Please, please please, those of you back east, keep an eye on what your sellers are offering.
I do hereby commit to taking a woodworking class in the Cincinnati/ Covington area summer 2024. I will rent a pickup truck and drag my gains back to Seattle where they can be shipped by ship to Anchorage, and then by rail on to Fairbanks.
The Ash that made it up here after the emerald borer is crap. I hate that, but I am not letting this beech go by. The trick about beech is it is tricky to season without checking, warping, and cupping. I am looking really for experienced lumber kiln operators.
Beech is not an especially desirable material for content creators on youtube addicted to pocket screws, but with old fashioned dovetail joints the fact that beech "moves seasonally even more than" eastern white oak is not really a concern. The interior of my sawtill is finished with I think hemp oil and Johnson's floor wax, directly off the plane iron with no sand paper to speak of used. The exterior is in milk paint and I don't care about the seasonal cracking in the milk paint finish.
The French Cleat at the top of my till is "flame grain," as are the drawer fronts. The plain grain has, I think, a lovely luster with just an oil and wax finish, no polyurethane required.
I do hereby commit to taking a woodworking class in the Cincinnati/ Covington area summer 2024. I will rent a pickup truck and drag my gains back to Seattle where they can be shipped by ship to Anchorage, and then by rail on to Fairbanks.
The Ash that made it up here after the emerald borer is crap. I hate that, but I am not letting this beech go by. The trick about beech is it is tricky to season without checking, warping, and cupping. I am looking really for experienced lumber kiln operators.
Beech is not an especially desirable material for content creators on youtube addicted to pocket screws, but with old fashioned dovetail joints the fact that beech "moves seasonally even more than" eastern white oak is not really a concern. The interior of my sawtill is finished with I think hemp oil and Johnson's floor wax, directly off the plane iron with no sand paper to speak of used. The exterior is in milk paint and I don't care about the seasonal cracking in the milk paint finish.
The French Cleat at the top of my till is "flame grain," as are the drawer fronts. The plain grain has, I think, a lovely luster with just an oil and wax finish, no polyurethane required.