Issue 463 Archives - Woodworking | Blog | Videos | Plans | How To https://www.woodworkersjournal.com/weekly-issue/issue-463/ America's Leading Woodworking Authority Tue, 24 Jan 2017 16:28:04 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.5 Calavera Tool Works: Reimagining Work Gear for Woodworkers https://www.woodworkersjournal.com/calavera-tool-works-reimagining-work-gear/ Tue, 17 Jan 2017 15:35:57 +0000 http://rocklerwj.wpengine.com/?p=35444 Indiana company bringing innovation to supply storage gear and work aprons for woodworkers, contractors and DIYers.

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New tools and accessories fill the pages of our “What’s In Store” department in every print issue of Woodworker’s Journal and our weekly eZine. But when’s the last time you can recall seeing a single new idea to help get you and your shop better organized? Try to think of something other than the latest version of multi-drawer steel tool chest on wheels… Tough to land on a product, isn’t it? While there’s always a new pneumatic nailer, a more powerful battery or another band saw coming to market, innovation in the sphere of shop organization and personal woodworking apparel very rarely happens.

So imagine my surprise when, shortly before Christmas, a box arrived containing four small black nylon gear bags with bright-orange carabiners attached. Plus a pair of extruded aluminum brackets on which to mount these bags. But this gear, looking more suited to geo trekkers or mountain climbers at base camp, is actually intended for jobsite folks and us woodworkers. Their source: a new Indiana-based startup company called Calavera Tool Works, founded by Michael O’Shaughnessy Williams.

He sums up these “5# Gear Bags” this way: “At their core, they’re super durable, easy-to-attach little bags that can be filled, stuffed, thrown, dropped, dragged or whatever else have you, and still be extremely useful pieces of gear at the end of the day.”

Williams has spent most of his life around construction sites, hardware stores and power tools. He earned a degree in industrial design and an MBA from Notre Dame, then developed power tools for Stanley Bostitch and Bosch, where he led the benchtop power tools group.

“I had these opportunities — dream jobs by just about any standard, not because I’m particularly smart, but because there’s not one other person in the world who loves this stuff more than me.”

Career pursuits led him from Bosch to Festool North America to lead the division’s marketing, product management and training efforts, up until about two years ago. Williams explains that his decision at that point to leave Festool was motivated by the desire to start his own company where he could be the one to make all the decisions impacting the finished product and to set high standards for customer service. What he had in spades was motivation. What he lacked, initially, was clarity about what to make.

“When I got (Calavera) started, all I could think about was making really great tool belts … rethinking how people go about organizing, carrying and storing their tools and supplies.”

The typical mindset and approach of contractors, Williams says, is a “carry-every-single-thing-you’ve-got” approach. “I’ve seen guys carrying around 40 lb. tool belts loaded with junk from three jobs back.”

When those overloaded tool belts get emptied, the mishmash of fasteners and other odds and ends often goes straight into the trash — or the “tetanus bin” as many call it. Small quantities of fasteners and supplies are rarely kept sorted, either while in the tool belt or after getting dumped from it. When supplies unexpectedly run out, time gets lost running to the store rather than staying productive on the site. For many busy contractors, organization becomes afterthought, not an operating objective.

Williams’s new-product epiphany came one day while spending time with his kids at a climbing wall. It occurred to him that climbers’ chalk bags offer a compact efficiency and convenient attachment system for folks who can’t afford to be weighed down or burdened by excess gear. Could that same “take just what you need” mindset translate to the jobsite or woodshop? It was worth a try.

“The day that the idea for the 5# Gear Bag struck, I dusted off the 40-year-old sewing machine my mom gave me 20 years ago and set to learning how to use it. I probably made 300 (prototypes) myself before settling on the final design we have now,” he admits.

The size of these bags roughly approximates the proportions of the 5-lb. brown bags in which hardware stores used to sell bulk nails or screws. Snap-on carabiners offer quick connection to a pipe, screw or whatever attachment surface is nearby. The bags also have an integrated belt clip and internal drawstring closure. Calavera’s aluminum bracket system, packaged with the bags, enables them to be mounted to a bench, sawhorses or a cabinet. The top multipurpose bar of the bracket can be moved from one base bracket to another, depending on where you need your supplies to be for different jobs.

“Now you can have your supplies within easy reach but not on top of your work surface where you’re trying to get work done!”

While the 5# model is the only size currently available, Calavera plans to offer 1# to 10# sizes as well.

In addition to the new Gear Bags, the company also manufactures four styles of leather Work Aprons, which Williams hopes will come as a welcomed solution for woodworkers. While carpenters have a myriad of quality tool belts from which to choose, personal shop apparel for woodworking is limited. And most woodworkers, with the exception of Norm Abram, just don’t wear tool belts.

Williams studied the work habits of professional woodworkers in order to match function to form in these aprons. Made of several grades of leather, ranging from supple to stiff, the aprons feature just a few breast pockets to keep them “streamlined,” he explains. There’s a place for a pencil, notepad or phone, a 6-in. ruler and maybe a small square. But, he’s steered clear of big pockets around the waist to minimize bulk storage there — an apron shouldn’t be a tool belt, after all. These handmade aprons are available in several sizes, plus three adjustable strap options to suit personal preference and body type.

“I have logged more miles than I care to remember visiting tanneries and leather shops around the country in search of the perfect materials for the main panels, pockets and straps,” Williams admits. “I think the materials give us an excellent range of fit, feel, color and character. Some will want one that feels soft and broken in right out of the gate, while others will want the satisfaction of breaking in our hand-dyed model that starts out stiff as a board.”

At these early stages of operation, Calavera is very much a family affair. Williams cuts and hand-dyes every component of the top-end Work Aprons, and he says his four kids can regularly be found in the shop pitching in with organizing, packaging and label-stitching tasks.

What Williams can’t do himself is outsourced to other American companies, and Williams is committed to a “Made in America” business ethic. He admits that the entire product line could have been launched much earlier last year if he had sourced the manufacturing overseas. But that alternative was out of the question.

“It seemed disingenuous to me to build a company around my love for the American craftsman by sourcing all of my products in foreign factories. Plus, once I got past the learning curve, I found a wealth of domestic sources ready and waiting to start cranking out some really great finished products.”

As the 5# Gear Bags and Work Aprons continue to gain exposure in the marketplace, there’s much in store from Calavera this year. Williams teases that the company will be rolling out more sizes, colors and configurations of the Gear Bag line, with camo being his personal favorite. He plans to borrow even more design inspiration from the backpacking and climbing industries and expand the storage bar system, too.

In the meantime, Williams is overwhelmed by the reception the 5# Gear Bags and Work Aprons are receiving, and he says both jobsite and woodworking customers are beginning to embrace Calavera’s concept of “take what you need for the task at hand, and leave the rest.” It’s a new kind of practicality, rooted in quality products, with many more possibilities to explore.

“There’s simply no way to overstate how good it feels to step outside the boundaries of comfort and chart your own course, to see ideas become reality, and then to see those things you’ve created become useful and valuable tools in the hands of end users,” Williams says. “It’s not for the validation, but because this will enable us to push forward with a much broader plan to bring innovation to our industry.”

Learn more about Calavera Tool Works products by clicking here.

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Options for Breaking Edges https://www.woodworkersjournal.com/options-breaking-edges-2/ Tue, 17 Jan 2017 15:08:31 +0000 http://rocklerwj.wpengine.com/?p=35450 Softening the edges of your projects can make them both aesthetically more pleasing and less likely to splinter. Chris Marshall explains and offers advice on how best to break edges in this video.

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Softening the edges of your projects can make them both aesthetically more pleasing and less likely to splinter. Chris Marshall explains and offers advice on how best to break edges in this video.

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Milwaukee Compact Tape Measures https://www.woodworkersjournal.com/milwaukee-compact-tape-measures/ Tue, 17 Jan 2017 14:00:57 +0000 http://rocklerwj.wpengine.com/?p=35328 Promising best-in-class durability, these five new Milwaukee tape measures are up to 30 percent smaller than comparable products for lighter, easier handling.

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Promising best-in-class durability, Milwaukee’s five new Compact Tape Measures are up to 30 percent smaller than previous Milwaukee and other competitors’ tapes on the market, thanks to advanced manufacturing technology. For instance, the 25-ft.-long tape fits in the housing of a 16-ft. tape. The smaller housings make these tapes easer to handle and reduce weight when clipped to a belt or tool belt.

Milwaukee says the reduction in size comes without sacrifice to durability. The tapes feature Milwaukee’s proprietary Nylon Bond Blade Protection and a five-point reinforced frame for drop protection.

Available this month, the new Compact Tape Measures come in five lengths: 16-ft. (item 48-22-6616, $10.99); 25-ft. (48-22-6625, $14.99); 30-ft. (48-22-6630, $19.99); 5-meter (item 48-22-6617, $10.99); and 8-meter (48-22-6626, $14.99).

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Rockler Disc Sander Angle Jig and Circle Sanding Points https://www.woodworkersjournal.com/rockler-disc-sander-angle-jig-circle-sanding-points/ Tue, 17 Jan 2017 14:00:16 +0000 http://rocklerwj.wpengine.com/?p=35324 Enlarge your disc sander's table, and bring more accuracy to angled or curved-edge sanding, with this multipurpose jig.

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Disc or belt/disc sanders may come with a miter gauge for use with the disc sanding table to support workpieces when sanding their edges and ends. But, often these miter gauges are too small to provide adequate support and have only a crude angle scale. With Rockler’s new Disc Sander Angle Jig, you can both enlarge your sander’s table and bring greater accuracy to angle-sanding tasks.

The 3/4-in.-thick MDF jig base measures 12 x 15 inches, and it can be mounted to any sander table that has a 3/8- x 3/4-in. miter slot and at least 3 in. between the front of the miter slot and the sander’s disc. Its 12-in.-long fence can be swiveled up to 46 degrees left or right. A durable and bright aluminum protractor scale, demarcated in half-degrees, is embedded in the jig base to ensure accurate fence angle settings.

There’s also an aluminum T-track, oriented perpendicular to the sander’s disc. When the T-track is outfitted with the included metal stop and centering point, the jig can be used to locate the center points of circles of various radii for sanding their convex edges.

Rockler’s Disc Sander Angle Jig and Circle Sanding Points (item 54963) is available now and sells for $119.99 at Rockler stores, online or through the printed catalog.

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Best Finish for a Maple Tabletop Overlay? https://www.woodworkersjournal.com/best-finish-maple-tabletop-overlay/ Tue, 17 Jan 2017 13:59:18 +0000 http://rocklerwj.wpengine.com/?p=35319 Is a wipe-on finish the best choice for my roughsawn maple tabletop overlay?

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I’ve built a tabletop of roughsawn maple blanks 7- to 10-in. wide and 1-in. thick to create a rustic “farmhouse” look. It overlays our existing kitchen table to accommodate more people. I am considering topcoating the maple with Watco® Danish Oil Natural to protect it from water/oil and other food spills and to bring out a little more color in the wood. The wood is light brown color in color now, as you can see in the above photo. Do you have other suggestions for finishing this tabletop to bring out the color of the wood and protect from spills? The table overlay is serving as an interim to a longer “farmhouse” table that my wife wants me to build someday. So eventually I’ll likely reuse the wood from this overlay for other projects after it is planed to relieve the planks of their natural bow and cup. I’m not particularly concerned about the penetration depth of finish, which would, for the most part, be planed away. – Tom Corwin

Rob Johnstone: My opinion — and it is worth every cent you are paying for it — is that you have the right idea with Watco oil. That is especially true if you are thinking of resurfacing the boards and making something else out of them later. I would apply a few coats of the oil finish. Then, from time to time, I would clean the whole top and rub it down with some fine steel wool, followed by a “touchup” coat. I think you will be happy with the results.

Tim Inman: For the use you’re describing, I think the Watco type finishes would be fine. Sam Maloof’s Poly/Oil Finish would be my recommendation. My bigger concern is that you don’t forget to finish the BOTTOM of the tabletop. If just one surface is finished, you will have unwanted warping for sure.

Chris Marshall: That’s a neat-looking tabletop! And a simple, clever idea for expanding the seating of your current table. If the wood isn’t terribly rough, I’ll make a third suggestion. You could apply a conventional brush-on varnish to build to a thicker film finish more quickly than Watco or similar wipe-on product. With a thicker coating, you can be sure spills and food stains won’t be a problem, and the film might even give you a smoother overall feel to the tabletop’s surface than a wipe-on finish. I really like General Finishes Enduro-Var waterbased varnish. It imparts a nice amber tone to the wood, which I think you’ll appreciate. It dries fast, too, with very little odor during curing. But an oil-based polyurethane would also give the maple an amber tint if you prefer more traditional oil-based varnish instead.

 

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Bubinga Arcade Joystick https://www.woodworkersjournal.com/bubinga-arcade-joystick/ Tue, 17 Jan 2017 11:15:27 +0000 http://rocklerwj.wpengine.com/?p=35453 This reader took a collection of waterfall bubinga and spalted curly maple boards and created an award winning customized arcade joystick.

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I made a nice joystick from waterfall bubinga and spalted curly maple. This case just earned 3rd place in a contest at my local woodworker’s association. All the boards were 1/4″ thick and about 3″ wide. Two of the 6 boards were a near perfect grain match. I decided to use this match to make the top of the case.

-Michael Dove

See the Gallery Below:

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Readers React to Stanley Black & Decker’s Purchase of Craftsman Tools https://www.woodworkersjournal.com/readers-react-stanley-black-deckers-purchase-craftsman-tools/ Tue, 17 Jan 2017 11:10:55 +0000 http://rocklerwj.wpengine.com/?p=35427 eZine readers share their memories of Craftsman Tools, and their questions about the brand's purchase by Stanley Black & Decker.

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In the last issue of the eZine, Rob talked about Stanley Black & Decker’s recent purchase of Craftsman Tools, a line that has created a lot of memories. – Editor

“I’d like to share a story with you, if you don’t mind. I’ve always been a hands-on person. Loved tools, and doing and making things with them.  At the age of eight, I discovered my Dad’s old homemade carpenters tool chest in the basement. Saws, planes, drill bits, electric drill, jigsaw, all kinds of neat stuff — most of which had the Craftsman name on it. Right away, I started working through what little wood he was hoarding for a rainy day. (I won’t go into the trouble I would always get into for using his pieces of wood.)

“A couple years later, I discovered his small metal toolbox in the garage (to work on my Schwinn), mostly of Craftsman Tools as well. My Dad was a Marine in WWII, and grew up in a one-room log cabin with a dirt floor until he was about 10. Then it was off to live with his grandfather, who had a tarpaper shack and farmed with oxen, no car. At 17, he left high school to join the Marines. He must have loved Sears. His 12′ aluminum rowboat was an Elgin (another trade name sold by Sears). When he built his house in 1954, there was Kenmore all over in the kitchen, and in the basement were Kenmore matching washer and dryer.

“When I started collecting tools, I followed suit and also bought Craftsman, which I have yet today. When I went to work as an auto body tech, everyone poked fun at my Craftsman toolbox, and my wrenches, socket, pliers, etc. Mine were all lifetime warrantied, same as those with Snap-on, Mac and others. The difference is I wasn’t waist deep in debt like they were. I eventually did trade in the Craftsman stack for a larger Snap-on chest. But I never invested in those expensive hand tools.

“So here I am, semiretired, waiting for my disability to start, and I read your short column. It sure did bring back many memories of my dad and I working together with his tools as a youth. It reminds me that, someday, my sons will have to fight over my Craftsman tools, to see who gets what. You know, that old Craftsman circular saw my dad had, never died. After Dad passed, my brother inherited it. I’m sure glad that the Craftsman name is still going to be out there. It does have a great history. And they are great hand tools.

“Stanley is a great name to be mated with, in my honest opinion. I wish they still made hardware. The overseas junk we get these days can’t hold anything against that old Stanley hardware.” – John E. Adams

“As a guy who is admittedly a tool snob (automotive), the very idea of buying Craftsman wrenches, sockets, almost anything they produced, wasn’t even a consideration. However, in the last several years, Craftsman has created some of the best value and well-made tools on the market.  Their premium wrenches (once ugly, clunky and downright crude) are right there with Snap-on Tools, and Craftsman sockets are on par with anything you can find in the upper price range, foreign or domestic.  The warranty is always honored (it breaks, they replace it free), even at my local Orchard Supply. I hope they continue to produce first-rate tools and that Stanley Black & Decker promotes the heck out of them! They deserve a place in professional settings as well as the ‘home repair kit.’” – Steve Pendlay

Several readers felt that the news raised questions. – Editor

“Like you, I’m glad that if Sears had to sell the Craftsman brand, they sold it to someone who knows tools.  My concern, though, is will Stanley honor the Craftsman lifetime guarantee?  More than once in my 85 years, I’ve taken a broken Craftsman tool back to Sears who (except on one occasion) simply replaced it with no question. On the one occasion mentioned, I happened to get a new hire clerk who, after I told her of the Craftsman guarantee, her boss intervened to set her straight.” – Donald Haff

“One of my concerns is the parts availability for older tools. Sears was generally very good about this. Will S-B&D keep and renew the inventory? Nobody has mentioned this aspect to my knowledge.”  – Paul N. Sheldon

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