News and features about woodworking tools, techniques and projects
Window and wall treatments for dramatic designs
Season 20 starts off with these free standing tool cabinets
Scroll saw work and decorative wood inlays in furniture.
Balustrades and Newel Posts
Segmented turning a bowl with Bill Sands of Codger Lodge and turning a segmented box with Susie Phillips.
Scott builds a 7 drawer spice box and installs a Photo Voltaic array!
Simple, affordable kitchen renovations
New woodworking ideas for every home
Clever wooden cabinets with easy to use hardware
Affordable solutions with reclaimed woods.
Building outdoor garden benches and pergolas.
Making things to simplify shop tasks. Revolutionary new clamping designs.
Relaxing skill building cutting projects
Window and Wall Bracket Accents.
Scott builds a shaker style secretary
Maple and Diamond wood serving ware
Handcrafted tiles and rich marble recreate an heirloom
Wooden miniatures that are intriguing gifts
Featuring mahogany chippendale carvings
Basic turning skills combine with rich hardwoods
Mini office organizing table
Clever tool tote features two built-in storage drawers
Affordable solutions to everyday woodworking challenges
Bandsaw curves join together for a sturdy occasional table
Willow column cabinet - any room can be enhanced
The ultimate recycled hard maple portable bench
Bending wood the easy way for the perfect useful table
The pen is beautifully crafted with dyed plywood and has an inertia design that produces the pen point with a quick shake, while the opposite end serves as a stylus for your iPad. Also made with plywood is a peppermill designed with a pump and grind mechanism for ease of use and charm that will add beauty to any kitchen table.
Spindle turning, or turning between centers, is a woodturning method that uses a piece of wood on a wood lathe that is being turned on its center axis. The couple provides step-by-step instructions to make beautifully sculpted, sanded to perfection candle creations out of majestic walnut wood.
Woodcarvings are created in this episode, a Wind Spirit, Flying Horse Weather Vain and a 3-dimensional Moose Walking in the Woods. Scott repurposes reclaimed walnut wood and utilizes a selection of woodcarving hand tools to create the Flying Horse & northern white cedar wood to carve the whimsical Wind Spirit. Guest Jim Foster stops by to show Suzy how to paint on carved wood for a life-like look.
Learn how to frame those favorite pictures, souvenirs and such with Scott and Suzy as they show us how to make heirloom frames. Utilizing southern yellow pine, the team frames the beautifully painted Moose Walking In the Woods from the previous Spirit Carvings episode. The piece turns out beautifully and will add rustic charm to any room in your house. Also, Jim Foster stops by for gnome carving.
A beautiful broken arch wall cabinet is designed out of walnut wood with complimenting maple wood in this episode of American Woodshop. Scott visits Lisa Sager, owner of Cloud9 Creations to watch her create a breathtaking stained glass insert for the cabinet. Scott adds LED lighting to the cabinet that showcases the glass landscape with a soft glow, adding dimension to the piece.
Scott creates unique boxes out of various species of wood, and notes the importance of keeping all the wood grains running in the same direction, and adds, “let the wood dictate the shape of the piece.” All boxes are one-of-a-kind, lathed turned and buffed to a beautiful soft shine.
Formed with 38 perfectly sanded slats, held together with 80-pound fish line, and adorned with jewelry beads, this basket will make a statement at any picnic. Scott provides tips on using the drill press, a spindle sander, the art of wood steam bending and the best stains to use that will hold up in the elements while crafting this one-of-a-kind work of art.
Scott and Suzy use an old table leaf purchased for just $5 to create this new corner shelf based on an antique, century old piece they discovered and use as the pattern for their “new” piece. Made of mahogany, this Chippendale influenced sculpted and hand scrolled work of art comes alive and makes a beautiful addition to any room.
Made from varying maple woods, this drop-leaf table, also known as a butterfly-table is durable and stunning. Hinged gatelegs support the table and add functionality and ease of storage to the overall table design. The finished piece is sanded to perfection and dipped in a Cherry Danish Oil finish.
Beautiful, durable and perfectly sculpted, this chair will provide comfort for those long, lazy summer afternoons in your garden. In addition, Scott provides tips on the most durable woods to use for outdoor furniture and sites white oak as a great option as properly finished with oils that include UV blockers, will last 3-5 years depending on sun exposure.
Making handcrafted bed accents from century old pine
Scrolling Brackets for Door Ways, carving Weather Vanes and Totem Accents.
Through-Pegged Mortise and Tenon Joints. Miller Sawmill tour.
Honey Locust from log to home is used to make the ultimate salad serving bowl. This 44-pound green wood bowl blank is turned into a three-pound graceful kitchen masterpiece. Bandsaw tips save the day when making this rough bowl blank. Plus, a visit to Catch My Drift (driftwood art) at the Brubaker Studio.
Straight from a magazine comes the ideal curved handle tool tray. Hand-cut through dovetail joints add strength and elegance to the handy way to store key tools. Reclaimed woods include Kentucky Coffee Tree and Osage Orange. Scott harvests a burl tree for future projects and Burr Oak Tree Services share logging techniques.
This 300-year-old round table was traditionally a cricket game centerpiece. Recreated from American Chestnut, quarter-sawn White Oak and Mahogany, the triangular shelf holds three angled legs perfectly. A geometric challenge comes together with dominoes. The Urban Timber Mill cuts live edge slabs for the ultimate display table show.
A log is transformed into a beautiful vase by a series of wood turning techniques. The trick is to keep this 50-pound spinning “trunk” balanced! Sometimes making wood behave can be challenging. Guest turner Barry Todd shares his latest turned creations.
Making cabinets has never been easier! Simple tools are used to build the case for an antique curved beveled glass door. LED lighting is featured. Plus, see the best way to “hang” wall mounted cabinets. Custom cabinets are hard to beat!
Chair making is the best way to truly hone woodworking skills! Windsor hoop backed forms are solid and comfortable. Special jigs are used to laminate the bent wood hoop. Turning is used to make stretchers and spindles and the seat is sculpted. Magic happens when they all join together!
Special tempered stainless-steel blades are finished with custom wood handles called scales. Spectra Ply is turned for the big knife, Purple Heart is used on the gift knife and two others must be seen to believe. Also, crown molding is cut to make a perfect tray!
Sized to hold a king’s ransom, yet ideal for any home treasure. A homemade router table box joint jig is demoed with beautiful precision. The shell carving is created with just one chip carving knife. Plus, a custom top is formed with a scrub plane. A fun gift idea!
Easy to use finishing products are featured as the best way to keep furniture looking great. Tips and tricks make restoring furniture fast and rewarding. Learn the best way to fix most common furniture repair challenges.
Two live-edge Corkscrew Willow slabs are turned into stunning display tables. These came from wood harvested in episode 2904. Castle joints are created to make the leg assemblies on an epoxy resin “river” table. Just wait until you see how this all comes together!
Blended Danish oil gives a four-sided glass and red oak display case with tapered red oak plugs an old world look.
Creating live edge benches; natural edges with curves and bark; track saws.
Hard maple circular cutting boards; turned pie servers and cheese planes
Steel casters add a mid-century modern look to a freestanding red oak tool tower
Scrolling a reverse image tiger and eagle; routed lettering.
Creating lamps using epoxy resin and turned parts with internal LED lights.
A hard maple cabinet features vintage art glass and internal lighting
Using a bandsaw, jig saw, cordless drill and carving chisels to make garden chairs with playfully carved accents.
American black cherry Chippendale highboy with scallop shell carvings.
Steps needed to finish custom wooden works with style and ease.
An unconventional corner chair made of a bent lamination arm rest supported by turned red oak spindles with a plank seat.
Inlay turned boxes; chisel sharpening tips.
Cantilevered tables with live edge walnut slab tops.
Restoring leaded glass and architecturally unique windows.
Making a conference table with 6/4 walnut; using a castle joint; seeing wood kilns in action at Hartzell Hardwoods.
A sturdy and functional stool designed for kitchen use, with a triangular seat and hickory legs.
Two clocks are made with a wood lathe; the basics behind face plate turning; how different chisels are used to master turning bowls; three different uses for turned objects.
Converting a ladder-back chair into a rocker the easy way; rebuilding a garden bench using recycled mahogany.
A three-drawer game table chest with a granite top.
Turning an antique glass door into a display cabinet.
Creating a stand that can be used to display unique objects.
Using unusual pieces of wood to make a table and a whimsical bench; how to finish green wood
Using epoxy resins to construct three floating shelves with internal lights; bark accents are combined to create a freestanding, natural live-edge accent piece.
Six finishing techniques for furniture restoration; finishes that are safe to use.
Basic woodworking techniques to revive furniture.
Joining delicately sawn artwork with live edge stands; how to master cutting with a scroll saw