Cutting to a line
Sawing and paring to a marked line is the single skill behind nearly every joint. It rewards slow practice on offcuts before any real project wood is touched.
Notes for people picking up a saw and chisel for the first time. No machines, no rush — just the fundamentals of joinery, sharpening, and small projects you can finish on a single bench.
Where beginners stall
Sawing and paring to a marked line is the single skill behind nearly every joint. It rewards slow practice on offcuts before any real project wood is touched.
A dull chisel teaches bad habits. Once an edge takes a clean shaving from end grain, most beginner frustration quietly disappears.
Wood splits, tears, and planes differently depending on grain direction. Learning to read it before cutting saves a lot of ruined stock.
Articles
How the butt, rabbet, dado, mortise-and-tenon, and dovetail relate — and which one to learn first.
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A repeatable routine for chisels and plane irons using stones, a honing guide, and a simple test for sharpness.
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Three small builds — a bench hook, a shooting board, and a simple box — that teach real skills.
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