|
Woodworking is the process of building, making or carving something using wood.
History
Along with stone, mud, and animal parts, wood was certainly one of the first materials worked by primitive man. Indeed, the
development of civilization was closely tied to the development of increasingly greater degrees of skill in working these
materials.
Two ancient civilizations to use woodworking are the Egyptians and the Chinese. Woodworking is depicted in many ancient
Egyptian drawings. There are also copies of ancient egyptian work, such as chairs, that still exist. The metal used for this by
the Egyptians was probably bronze or even straight copper, as ironworking was not developed until much later.
Similarly the progenitors of Chinese woodworking are considered to be Lu Ban (魯班) and his wife Lady Yun. Lu Ban
is said to have brought the plane, chalkline, and other tools to China. His teachings are supposedly left behind in the book Lu
Ban Jing (manuscript of Lu Ban), although it was written 1500 years after his life. This book is filled largely with descriptions
of dimensions to use for building various items, such as flower pots, tables, temples, etc. It also contains extensive
instructions about Feng Shui, the ancient Chinese practice of geomancy. It mentions almost nothing of the intricate glue-less nailless joinery for which
Chinese furniture was so famous.
Topics in Woodworking
Woodworking is now a general term covering a wide range of skills and techniques.
- carpentry - Originally a carpenter was a wagon maker but carpentry has come
to mean the general working of wood. Sometimes used to cover all aspects of woodworking, at other times carpentry refers to the
least-skilled level of woodworking and larger projects, such as house building.
- joinery - The joining of two or more pieces of wood together, necessary in most
woodworking projects.
- cabinetry;cabinet
making;cabinetmaker - - The practice of utilizing many woodworking
skills to create cabinets, shelving and furniture; a craftsman who specializes in the making of fine furniture. Implies a very
high level of skill in woodworking.
- marquetry and parquetry- The
practice of creating patterns by inlaying different wood veneers; with different colours and different grains complex patterns
are formed. Originally used to decorate furniture, both are now often used to produce pictures. Often regarded as a fine art
form, equal to sculpture and painting. Marquetry is distinguished from parquetry by the shapes used and formed - marquetry
entails the creation of organic or scenic pictures, while parquetry involves geometric shapes.
- turning - The art of turning
a piece of wood on a lathe and shaping it by holding various cutting tools against
it.
- carving
- boat building
- wheelwright
- cooper - A
maker of casks and barrels.
- bodger - Now obsolete, a wood-turner
specializing making chair parts. Also a colloquial term for an incompetent workman.
Some of these refer to special techniques such as marquetry or turning, while others refer to a specialized product such as
the cooper or wheelwright.
Woodworking Tools
A variety of tools are used for woodworking. These may be divided into hand
tools and power tools, or they may be divided into rough groups based on
their function in the woodworking process.
- Measuring and marking tools
- Cutting tools
- hand saws such as the tenon saw, dovetail saw, crosscut saw, coping
saw, mitre saw, and various
Japanese saws
- power saws such as the circular saw, chainsaw, table saw, radial arm saw, jigsaw, and band saw
- Shaping tools
- hand planes such as the jointer plane, smoothing plane, block plane, shoulder
plane, scrub plane and rabbet plane.
- thickness planer and
jointer
- router and router bits
- chisel and gouge
- lathe
- drill press and morticer
- Other hand shaping tools, such as the axe, adze,
froe, spokeshave, and drawknife.
- Assembly tools
- screwdriver
- hammer and mallet
- hand or power drills along with drill bits
- clamps including the C-clamp, F-clamp,
bar clamp, mitre clamp and band clamp
- horse, a tool upon which one sits, with a foot activated clamp to hold shingles,
spokes, or short boards, upon which one shaves wood with a drawknife or spokeshave.
- Finishing tools
- sandpaper when used with sanding blocks or power sanders such as
the belt sander, palm sander, and random orbital
sander
- scraper
External links
|