included
Skill Level - open to all

This is a special opportunity to spend a week with the "Master." Frank will cover a variety of techniques and topics including hand-cut dovetails. He will also do tool clinics. Your tools need to be in top shape and razor sharp to make joinery easy. Each student will practice dovetailing before tackling the real thing, making a jewelry box. Frank will show how to put on hinges, a lock, line it with padded velvet, and finish it to a jewel-like luster. There will be daily talks on woodworking in general. There will be demonstration on sharpening chisels, planes, scrapers, and the maintenance of edge tools. There will also be special demonstrations on hand dovetailing and finishing. By the end of the week, students will have a beautiful jewelry box and the confidence to tackle any project.

About the instructor:
klausz

Frank Klausz is a master cabinetmaker from Hungary. He has worked with wood for more than 50 years. He owns and operates a cabinet shop in New Jersey that specializes in fine furniture reproduction and custom architectural fixtures. Frank writes for a number of woodworking magazines and lectures throughout the country for woodworking shows, stores, guilds, and universities. He is featured in five instructional DVD's by the Taunton Press. Find out more about Frank at www.FrankKlausz.com.

 

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Sidetable

 

aBuild Christopher Schwarz's Holtzapffel 1875 Cabinetmaker's Workbench with Kelly Mehler

October 19-24 - FULL ...email to be waitlisted
Cost $950
Plus $1050 for all materials (including the vises!) and machining
Skill Level - Intermediate

Build a bench designed for a lifetime of cabinetmaking in this six-day class with Kelly Mehler. This is Christopher Schwarz's adaptation of the original which we made last school year. The class was a huge success and there were many requests to repeat it.

In this class, you'll build a modified version of the 19th century Holtzapffel workbench, a simple and stout bench that can hand more varied tasks than most modern benches. The Holtzapffel, which was featured on the cover of the Fall 2007 issue of Woodworking Magazine, features a twin-screw face vise that can handle a 24"-wide case side and an end vise for clamping individual boards and panels up to 24" x 60".

The original design has been modified for this class so that the bench can be disassembled for easy transport back to your shop or for standard shipping. But rest assured the modified design is as simple, stout and useful as the 132-year-old original.

The class will use a combination of both hand and power tools to build the bench – power tools to handle the rough work and hand tools for the fine details and critical joints. No particular expertise in hand tools is required.

The school will handle all of the wood selection and rough milling of the bench stock so that you'll be focusing on the joinery and assembly during the six days.

Please note that this class is physically demanding. Additionally we are not able to ship the completed bench.

Additional information on the vises and size for the bench are located in the "Participant Information" link below.

 

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a


Building a Bed with Kelly Mehler

November 2-7
Cost $790                                    Materials not included.
Skill Level - Intermediate

Building a Bed has been a highly requested class each season. In this class we will build a simple bed of your choosing. (The most popular bed has been the classic Pencil Post bed pictured.) We will collaborate on a design that can be constructed in the time available at the skill level you wish to work.

During this six day class you will learn traditional bed construction strategies that include:

Photo & bed by student Jerry Burroughs-2007

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Contact Kelly Mehler P.O. Box 786, Berea, KY 40403 phone (859) 986-5540 fax (859) 986-1233
email: kelly@kellymehler.com

 

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