OldTools Archive

Recent Bios FAQ

163932 dcarr10760@a... 2006‑10‑09 Bio Reposted (lengthy)
Galoots one and all!

Executive Summary: My Bio never made it to the archive so here
it is again. I like old tools and am glad to be here!

Long version

I was browsing the archives as I do regularly and saw the Bio Tab and
thought I would read over my bio. Much to my surprise I didn't have
one. In a moment of clarity last year I had saved a copy of it. I send
it again, annotated, in hopes that it will find its way to the 
biosphere.

Greetings everybody! I have been lurking for awhile now, mostly in the
archives and thought it would be good to step out onto the porch.

A bit about me: I'm 45 [now 46], I have three sons 17, 14 and 6 months
[18, 15 and 14 months]. I work in my family’s electronics firm
designing high voltage test equipment and machinery. But I have been
interested in woodworking as long as I can remember.

I followed the normal trajectory (tailed tools and little baby food 
jars
screwed up underneath shelves holding hardware) until I was in my
mid twenties. I lived then in an apartment in a creaky old Victorian 
house.
The landlady lived directly below and was concerned about keeping
things quiet. I started making furniture with hand tools in the living
room of that apartment as quietly as possible.

About that time I stumbled across a copy of the Woodcraft catalog
and the lust for shiny hand tools began.

I took a Timber Framing workshop at the Hancock Shaker Village
taught by Jack Sobon. He used hand tools exclusively, and had quite
a compliment of antique tools: froes, adzes, handsaws, broadaxes, slicks
and firmer chisels. My enthusiasm for old tools was born that week.
Seeing him work so (seemingly) effortlessly and quickly with these tools
really made me realize that I didn't need Alternating Current directly
involved in my woodworking.

This was back in 1984 or so. While I was one of the first guys on my
block with a home computer and have been on the Internet now
for nearly ten years, somehow I missed the online woodworking
community completely…until now.

In the past year or two I did join several woodworking forums. While 
they
have a bunch of great folks, there’s a bit too much “I can't get my
Grizzly band saw to track strait” and “I want to build my girlfriend a
Hepplewhite table out of MDF but the only tools I own are a cordless 
drill,
a circular saw and a metric socket wrench set, how do I begin?”

So, while I am definitely not elitist in my hand tool use, I was always 
on
the lookout for a group that was a bit more focused on my particular
woodworking interests. So I managed to find Y’all.
Better late than never, I suppose.

My interests of late center around building (or compiling) a set of 
18th
century tools and building a joiners chest to house them.
Eventually using them to build reproduction period furniture.

Let me apologize straight off if I have violated any etiquette, please 
be
gentle with me if I rock on any tails (or dragging knuckles).
Glad to be here!

David Carroll

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163933 "Bill Rittner" <wcrittner@c...> 2006‑10‑09 Re: Bio Reposted (lengthy)
David re-posts his bio.

Welcome to the porch. If you love old tools and working wood with hand 
tools, then you re surely in the right place. Most of us here are a bit 
rusty and smell of wood.

Bill Rittner
Manchester, CT 

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Recent Bios FAQ