tools

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[audio src="http://www.woodworkersjourney.com/audio/podcast3.mp3" options="controls autobuffer" format="mp3"]

Sharpening can be a real chore. Even though you know the end results are worth it, it still can be tempting to keep putting it off. But imagine how poor your woodworking results would be if you never sharpened your tools. In order to perform at your best, your tools need to be honed to perfection.

Well, the same rules apply to your non-woodworking tools that help shape your business. If you neglect sharpening and honing these tools, then you won’t have a woodworking business in the first place.

In fact, not too long ago, I wrote about the big three tools you need to be honing as much as you hone your chisels and plane irons.

Check it out: Why Are You Avoiding the Big 3?

I’m thrilled to be doing the third podcast for you, but something’s missing….a name! I could call it “The Woodworker’s Journey Podcast” but I think you all can come up with a better more creative name than that.

So, if you’ve got a great idea for a name, pitch it down below in the comments. If I pick your name, then I’ll give you a full bio in the next podcast as well as a direct link to your site and/or Twitter page.

I’m looking forward to seeing your awesome ideas and comments.

For more inspiration for your woodworking journey, be sure to subscribe today!

Download the MP3.

Amazing background music composed by Dereck at Lostwars.

It’s easy to get caught up in the world of jigs, fixtures, templates, etc. Basically, we have a tool for every little process we can imagine. While these do serve a purpose, sometimes the best tools to move us from good to amazing are right in front of us.

This is true when it comes to designing your furniture. There are tools to help automate the process and make it easier, but when it comes to the quality of your designs there exists no greater tools than these three below.

Function

That’s right, function. The intended function of a piece will help determine it’s size, shape, features, and even what materials to make it from.

Standard sets of measurements exist for just about every furniture type out there. These are set by, you guessed it, the function of the piece. Are you making an end table? Is this a cabinet to display a precious collection?

Whatever the anticipated function, your designs can be guided by understanding what you want this piece to accomplish.

Proportion

This is, by far, one of the greatest tools a designer can have at their disposal. The Greeks and Romans had this tool, and Nature displays it prevalently. Proportion is essential in achieving a balance  and harmony between the overall piece and the parts that comprise it. Whole articles have been authored on this one subject, so forgive me if I’m too brief in my attempted explanation.

So, how does one figure the proportion of something? Well, leave it to those genius Greeks to solve that for you. The Golden Ratio (sometimes called the Golden Mean or Golden Rectangle) is a simple formula that allows you to take one known measurement and then find all the remaining measurements of the relating sides or parts.

It may sound complicated, but it’s actually very simple. The numerical value of the The Golden Ratio is 1.618.

Let’s say you are making a table, and you know that the top has to be 28″ in width. What would be a pleasing length for the top? Simply take 28″ and multiply it by 1.618. You get 45.304.

Now you know that the top would be proportioned if you make it around 45″ long. If you know the longer measurement, then simply divide by 1.618 to get the shorter measurement.

Realize that this isn’t a concrete rule to follow. This formula simply gives us guidelines to help suggest measurements that are pleasing to the eye and are in proper relation to each other.

I use this to figure table top sizes, dimensions for doors, the panels within the doors, even the frame parts of the doors can all be calculated. Drawers, legs, cabinet depths, these all can be found using the Golden Ratio. Get familiar with this tool and discover what golden opportunities it affords.

Intuition

“The best tool is the eye. Train the eye. The eye guides your hands to achieve the form. If the eye says it’s right, it is right.”

- Tage Frid

Tage Frid taught my teacher back in the late forties and early fifties. He instilled this principal of intuition in each of his students. As a result, my teacher passed this on to me.

In fact, I would hear him say almost this exact phrase to all of us at one point or another. His purpose was to help us develop that sense of balance and proportion to the point that it became almost like a second nature. This intuition affords a sense of liberation and freedom as you work. It allows the eye to guide the whole process.

Sometimes, even when all the numbers add up, and everything seems to scale on paper, things still don’t seem quit right. Your intuition can quietly and accurately inform you when something seems balanced and when something seems terribly out of proportion to another part.

In the end, after it’s all said and done, does the piece seem right? Does it seem balanced? If not, then what is it that is unbalanced? Go ahead. Change the drawing. Alter the design based on this intuition. Now, step back and look at it again.

As you’re shaping that compound curved table leg, put aside the templates and just begin to shape it by eye. Carefully take in all the angles visually and let the eye guide the process. Now, hold it up to one of the finished legs. All it takes is a little time and trust. Train the eye. It’s the best tool we have. It guides the intuition.

These tools have always been at your disposal. They’ve worked for humanity for centuries. Yet, even today people can be reluctant to rely on them. Maybe it’s the fact that they require more trust of your own abilities.

However, once you begin to take these tools and implement them for yourself, you’ll find greater freedom within your woodworking than you had before.

Have you had success using these three resources? What tools do you employ in the design process?

How would you like to design furniture that sells? Find out how in the Woodworking Can Pay The Bills E-course.

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