Synopses & Reviews
With The Woodwright's Companinon, Roy Underhill continues to demonstrate 'how to start with a tree and an axe and make one thing after another until you have a house and everything in it.' Underhill's latest book features chapters on helves and handles, saws, the search for the whetstone quarry, crow chasers and turkey calls, hurdles, whimmy diddles, snaplines and marking gauges, candle stands, planes, window sash, riven shingles, and pit sawing. The final chapter offers a glimpse of traditonal woodworking techniques still used by the Colonial Williamsburg housewrights. More than 260 photographs complement the text.
Synopsis
Underhill's second book features chapters on helves and handles, saws, the search for the whetstone quarry, crow chasers and turkey calls, hurdles, whimmy diddles, snaplines and marking gauges, candle stands, planes, window sashes, riven shingles, and pit sawing. The final chapter focuses on traditional woodworking techniques still used by the Colonial Williamsburg housewrights.
About the Author
The longtime master housewright at Colonial Williamsburg, Roy Underhill is the leading authority on old-time woodworking techniques. He created The Woodwright's Shop for public television in 1979. The series, produced by the University of North Carolina Center for Public Television, has aired nationally since 1981, with thirteen new programs introduced each year. Roy is a graduate of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and holds a master's degree from Duke University.
Table of Contents
Finding and Buying Old Tools
The Forest
Making Handles
Saw Sharpening and Saw-Making
Quarrying Whetstones
Crow Chasers and Turkey Calls
Making Wattle and Bar Hurdle Fencing
Toymaking
Line Reels and Marking Gauges
Tripod Candle Stand
Understanding and Using Planes
Making Wooden Window Sash
Making and Laying Split Shingle Roofs
Pit-Sawing Timber
Virginia Timber-Framing