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Short Course ::

Short course dates for 2012

Dates for short courses in 2012 are as follows:


30th April - Tool tuning
14th May - Tool tuning
28th May - Tool tuning
4th June Dovetailing
18th June - Drawer making
9th July - Tool tuning
16th July - Tool tuning
30th July Dovetailing
6th August - Drawer making
15th August - Tool tuning
20th August - Tool tuning
27th August - Tool tuning

The cost of the Short Course for 2012 is £595 per week (no VAT is charged). This is 5 days, 9am to 5pm .

Please read our booking procedure

Please see our links page for suggestions for places to stay and for information about the local area.

 

 

Discover the benefits of a short course with David

  • Stop struggling with your hand tools

  • Eliminate a major source of frustration and error

  • Perfect your sharpening technique

  • Transform your old plane into a super tool

  • Learn how to use your bench planes

  • Achieve a four minute sharpening time

  • Working with sharp tools becomes a pleasure

 

 

 

 
Spend five days with the expert, someone who knows what to do, how to do it and more important why to do it. These techniques will revolutionise your work, whether at amateur or professional level.
 

What former students think of the short courses

Starting Right/Tool tuning

Phil Roe - Professor of Aerospace Engineering at the University of Michigan. June 12th course

It seemed to me that almost all of your methods, from the sharpening process itself to the techniques for squaring a board, are based on very simple, intuitive geometrical arguments and it was a real pleasure to see the systematic way in which you built these arguments into methodical processes. These really work, and they take the mystery out of matters that are often treated as mysterious. However, they don't take the satisfaction away.

Martin Runnacles

“The week I spent at Hartland on tool preparation was the most valuable woodworking time I’ve spent, away from my own workshop, since I retired from corporate life 6 years ago and first met you.”

Craig Allison

"David's premise is that, using sharp tools, great care, and techniques which minimize errors and eliminate additive errors, a serious amateur can produce work of high professional quality. I recently completed a series of 3 one week courses with David, and found that he is right. I have been an amateur woodworker for upwards of 30 years, and I learned a tremendous amount. I can enthusiastically recommend David's courses to students of any level who want to produce work of the highest quality"

Dovetails

Jim Linn BA pilot trainer June 19th course

I'm finally writing to you to say how much I enjoyed the course in June and of course can't wait to go again next year. I particularly enjoy your company and teaching style and the level of technical precision which appeals to my "theorist" mindset.

Francis Mason July 17th course

A belated thank you for a very useful and interesting course back in July. I had only done the tool tuning course before, the dovetailing course was an opportunity for comparison and a useful revision and measure of its effectiveness. Like all the people on this year's course we all agreed that the tool tuning training had considerably improved everyones expertise and understanding. We all experienced daily revelations as to the reasons why things work and others don't in woodworking, with tools being the centre point of this. In my past life, I went though a period as a technical professional trainer trying to convey difficult technical concepts and skills to a wide range of student ability. I was intrigued how you would approach training in an comparably difficult area. The concepts that you are presenting to trainees are often extremely novel and are aimed at working towards producing exhibition standard objects. From that point of view you are not providing half measures which from my point of view was one of the sole reasons for joining the course. Too much of modern life is focussed on the mediocre, rather than perfection, it makes a refreshing change to spend a week in retreat refreshing these principles. It was interesting to see the ways that you coped with the range of student abilities within the group and still managed to enable them to achieve the principal course objectives. This is even more remarkable given to the high level of performance that you are aiming for. All I can say is keep doing what you are doing! On a practical level, the course has altered my perception of what is important in working with wood or other materials. I am approaching my work in a more careful and methodical manner, checking and thinking more about the next procedure rather than just rushing in as I have been prone to do.

Alistair Haimes July 31st course

I wanted to write and thank you for the superb and fascinating dovetail short course that I came on recently. The precision that is possible was an absolute revelation to me, as was the difference that perfectly-honed and prepared tools make. I intend to spend a few hours sharpening next time I get some time free!  In all it was also a very enjoyable and motivating week and has invigorated my whole love of working wood.

Drawer Making

Jon Clarke, System Support Engineer, ITV Southern transmission Centre

August 7th course

Thank you for another totally brilliant course. I may have read the theory but through your expert tuition it is so rewarding to put that into practice and create something better than I would have hoped. The drawer also impresses others (even if I am painfully aware of the bits that didn’t work out quite as well as your demonstration).

 

Watch video clips of some short course students. (Windows only)




Former short course students Chris, Linton,Robin and Ben.Theresa and David behind. Linton had made a didgeridoo from a plastic drain pipe, DLC is still trying to play it.

 

Short course Topics

Starting Right - essential skills for hand tools

Most amateurs are not getting the most out of their hand tools. This week is designed to radically improve basic skills. Most planes should be viewed as a crude kit of parts. You will not believe the improvement in performance that can be achieved. See below for a more detailed description of the week.

Dovetails

On this course we will work through a series of different dovetail joints, starting with a through dovetail exercise. These dovetails are found at the back of drawers and in boxes and carcases.

A well tuned dovetail saw cuts straight. It is possible to tune a western saw which usually has too much set.
We will then work on single lap dovetails, which are found at the front of drawers, the base of a carcase and often in tables with drawers. The joints will be cut with hand tools, but I will also demonstrate a technique for cutting sockets on the bandsaw. If time permits, we will also have a go at my favourite secret mitre dovetail.
By analysing your technique at every stage, it should be possible to work towards an exhibition quality result. We will discover the importance of good preparation, precise marking out, accurate cutting and sharp chisels. Timber will be supplied , but you will need to bring your own hand tools.

Drawer Making and Fitting

This is intended to further develop your skills and is only suitable for those who have completed the Dovetailing course. We will make and fit the smartest arts and craft style drawer, with a flush drawer slip.



Starting Right-Tool Tuning: Essential techniques for sharp tools.

(5 days) The aim of this course is to get your tools working as well as mine! It is similar to Bruce Luckhurst's tool technology weekend. However the extra time allows us to deal more thoroughly with the topics.

Every year at the Axminster show I see people's jaws dropping with amazement when they use my planes and chisels.
The planes take tissue thin shavings (0.001" thick) with practically no effort, leaving a polished surface which cannot be improved by sanding. The chisels leave a polished surface and cut with minimum effort.

It is unfortunate that plane and chisel manufacturers do not tell us that their tools do not work "straight out of the box". A more serious issue is that a plane with a hollow in the length of the sole will not plane a straight edge with a fine shaving.

On long course, I want my students working with tools that function as well as mine within the first week. Plane fettling to produce this result takes about two days. It is very beneficial to replace the standard blade with a thick, high quality replacement iron. The new materials available today will hold an edge for three to five times longer than a carbon steel blade. Cryogenically treated A2 blades are available from Lie-Nielsen, Karl Holtey and Ron Hock. (The Victor blade from Clifton is the best of the carbon steel blades.)

We deal with chisel sharpening, grinding and preparation on Monday. The requirements for "sharpness" are investigated with the aid of a 50x microscope. The main work is to prepare a flat polished back, removing all trace of the manufacturers grinding marks. I prefer Japanese water stones as they are affordable, cut faster than any other medium and produce the best edge. However they wear fast and we must anticipate this wear in the way we use them. It is fatal to use a water stone in the same way one uses an oil stone! Razor sharp edges are more a question of equipment and technique than years of skill and practice.

On Tuesday morning we learn a reliable and repeatable method of producing a curved edge on a plane blade. I explain the need for a curved edge and the benefits of changing the amount of curve for different types of work. We also start to investigate the reasons why our planes do not work well. You strip your plane down to its component parts and start to fettle them. Seating the frog to the body casting provides a firm base for the blade and reduces sole distortion. The top surface of the frog often fails to support the blade because it is hollow at the critical point where the centre of the blade is supported. Every working part is improved and the chipbreaker needs considerable work.

After final assembly the sole is flattened on a large sheet of "float" glass using a series of aluminium oxide abrasive grits. Your plane is usually ready to test by Wednesday evening or Thursday morning.

We then learn how to use it to prepare an accurate face side free from bumps or wind (twist). The squaring of an accurate face edge is followed by methods of marking and planing end grain. (Block plane, bench plane and shooting). The next job is to gauge and bring the work to thickness which can easily be done to better than 0.004". I usually leave the work about 3mm over width and bring this dimension to size last.

On Friday I hope to demonstrate marking out techniques and some sawing and dovetailing work, this involves several methods of accurate chisel use. There is not always time. It depends on how much deviation has occurred! Some groups have a tendency to discuss general workshop issues, the whole of cabinetmaking and the meaning of life, instead of concentrating on the job in hand.

I often have to persuade people of the virtues of this course. We do not make anything! However these skills are the fundamental platform for building everything. It is impossible to build exhibition quality furniture without mastering these skills. If the basics are not right, errors have an unhappy knack of accumulating through the job.
This course will revolutionize the way you work wood.


Things to bring-

It is essential to bring your own bench plane and a couple of chisels. The most useful bench plane in my opinion is a No 5 1/2 or No 5. Lower numbers are fine, the No 6 is heavier while a No 7 or No 8 can take a huge amount of time to flatten and are beyond the scope of this course.

Modern Stanley & Record planes are poorly made and though we can improve them radically, older ones are preferable. Lie-Nielsen planes require little work, Clifton a good deal more.
We can also tune up block planes. Stanley & Record numbers 60 1/2 and 09 1/2 are useful. Lie-Nielsen adjustable mouth and fixed mouth block planes are superb.
Old chisels are fine as long as the flat side is not badly rust pitted or worn convex in the length. I have supplies of Japanese bench and paring chisels if you would like try one.
Optional tools to bring if you have them are; engineers set square, marking knife, steel rule, marking gauge(s), honing guide, sharpening stones. Note book and pencils are essential, some short pieces of hardwood to practice with are helpful, about one foot long, three to four inches wide, 3/4 inch thick. It is always interesting to see photos of your work, plans or work in progress!

Please discuss any tool problems with me, well before you arrive. I may be able to order planes, replacement blades or chisels for you if there is sufficient time. Some Japanese chisels and saws, bought through me - have a significant discount.

 

 

Short course students Geert, DLC,  Robin again, and Richard



 

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