My dad's workshop
After moving to Canada, my parents had two businesses which provided the family's livelihood. One was a tourist camp, the other one was my dad's custom woodworking business.
Heating
For the second workshop, my dad decided to put the wood stove closer at hand, and right in the shop.
The rationale was that if anything would happen to it, he would notice it before it got out of hand.
This has worked out much better - 20 years running so far.
The image at left was actually taken back in 1990 by my brother Markus when we were still playing with black and white film. We haven't taken a photo quite as enchanting of the old oil-drum woodstove since. The walls around it have also become a bit more cluttered since then.
Planing and sanding
In this shot, you can see the 20" thickness planer, 12" jointer, edge sander, and stroke sander.
the sawhorses, in the light towards the right, is where my dad sorts out lumber for a project.
this is where the lumber goes first after he carries it into the shop, and from here it goes over
the jointer and thru the planer for squaring it up.
Most of the lumer used to come from his own sawmill, although he's given up on cutting his own lumber - too old now.
The door between the radial arm saw and the jointer goes to a room where the wood shavings go. to clean up, my dad simply opens the door and pushes the wood shavings into that room. Farmers and people with horses used to come to retrieve the shavings on occasion. But more recently, my dad has taken to just shoveling the wood shavings and sawdust straight into the woodstove.
Here's a panorama shot of the whole workshop (click to enlarge) Visible in this one is the 18" band saw. That saw would be good for resawing, but my I have never seen my dad use it much for that. When I still lived at home, I'd use it quite often to resaw pieces of usable lumber from cedar slabs from my dad's sawmill. I used these to make lawn chairs which I sold.
More pictures of my dad's shop |