20L0363 - Build a Chair from Bulls%$t

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Offert en anglais seulement
In this short pocketbook, Schwarz brings his characteristically irreverent outlook to chairmaking, taking a subject often seen as intimidating and reducing it to its fundamentals. Whether you’ve never built a chair before or you’re a seasoned woodworker seeking to simplify your craft, it is a uniquely approachable strategy, using readily available materials, a few basic tools, and a method that makes drilling the holes for chair legs and spindles far less complicated.
An adaptation of a traditional stick chair with straighter, simpler lines, the chair is made entirely from materials found at your local home center: shovel handles and stair handrails for legs, a seat and headrest made from construction lumber, dowels used as spindles, and curved arms cut from plywood. The only tools needed are a jigsaw or bandsaw, a cordless drill, a block plane, drill bits and other basic shop gear.
The techniques described are easily adapted, not just for other chair styles but also for other workshop projects. A bonus section at the end shows how to turn leftover scraps into a sturdy three-legged stool.
Hardcover, 4 1/4" × 6 3/4", 107 pages, 2025.

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Build a Chair from Bulls%$t
Offert en anglais seulement
In this short pocketbook, Schwarz brings his characteristically irreverent outlook to chairmaking, taking a subject often seen as intimidating and reducing it to its fundamentals. Whether you’ve never built a chair before or you’re a seasoned woodworker seeking to simplify your craft, it is a uniquely approachable strategy, using readily available materials, a few basic tools, and a method that makes drilling the holes for chair legs and spindles far less complicated.
An adaptation of a traditional stick chair with straighter, simpler lines, the chair is made entirely from materials found at your local home center: shovel handles and stair handrails for legs, a seat and headrest made from construction lumber, dowels used as spindles, and curved arms cut from plywood. The only tools needed are a jigsaw or bandsaw, a cordless drill, a block plane, drill bits and other basic shop gear.
The techniques described are easily adapted, not just for other chair styles but also for other workshop projects. A bonus section at the end shows how to turn leftover scraps into a sturdy three-legged stool.
Hardcover, 4 1/4" × 6 3/4", 107 pages, 2025.