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The Woodwright's Shop: A Practical Guide to Traditional Woodcraft
The Woodwright's Shop: A Practical Guide to Traditional Woodcraft

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Author: Roy Underhill
Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press
Category: Book

List Price: $22.50
Buy New: $15.30
You Save: $7.20 (32%)



Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 7 reviews
Sales Rank: 58841

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 211
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.4
Dimensions (in): 10.8 x 8.5 x 0.7

ISBN: 0807840823
Dewey Decimal Number: 684.082
EAN: 9780807840825

Publication Date: October 1, 1981
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Woodwright's Shop: A Practical Guide to Traditional Woodcraft

Similar Items:

  • The Woodwright's Apprentice: Twenty Favorite Projects From The Woodwright's Shop
  • The Woodwright's Companion: Exploring Traditional Woodcraft
  • The Woodwright's Eclectic Workshop
  • The Woodwright's Workbook: Further Explorations in Traditional Woodcraft
  • The Woodwright's Guide: Working Wood with Wedge and Edge

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Roy Underhill brings to woodworking the intimate relationship with wood that craftsmen enjoyed in the days before power tools. Beginning with a guide to trees and tools, The Woodwright's Shop includes chapters on gluts and mauls, shaving horses, rakes, chairs, weaving wood, hay forks, dough bowls, lathes, blacksmithing, dovetails, panel-frame construction, log houses, and timber-frame construction.


Customer Reviews:   Read 2 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Fascinating   November 2, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I guess it's time I wrote a review, now that the covers are about to fall off of the book. Few books in my shop library are as practically useless for me yet so fascinating as this first Woodwright book by Underhill. I will never actually make anything he displays in here, but I've made everyone of them in my head at least once a winter for a couple of decades.

If you've never seen his program on PBS, then please look for it. In my area it's shown Saturday afternoons. You'll be in nostalgia heaven. Both on the show and in his books, no electricity is allowed, much less power tools. Start here then get the other five.



5 out of 5 stars St Roy   September 22, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Any of Roy's books are awesome for woodworkers who know how to read. Oh sure, you love Norm and his $8000 drum sander, but if you truly want to learn how to work with wood with nothing more than the bare essentials, then pick up this book as well as all the other books Roy has written. Otherwise, just buy all the garbage books about "How to Master a Biscuit Joiner" or "Setting up a Leigh Dovetail Jig". Just make sure you add a box of 80 grit sandpaper for your random orbital sander to your order.


5 out of 5 stars Life-changing!   February 13, 2008
 4 out of 4 found this review helpful

I first saw Roy Underhill on a local PBS station back in the early 1980s. Instantly, I knew that this was the kind of woodworking for me. Screaming routers, finger-chopping table saws and jointers, and multi-horsepower lathes seemed not just dangerous but downright obsolete after witnessing Roy's talents. Honestly, who needs modern woodworking technology when the old methods are clearly better in so many ways? Better for your health and the health of your bank account, and better for the environment. Roy's wonderful series of woodworking books tell you everything you need to get started. They will positively change your woodworking, and your life. Thanks to Roy's books, and others, like Dunbar's _Restoring, Tuning & Using Classic Woodworking Tools_, power tool woodworkers look at my woodworking projects in awe... those amazing and elegant hand-cut dovetails, those silky-smooth hand-planed surfaces, those sweet touches that set my work apart as obviously hand-made. Once you've mastered hand-tool woodworking, you see that the products of woodworking machines stand out as brutal and clumsy. Guys, do not hesitate to purchase the entire series of Roy's woodworking books!


5 out of 5 stars Woodwright Shop book   January 8, 2008
I bought this book for my husband for Christmas, as he loves this show and the shows are not out on DVD yet. He loves the book and can't put it down. He advised it is very easy to read and understand.


5 out of 5 stars What??? Only two reviews???   November 19, 2004
 32 out of 32 found this review helpful

This is one of the finest things ever written! I sincerely hope that a copy of this book lives on the shelf of everyone who has a love for tools and wood and what happens when the two come together. Underhill gives us a look into the world of real hand tool woodworking - no electricity, please. "Start with an axe and a tree and make first one thing and then another until you have a house and everything in it." It can be (almost) that simple, but you have to restore a fractured culture first, and also learn to speak the language of trees and wood and steel. This book will accomplish both those aims.

Underhill, former Master Housewright at Colonial Williamsburg, did the amazing hat trick of turning something as offbeat and esoteric as pre-industrial woodworking into a highly successful career, and became a beloved personality and celebrity in the process. When you read his books, you'll know how he did it. Instantly, you get the sense that his deep affection for his trade, and the trades that support it, illuminates his life. He "sees" things, he doesn't just look. Like ripples in a stream allude to rocks below the surface, he looks at the bark of a tree and understands what lies within - twisted firewood or beautiful furniture? Dissecting an old piece of furniture or part of a house tells you about the tools that made it, and the men who used the tools, and the community they lived in, and what their lives were like. But all of this could be ponderous and self absorbed if it weren't infused front to back with an infectious sense of humor and a Tom Sawyer/Peter Pan view of the world, where if we're lucky we'll all get to run away and be pirates together.

Poetic, lyrical, sad, happy, this book has it all. A true classic from an amazingly talented person. Maybe the 60's hippy culture did ONE thing right - it gave us Roy Underhill, boy genius, and set him loose upon a (hopefully) grateful world. His books, and the first two particularly, make a perfect gift for that tired, world weary person in your life who is thinking that there is something missing in his or her work, that their long days are filled with meaningless seeking, and who might like to turn their hands to something slower, calmer, more beautiful, and decidedly valuable for a change.



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