Why Wood Moves and How to Build Around It

Every piece of solid wood is still doing something long after the tree has been felled. It takes on and gives off moisture from the air, and as it does, it swells and shrinks. The frustrating part for beginners is that this movement is uneven. Wood expands and contracts significantly across its width but barely … Read more

Flattening Rough Boards by Hand When You Don’t Own a Jointer

Rough-sawn lumber is cheaper by the board foot, comes in better grades, and lets you choose your own grain instead of accepting whatever the home center pre-surfaced that morning. The catch is that it arrives cupped, twisted, and furry from the saw. Most instructions assume you own a powered jointer and a thickness planer to … Read more

Why Wood Moves, and How to Build So It Never Cracks

A beautiful tabletop that splits down the middle a season after you finished it is one of woodworking’s most disheartening failures, and it is almost always avoidable. Wood is not an inert material like steel or plastic. It is a bundle of long cellulose straws that soaked up and gave off water while the tree … Read more

Getting Strong Glue-Ups With Clamps, Cauls, and a Calm Plan

The glue-up is the moment in a project where hours of careful work either come together or come undone, and it is where beginners feel the most panic. The glue is spread, the clock is running, boards are sliding around, and something always seems to be going wrong at once. Yet a strong, flat, gap-free … Read more