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Thanks for the tip. To be more specific, dewaxed shellac. That may be where the SW rep is coming from. I would not coat a standard shellac surface with poly. But truthfully, there is even some debate going on as to the validity of that theory. The shellac I used for that particular project was Bullseye SealCoat, which is indeed dewaxed.

Really, really well-done. You guys should be promoting this to radio stations as a 2 or 3 hour Saturday morning talk show idea. Hi, Great job on the pod cast! Keep em coming. I would just add that in deciding a shop rate to strongly consider your overhead operating cost and factor that in to what you want to make per hour. As you get deeper into this thing, you might consider adding show notes to either or both of your websites, for links or other references you make during the podcast.

Pretty slick, tho it does currently require a download. Hey Mike. I listen to a number of podcasts that use that system. Its very cool. Thanks for the suggestion. I look forward to future shows! I have followed your site and have completed some projects thanks to your help.

I only wish that I had the time and energy to do some more. Congrats, Guys! Who is this Matt Vanderlist guy anyway? Your email address will not be published. Wood Talk. WT2 Next. WT1 — The Awkward Beginning. April 1, pm 35 Comments. The combined effort is a hit not a hot. I kind of liked it better when it was a hot.

Hot, hit or a hoot, I can tell you were having a good time with this… Kinda had an NPR Car talk groove — but something I can get much more out of.

Come on out and say hi. Thanks for everything folks. Its been an amazing 10 years and we could NOT have done it without all of you. Seriously the listener interaction, the inside jokes, and the desire to keep doing the show all came from you, the listeners.

Thank you! Thanks for this last show. While I am not realy a woodworker but a machinist, I always enjoyed listening to your podcast, I learned a lot and it was always entertaining. I am really going to miss you guys. It was a great show and you gave us plenty of warning that it was coming to an end. Thanks again. This was my favorite show. I was going to ask if all the episodes and after show content might become available for purchase on USB or download?

It is with a heavy heart I read this posting. This podcast has been around since I started woodworking as a hobby. All four of you have helped me and so many other people in so many ways, not just in woodworking but in connecting with and appreciating others as people. Crushed by the end of Woodtalk. I started at episode one when I started woodworking, caught up on the backlog, and have been following every episode since. I will miss you in my earholes while I am in the shop.

Thanks for the great content. Thanks guys for all the years… I knew you guys were something special when I had not cut a board in over three years, but still did not miss a show. My obsession switched from woodworking to photography after I had built all the things I wanted… I thought the clean up was going to be easier with photography, but I ended up being wrong.

I made a website and tried to pass on any tips I had learned to other photographers in the spirit of the Woodtalk guys. Then I took every photo I wanted to take, and took the plunge, bought a CNC and a few 3D printers and am more of a maker now.

Good luck in all your future endeavors! I will continue to follow everyone as individuals, and look forward to great content yet to come.

I started listening to Wood Talk last year, around the time I really started getting into woodworking. I kept up with the new episodes, but now have about eight years!!! Great to hear from Matt V. All the best. Best of luck and appreciate the time and effort you put forward.

We all knew it was over once Matt starting welding. The one true thing we all take away is the way you made us all feel like we were listening to our friends do a podcast not some random crap-talk.

The four of you have all had an impact on my woodworking. WT was the reason I started listening to pods! What a great, humorous, and occasionally off-color show with a variety of experience levels. Best of luck to your new adventures. Keep making dust!

Thanks for a great show. I will definitely miss it. You guys help to inspire me to pursue my journey and adventure in woodworking. Like old reruns of CarTalk …. Well, the website is still up and the feeds will remain alive. So the show will be as available as it ever was. Darn, going to miss listening to you guys! The three four of you had a great chemistry and played off each others personalities well. It was a very entertaining run.

I do understand the need to balance life and work priorities with limited time. That said, you will be missed, amigos! I sincerely thank you for the info you shared and all the years of the work which went into the show. Bummer guys. I just found your podcast last week and have been waiting for you to come back. I have so many questions. I will always have past to listen to. You guys had a great show and will be missed. Not since Johnny Carson quit have I felt so alone.

From here on this will be known as The Day Woodworking Died. You have been my saving grace for countless hours of windshield time! Thank you thank you thank you! Well done and happy wooden trails! Today we explore the wonder that is cutting boards. I scream, you scream, please stop screaming about cutting boards!!

Our approaches to dust collection, shop flooring, cupping after resawing, gluing cedar, and preventing chatter when hand planing. How woodworking has changed in the last decade, building a door, the future of furniture design, the Handworks show, table top glueups, and installing the Turbo Vise. Building your first table, tools you should never buy used, and how to get those pesky feed rollers working properly. Variable suction on a dust collector, having helpers in the shop, how to use turning tools, dealing with a twisted board, and wood allergies,.

Planter box finishing, why lumber dealers are closed on the weekends, and is rough lumber necessary? Miter saw fences, stinky shellac, rough sawn lumber, slab prices, sharpening set ups, and woodworking education. Getting that vintage Cherry look, building movie furniture, how to prepare the shop for the summer, low angle planes, outsourcing finishing, air dried vs kiln dried lumber for a bench, and our critique of bad critiques.

Edge-banding router bits, boxed beam construction, our contributions to woodworking, to pre-finish or not to pre-finish, drill press speeds, epoxy pouring tips, and should you buy a Domino. Building complex reproductions, breadboard end tenon length, cutting board finish, and match-planing boards. Struggling to get started on a project, shellac and wax finish, sharpening issues and the MK.

II jig, book recommendations, and hollowing with hand tools. Ozoroa reticulata, unnecessary expensive tools, cross grain workbench, and making a table lighter. Cheap chisels, the worst woodworking fads, the Woodsmith Shop, end-grain table tops, case miters, and cherry alternative. Gouges vs scrapers, low angle jack advice, tack cloths, our business names, and getting into restoration. The boys are back! Grain tear out, bandsaw upgrades, why do they like gray and how can we stop it? Hard wax oil finishes, sharpening gauges, getting into CNC?

Voicemails Steve is looking for advice on buying. Wood Talk. Wooden moulding planes, how to improve a raw linseed oil finish, Trapezoid case mitered angles.



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