Anarchist's Tool Chest
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Anarchist's Tool Chest

By The Woodworking School at Pine Croft

Join Megan Fitzpatrick in this 5- day class covering how to build an Anarchist's Tool Chest.

Date and time

Location

The Woodworking School at Pine Croft

1865 Big Hill Road Berea, KY 40403

Good to know

Highlights

  • 4 days 8 hours
  • ages 18+
  • In person
  • Free parking
  • Doors at 8:30 AM

Refund Policy

Refunds up to 15 days before event

About this event

Other

Class Description:

Aside from a workbench, a sturdy tool chest is one of the most important things to have in your shop. It organizes and protects your tools from damage, rust and loss. While many woodworkers have attempted to improve upon the traditional chest design that emerged 300 years ago, the old form has remained the absolute best way to keep the most tools in the smallest space. And if you need a slightly smaller footprint for your chest, you’re in luck. In this class, you can choose between making a full-size chest (25-3/4” tall, 24” front to back, 40-1/4” long) or a traveling version that will fit into the back of a car or truck (14-1/2” high, 19-1/2” front to back, 39-1/2” long). The full-size chest will hold a complete set of the hand tools typically used for furniture work; the travel size chest will hold most of them.

In this five-day class you will build the shell of your own traditional tool chest using hand tools and techniques. This is an excellent first project for a new hand-tool woodworker – especially if you want to get good at dovetails! Skills you will learn in this class include:

• Traditional through-dovetail joinery

• Cutting basic mouldings by hand

• Fitting mouldings to casework

• Loose-tenon joinery

By the end of class you will have all the skills you need to complete the interior of the chest at your workshop at home, whether you want to dovetailed tills or simple rabbeted and nailed tills.

ATC Tool List (the ones you need to build it – not all the stuff you’d want to put in it…)

Smoothing plane

Jack plane

Marking or cutting gauge

Marking knife

.05 or .03 mechanical pencil

Dividers (2 pair if you’ve got ‘em)

12” combo square

Dovetail marking gauge or sliding bevel

Dovetail saw

Chisels ½” and 3/8”

Mallet

Rabbeting plane, moving fillister or a large shoulder plane

Hammer and nail set

Coping saw with extra blades (I recommend Pegas blades)

3/16” Beading plane

And any other tools you just can’t bear to be without. For me, that includes my waterstones and honing guide, a 6” adjustable square, a double square (a.k.a. diemaker’s square or machinist’s square) and multiple pencils. And don't worry if you don't have some of the more esoteric tools – I'm happy to share my beading plane.

Organized by

The Woodworking School at Pine Croft

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$2,200
Oct 5 · 9:00 AM EDT