Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
Woodworking (rec.woodworking) Discussion forum covering all aspects of working with wood. All levels of expertise are encouraged to particiapte. |
Reply |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article , Jim wrote:
(Doug Miller) wrote in .com: In article , Jim wrote: Completely new direction... just responding to the subject. Did anyone else think this show was worthwhile? It was a fairly small show with what appeared to be light attendance. However, every one of the vendors and demonstrators were extremely informative and took the time to offer advice. [snip] *Very* worthwhile. SWMBO and I took #2 son Allen (age 12) along. He griped and moaned about it beforehand, but within fifteen minutes of getting there, he had spotted Don Weber's booth, and was fascinated watching Don turn firewood into chair spindles (frankly, so were we). Don sat him down on the shaving horse, handed him a drawknife (I'm sure it helped that Allen was wearing a shirt with the Boy Scouts logo), and showed him how to smooth and square a walnut billet in preparation for turning. Allen spent the next _four_hours_ playing apprentice and assistant to Don, learning about working with green wood and how to use a treadle lathe, and just generally seeing first-hand, in a way that I could never have explained to him, that fine results can be achieved with primitive tools. [snip] It must have been your son I saw with the big grin on his face using the draw knife.... Probably so. Blond, 5'4", glasses, yellow tee-shirt, denim shorts? The wood mag show should take notice and have a few more hands on things for the kids. The vendors at that show would do well to involve them too. As a result of the people giving the demonstrations talking with, giving advice, and generally teaching my youngest daughter, I'll be buying a scroll saw in the very near future. Something I wouldn't have done if they hadn't got her interested it it. Amen to that. The "Make-a-Memory" workshop was a step in the right direction, I think, but we didn't do that. We had seen the references to it in the ads, but when we got there and saw the signs hanging from the ceiling showing what the kids would be making on the scroll saw (a duck, a dinosaur, I forget the third one, all just block figures), the three of us looked at each other and said "Naaah". Allen's *waaaaay* beyond that on the scroll saw: he just recently completed a silhouette of the Eiffel Tower. Scroll saws are great tools for kids. They can exercise all kinds of creativity, and the chances of getting hurt are pretty slim. Glad to hear your daughter has caught the bug too. I love spending time in the shop with my kids. You'll get to enjoy that too now. The Dremel scroll saw they sell at Lowe's is a pretty good starter saw. Not very expensive, and quite workable. To control vibration, get a rubber pad (we bought one at WoodsWork on E. Washington St) and bolt the saw down to a bench or table with the pad in between. Make the bolts snug, but *not* tight. Good places to buy blades are the woodworking shows, WoodsWork, and Winner Woodworking on the SE side. Superior Distributing, downtown, probably has them too, but I haven't checked. The library, and most of the woodworking stores, have a good supply of books on scroll saw techniques, and WoodsWork has _by_far_ the best selection of books of patterns, at all skill levels. -- Regards, Doug Miller (alphageek-at-milmac-dot-com) |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
ot- The Ted Nugent Show | Metalworking | |||
Men, Metal & Machines - Visalia Show Report | Metalworking | |||
Is there a FAQ? | Woodworking | |||
SF Bay Area Woodworking Open House | Woodworking |