The Woodwright's Eclectic Workshop
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Roy returns now with his fourth book, The Woodwright's Eclectic Workshop. It features step-by-step instructions for many projects featured on the television series in recent years, including such popular projects as the Adirondack chair, tavern table, folding ladder, rocking horse, lathe, and kayak. All projects are illustrated with photographs and measured drawings.
The book also includes colorful descriptions of what it was like to be a tradesperson who made a living by hand, working with the tools and methods Roy describes on television and in his books: carpenters, joiners, wheelwright, millwrights, chairmakers, and blacksmiths. As Roy puts it, he wants to examine 'the old paths in the way that they were originally taken: not as adventuresome recreations but a profession that put food on the table and clothes on the kids.'
Roy Underhill
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.
Read more from Roy Underhill
With Saw, Plane and Chisel: Building Historic American Furniture With Hand Tools Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsThe Woodwright's Apprentice: Twenty Favorite Projects From The Woodwright's Shop Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Woodwright’s Guide: Working Wood with Wedge and Edge Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Woodwright's Shop: A Practical Guide to Traditional Woodcraft Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Woodwright's Companion: Exploring Traditional Woodcraft Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Woodwright's Workbook: Further Explorations in Traditional Woodcraft Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
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The Woodwright's Eclectic Workshop - Roy Underhill
Introduction
I had never handled a tool in my life, and yet in time, by labour, application, and contrivance, I found at last I wanted nothing but I could have made it.
– Daniel Defoe, Robinson Crusoe, 1719
When Robinson Crusoe first hit the streets in 1719, it became an instant bestseller. Since that time thousands of stories have been told and forgotten, yet this tale of a man forced to rely on simple tools and common sense has endured and is familiar to almost everyone today. What could account for its timeless appeal?
Is it just escapism? The stresses that were part of everyday life in eighteenth-century London are still with us today—with a vengeance. Could this explain the enduring popularity of the theme of the simple life
? Is our attention to the old ways
just more therapeutic nostalgia? No way.
The test of a classic is that it remains eternally modern. Traditional methods endure because they always have worked and they always will. Your axe will still fell a tree. Your mallet and chisel will still cut perfect dovetails. Your plane (just a block of wood with a piece of steel in it) will still give you the finest surfaces and the crispest mouldings. The old ways work; they brought us to where we are today. There was life before electricity.
But power tools work too, and they are readily available. Why would anyone choose to work wood with old hand tools? You might as well ask why some people prefer to travel on cross-country skis rather than snowmobiles. Both will get you there; the difference is in the character of the journey.
In this book we will learn how to make a few things in the honored tradition of the industrious amateur. We will also explore the old paths in the way that they were originally taken: not as adventuresome recreations, but as professions that put food on the table and clothes on the kids. You know their names; you may even bear one of them yourself. Who has not met a Cooper, a Charpentier, a Zimmerman, a Sawyer, a Joiner, a Zeigler, a Turner, or one of the many Wrights? But before any of these specialized trades could exist, there had to be the pioneer, the homesteader who laid the foundations of the civilization to follow. So this book begins with a little trapper's cabin.
1 Log Cabins
Most of the Houses in this Part of the Country are Log-houses, covered with Pine or Cypress Shingles, 3 feet long, and one broad. They are hung upon Laths with Peggs, and their doors too turn upon Wooden Hinges, and have wooden Locks to Secure them, so that the Building is finisht without Nails or other Iron-work.
– William Byrd, "History of the Dividing Line
betwixt Virginia & North Carolina," 1728
Inside the one-room slave cabin reconstructed at Carter's Grove Plantation on the James River in Virginia.
Log cabins loom large in our history, both the real and the imagined. By now, most people recognize that neither the Pilgrims nor the settlers at Jamestown knew anything about log building. They knew only the building language of their native land, that of England's wattle-and-daub frame carpentry. Nor did they invent the log cabin after they had been here for a while. Many of them froze in muddy, canvas-covered holes in the ground until the Scandinavians brought their language of building with logs to the New World. Log building was a perfect fit in the new country and quickly became the dominant form on the American frontier.
As does any endeavor, log building has levels of sophistication commensurate with the time and energy that the builder can afford. Thaddeus M. Harris, in his 1805 Journal of a Tour into the Territory Northwest of the Alleghany Mountains, described the difference between a log cabin and a log house:
[Cabins] are built with unhewn logs, the interstices between which are stopped with rails, calked with moss or straw, and daubed with mud. The roof is covered with a sort of thin staves split out of oak or ash, about four feet long and five inches wide, fastened on by heavy poles being laid upon them. . . . If the logs be hewed; if the interstices be stopped with stone, and neatly plastered; and the roof composed of shingle nicely laid on, it is called a log-house. A log-house has glass windows and a chimney; a cabin has commonly no window at all, and only a hole at the top for smoke to escape.
The quality of log building can mark social distinctions as well. Ernest Thompson Seton told of this in his wonderful 1903 book, Two Little Savages. Describing the townspeople of the fictional Canadian settlement of Sanger in the mid-nineteenth century, he wrote:
Every man and boy in Sanger was an expert with the axe. . . . The familiar phrase, He's a good man,
. . . implied that he was unusually dexterous with the axe. A man who fell below standard was despised. Since the houses of hewn logs were made by their owners, they reflected the axeman's skill. There were two styles of log architecture; the shanty with the corners criss-cross, called hog-pen finish, and the other, the house with the corners neatly finished, called dovetail finish. In Sanger it was a social black eye to live in a house of the first kind. The residents were considered scrubs
or riff-raff
by those whose superior axemanship had provided the more neatly finished dwelling.
The log house that I will build with you in these pages might indeed brand you as riff-raff (but I'll still come to visit you anyway). Truly, very few of these once-common rude buildings have survived, and because of this, they are less widely understood today than the more finely finished log
Start chopping the notch on the side where you want the tree to fall.
houses of their time. As you build and live with such a rude cabin, you discover a sophisticated organic relationship developing between you and the materials and forces of nature. With an axe and a forest, you will see what I mean.
FELLING
To build with trees, you must first disconnect them from the ground. The axes and men that came over on the first boat were no match for the ancient giants of the American forest. But, as Benjamin Franklin noted when he watched the construction of a frontier fort in 1755, it was not long before they grew equal to the task: Seeing the trees fall so fast, I had the curiosity to look at my watch when two men began to cut at a pine; in six minutes they had it upon the ground, and I found it of fourteen inches diameter.
By a century later in 1850, an Ohio man recalled, felling trees was considered great sport: We experimented, as young boys will, and we felled one large hickory with the saw instead of the axe, and barely escaped with our lives when it suddenly split near the bark, and the butt shot out between us. I preferred buckeye and sycamore for my own axe; they were of no use when felled, but they chopped delightfully.
Look up, look around, and think before you begin chopping. First look for any predisposition of the tree to fall in one particular direction, caused by a lean or extended limbs. It is often better to fell the tree at right angles to the direction of the lean. You want to have cut the tree well nigh through before it goes over. You don't want to have a lot of splintering and surprises. This is dangerous business; to stay alive, you must stay in control.
The way to fell a tree with control is to hinge it down. Stand to the side of where you want the tree to fall and swing about you with the axe at full extension to be sure that there are no limbs, vines, or people to catch your axe on. Make the first cut on the side that faces the direction you want the tree to fall. You should feel as though you are whipping the axe into the tree rather than pushing it. When the first notch is more than halfway through the tree, move to the opposite side and cut the back notch a little higher up the tree than the first one. The wood that remains between these two notches is the hinge. Keep well to the side when the tree gets ready to go over. Never stand behind the falling tree; it will occasionally shoot back and can spear you like a bug.
Felling the tree is the first operation of woodworking, and the speed and ease of your axework is a prime example of one of the GREAT SECRETS OF WOODWORKINGS. Examine the surface of any one of the chips that flew from the notch. When you are working at your best, the area of the chip
Make the back cut on the opposite side above the level of the first cut.
Good axework is the systematic process of driving in the blade to split free large chunks of wood.
that was actually severed by the axe blade will be only about one-fifth of the total surface. The rest of the surface will plainly show that it was formed by splitting, demonstrating the extent to which you have taken advantage of the planes of weakness in the wood. This is the principle that is fundamental to the mastery of traditional woodworking:
Exploit the weakness of the wood when you work it and the strength of the wood when you use it.
Out of the Woods
If you are indeed building by yourself, without horse, helper, or handcart, you will find it unprofitable to cut a log too heavy for you to drag to the site by yourself. The tradeoff is diameter versus length. You can build a cabin wall 25 feet long if you are willing to use a lot of 4-inch-diameter logs. I figure an absolute limit is a 7-inch-diameter log that is about 14 feet long. Every tree is heavier in the butt log where it is the thickest, so that is the part of the tree to cut into logs for the short walls. Remember that the logs on a saddle-notched cabin must extend out beyond the corners. This requires that you cut your logs a few feet longer than the intended length of the wall.
Please don't hurt yourself doing this without adequate help. Years ago, out West, a couple had a falling-out, and the man began building a cabin on the mountaintop while the woman maintained residence in a tepee down in the aspen grove. He dragged a hundred logs up a winding path to the top of the mountain by himself, making an I'm killing myself through log-dragging and nobody can stop me!
statement that only incidentally grew into a cabin.
You may be able to carry a 14-foot log out of the woods by yourself if it is no larger than 7 inches in diameter on the small end.
Much about Bark
Bark is waterproof, which is good for the tree while it is alive and good for canoe builders, bugs, and fungi when the tree is dead. Millions of years of evolution have developed an efficient biodegradation process for recycling dead trees. If you leave the bark on a log, it will be considered part of the natural cycle by the organisms dedicated to this process. In other words, leave the bark on a log and it will rot.
The problem is not the bark itself, but the water from the living tree that the bark keeps in the log. Whether you leave the logs lying on the ground or stack them in tall, airy piles, the environment within the bark remains the same. Bugs that like to eat and nest in freshly dead trees bore through the bark and track in fungal spores that grow through the wood. This in turn attracts new bugs and more fungi that quickly destroy the log and anything you have built with it.
But what accounts for the pictures we see of houses built with logs that still have the bark on them? Surely these people knew better? Well, some did and some did not, and others didn't care. Soldiers building winter encampments cared only if their cabins would get them through the winter. They cut the logs in late fall when the insects and fungi were inactive. Come spring, if the bark was still on, the wood would still be damp inside and the bugs would come and the rot begin.
Any opening in the jacket of bark will allow the water in the log to escape as vapor. A dry log will not decay and will be much less attractive to bugs. If you remove even a strip of bark down the length of a fall-cut log, the water will escape through this opening and the log will be dry by spring. Rustic aesthetes who like the look of bark used to build dude ranches like this, hiding the bare strip under the chinking. There are also other, more expedient methods that allow you to build with bark-covered logs and still have something standing after a year.
You often see one such method in southern tobacco barns. After the logs are up, work down the length with a hatchet or axe, chopping off a 3-inch wide strip on the outside and inside of each log. I once dismissed accounts of this technique, thinking that logs are only hewn before building with them. I will long remember the dismayed expression on the face of the old fellow that told me of this, when I laughed and corrected him from my extensive documentary research. Later I realized that I had photographed this technique many times without understanding the tool marks I was recording. The logs were indeed lightly hewn after the walls were up, just to help them dry out and keep them from rotting.
Larger logs take more muscle and wheels to move. Garland, Dan, and Robert will place this 26-foot black locust sill on the row of decay-resistant locust-post footings. This log and its mate will be the bottommost logs in a large cabin at Carter's Grove.
The funkiest technique for preserving logs is one I have also heard described, but the physical evidence for it is harder to find. This way, people interrupt the natural biological process when it reaches a point advantageous to them. There are numerous other such examples in human endeavors. Flax is rotted until it is soft enough work into linen. Sweet potatoes are allowed to cure (dry) until it's safe to store them in the root cellar. Wild game is hung for a time before being cut up. All of these practices involve interrupting a natural process at just the right time. Too soon, and it won't have any helpful effect. Too late, and the stuff will spoil. So, too, the log builder can wait until the inevitable bugs loosen the bark so that it can be pulled off by hand. With the bark off, the bugs leave and the logs dry before the fungi can do serious damage. The logs don't look pretty, but once dry, they will last.
The tobacco barn behind this North Carolina farm family was laid up from small, bark-covered pine logs. After the walls were up, each log was lightly hewn down its length to remove a 3-inch-wide strip of bark and wood. This hewing allowed the logs to dry in place before the insects and decay could attack them. (It was not the custom to smile for the camera in 1903.)
The most fastidious means of getting the bark off is to peel the entire log. Peeling the bark off logs will give you plenty of opportunity to contemplate your misdeeds. Skinning a tree, like skinning a deer, gets you covered with blood. The sap sprays onto your skin and hair, then grabs all the dust in the air and sticks it all to you. Although the long-handled barking spud is best for peeling larger logs, smaller logs are easier to peel with a drawknife. A tree with a crook, crotch, or branch at about shoulder height makes a convenient lodgement for the pole being peeled. You will last even longer if you can perch the log horizontally about waist high. At least one of the supports should be V-shaped to keep curved logs from rolling back to their favored hanging position.
In the spring and early summer you can peel the bark from a log with an iron barking spud.
In the fall and winter, or on a log that is too dry, a drawknife is the best tool for removing bark.
If you don't mind the solitude, you may find it wiser to peel your logs in the woods so you won't have to clean up bark. Be warned that a fresh-peeled log is slipperier than owl spit and is better left to dry a few days before you haul it out. The drier it gets the lighter it gets.
SQUARING
Often you will feel the need to flatten your log on at least two sides before you use it. This need for squaring is only partially based on the neurotic western-European compulsion to impose strict geometric order on natural forms. Shaping the log into a standard rectangular section is genuinely helpful in the systematic construction of a frame building. It also gives you the flat walls for the more polite forms of log building. It gives you a lighter, stiffer timber and most certainly allows the log to dry. Squaring a log is generally useful and you need to know how to do it.
Layout
Although you can do the squaring entirely by eye, even the most experienced workers usually place guidelines on the log before going at it with an axe. First, roll the log up off the ground onto two short cross-logs with notches cut in their tops so that the log will not rock about. If the log curves, orient it so that the curve hangs in the vertical plane rather than to one side. Sit down