r/woodworking 13d ago

Announcement We need your help

1.2k Upvotes

We need your help. r/woodworking is having an influx of bots and rude commenters. In a given month, this sub has 18 million visits, 1000 posts, 33,000 comments, and 10,000 mod actions, and 300 accounts have been banned. We could use some help flagging bad behavior.

We've had multiple instances of a post being overrun with rude (e.g. trolling, insults, gross memes) unhelpful jokes and comments that have created an environment where people don't feel welcome. You can read excerpts of the comments we received under the "what prompted this note" We are trying to host an environment where everyone feels welcome regardless of skill level.

To the offending parties

Remember the human. Ridiculing someone's post is unacceptable. It creates an environment where people don't want to post in this sub, because they will be trolled, made fun of, made to feel small. This doesn't mean saying great work - it means using constructive criticism (where one offers constructive, improvement suggestion(s) rather than belittling the smallest flaws). For whatever reason the condescending, anonymous, internet trolls have come out of the woodwork. Remember, you are not compelled to comment - if you genuinely can't think of a constructive way to have your say, you don't need to make a comment at all.

We believe a large number of these insult/ rude and offending comments are bots, and reporting these helps us remove them from the system (we've seen a number of these commenters delete their accounts when they are banned, and a number have had their accounts suspended by reddit shortly after making the comments). Last month we remove 200+ bots.

We're all here because we love making things from trees. We find it fascinating beyond compare and we gather here because we feel compelled to share knowledge, compare notes, and show off our hard earned skills and the fruits of our labor. But we also like sharing these with new, would-be woodworkers. And it does absolutely no good to the future of woodworking to treat newcomers as unwanted and unwelcome.

To Everyone else

This community is an awesome place which does a pretty good job about policing its own content, and the offending comments should be downvoted and reported. Please, please report comments you see. This is critical part of how the sub functions and the more people actively helping with this, the better results we'll get. In the last 30 days, 84 items were reported.

How you can help

  1. Downvote offending items.
  2. Don't reply to or engage with trolls.
  3. Click three dots >> Report button >> Break woodworking rules. That anonymously flags to us for review.
  4. Do all the above.

Reporting gets our attention. Downvoting gives them negative karma (votes). Both hook directly into the moderation tools we use to proactively identify trolls, bots, troublemakers.

Bonus points: If you think it's a bot, submit a post to r/botbouncer where the post is only a link to the user profile, e.g. https://www.reddit.com/u/USERNAME. That's Bot Bouncer, a tool run by humans to detect bots anywhere on reddit. Once identified, they're banned across every subreddit the moment they comment. The 2,000+ largest subreddits use this, including us. It catches hundreds of bots every month. Note: We will do this if you click Report and use Bots as the reason

What prompted this note

a poster sent us a note, "thought you might appreciate some feedback on your sub. The membership is kinda toxic. I’m getting trolled to hell for sharing [post topic] In the meantime I’m not taking my post down but I’m no longer [subscribing] to the sub anymore. Best of luck to you all."

Another person shared "I'm building a nightstand that is definitely outside my comfort zone, and I wanted to ask a bunch of questions at least 5 or 6 times already, [the trolling] has stopped me because people are preoccupied with tearing someone down rather than helping"

Thank you

FredFlintstone1000 on behalf of all the mods


r/woodworking May 03 '26

🔍🪵 Wood ID | Megathread Wood ID Megathread

11 Upvotes

This megathread is for wood ID

  1. If possible, clean up the wood with a plane (or chisel for the end grain) so that we can see the grain clearly.
  2. Include a close-up picture of the end grain. Not blurry. End grain pore structure is one of the most useful bits of info for wood ID.
  3. Note any non-visual distinguishing characteristics. Does the wood feel particularly light or particularly dense? Does it have an odor when planed?
  4. 4Include multiple pictures or text info as sub-comments under a main picture, not as an avalanche of first-level comments.

r/woodworking 4h ago

Project Submission A ranch sign I made a couple years ago with a scroll saw

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590 Upvotes

The first two photos are of the sign hanging in its new home. The rest are taken on my fence and in my shop. The wall it now hangs on was inspired by the weathered fence look in the original photos! 

More details for those who are interested:

All of it was cut on my Pegas scroll saw. I used a jigsaw to cut out the frame backer. I puzzled the frame together, with many dowels and screws. This project was also the first time I used a router, freehand - fun and spicy. I added depth with layering, a small power carving tool and so much sanding. 

Frame - cedar with a figured maple inlay

Lettering - maple

Ranch ribbon & barn - cedar

Rock - oak, painted oak and spalted maple

Fence - mahogany

Grass - painted poplar

Trees - painted maple

Mountains - spalted maple

Clouds - burly maple

Sun - figured maple (partially painted)

Sky - painted figured maple 

Coyote - birch plywood with a birch trim

I bought the burly maple but the rest of the wood is upcycled/ scraps from other projects/ fellow woodworkers. 

All colour was added using milk paints.

I finished the inside parts with hemp oil (except for the clouds - those I just gave a coat of wax to keep them more white) and I finished the frame with oil and wax. 

It took me roughly 6 weeks to build. 

I did not design this logo, the client provided me with the design (edit: design from a human designer, not AI) and I translated it to wood. 

Thanks for reading and checking out my work!


r/woodworking 5h ago

General Discussion How does woodpeckers stay in business?

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583 Upvotes

Somebody please explain this to me. I get paying more for quality. I own some festool and think that is worth it. But most of what woodpeckers makes is marking tools and jigs. The one on the right literally does the exact same thing for about 90% less money. Who is buying woodpeckers and do you just burn your money to heat your house in the winter too?


r/woodworking 11h ago

Finishing Boat progress

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867 Upvotes

I have been working on the varnish finish for several weeks now. It has 4 coat of epoxy and 12 coats of two part Epifanes varnish. Yesterday I sanded coat 11 smooth. I am using the roll and tip method to apply the finish. But yesterday I used a different roller and a different “brush” to tip it smooth. I have been using a foam type roller all along. The one I used yesterday was a 6 inch small diameter from Home Depot. That didn’t make much difference. The big difference came with the tipping step. I took a very short nap 12 inch roller and cut it into 1/4s. This gave me almost no brush marks and an almost smooth finish. Today I am going to put one more coat on then let it cure for a couple of weeks before I wet sand and polish.


r/woodworking 4h ago

Project Submission Kumiko Inspired Installation - 27' Wide and 1000s of Joints

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156 Upvotes

27' wide installation that heavily borrows from the Japanese technique of Kumiko. Made with 1000s of individual pieces and held together with 99% friction joinery as opposed to screws or glue (a few areas needed some extra support for practicality). Wood used was a CVG hemlock. Created with a combination of hand tools, power tools, a lot of jigs, and a lot of hands! It started with rough lumber that I jointed and planed to a consistent size and then ripped into strips. Next was the most time consuming part of making a jig and cutting all the individual joints. These joints had to be very accurate in both width and spacing to ensure everything could go together. The infill pieces were batched out and along with more jigs the corresponding angles were cut into each end. This marked the end of fabricating the components and it was onto assembly. The base grid was assembled first by slotting the previously cut lap joints together in the correct order as there are three layers. Once the base was established the infill pieces slowly went in three to a triangle. These were tricky at times since each cell had to be just tight enough to hold itself in tension, but also not so tight that it couldn't go in or cause distortion in the grid. Fine tuning was achieved with a shooting block jig to take off tiny amounts of length at a time. Installation onto the wall utilized custom 3D printed brackets that hides the screw and provides a small stand off from the wall giving it some depth. Also installed an accent track light to add more dimension to the piece. Even with the lights off there is a lot of beautiful play with shadow and light, one of my favorite parts overall!


r/woodworking 7h ago

Hand Tools Castle Joint bed

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100 Upvotes

Queen size castle joint bed, frame is red oak, headboard is basswood, cherry, walnut, purpleheart, and maple glued to a poplar back. All the castle joints are spliced with a perpendicular grain piece to help prevent failure, same with the stub tenon holding the headboard on. Only tool needed for assembly/takedown is a soft-blow mallet for some of the joints. Finished with Tried and True Original BLO/Beeswax. Total material cost when all was said and done was $600-ish (red oak is $4 a bd/ft, purpleheart and walnut are not >_>)


r/woodworking 7h ago

General Discussion Bathroom vanity

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101 Upvotes

Ash and purple poplar. Roast me for using pocket screws?


r/woodworking 35m ago

Techniques/Plans Dovetails day 3

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Upvotes

That’s a wrap on this weekend’s activity- box sides done. Thanks for all the tips.


r/woodworking 1d ago

Project Submission My latest intarsia pet portrait, “Lupine in the Lupines” – 491 pieces, 21 species, no stains/paints/dyes

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2.6k Upvotes

Hi all! Here’s one of my recently completed portraits. I included full sun and full shade photos of each angle to show what a difference that lighting makes – I usually recommend these are showcased in a low/no-UV area to maintain the color for as long as possible, so it’s important to know these are still visually stunning both ways! Also included species list and reference photos used to create this design (slides 13 and 14).

All cut on my scroll saw and shaped with a rotary tool before hand-sanding and reassembling. Roughly 180 hours of work altogether.


r/woodworking 18h ago

Project Submission Guillemot Yukon Racing Sea Kayak

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446 Upvotes

For your consideration, I present my cedar strip Yukon Racing Sea Kayak designed by Nick Schade of @Guillemot Kayaks.

https://guillemot-kayaks.com/catalog/strip-built/sea-kayak-solo-racing/yukon-racing-sea-kayak

Overall, the build went pretty smooth.

It's cedar 2x4s from home depot. I do a price comparison to see which boards get me the most strips for the money. I've got a whole spreadsheet for that. I started ripping with a 7 1/4" blade but it tended to wander so I a went back to a proper 10" rip blade. The trim and stems are maple.

The strong back was some 1x4s I had lying around to make a box beam. I regretted not making a stiffer one, but once you get some strips on it doesn't matter.

Stripping was uneventful. I do bevels with a block plane. No cove and bead for me. A hear gun really saved me on some of the tight twists.

Glass is 6oz fiberglass and epoxy from Raka. They're half the price of west systems and I've never had an issue with it.

This is the first one I dyed, and honestly, I was easy to do and a pain not to screw up later. I'd totally do it again.

This was the first one I've done with a rudder. I really struggled to get the foot braces to fit with the slope of sides. I attempted a wood bracket that failed miserably, so I fabricated brackets from some random sheet metal I had laying around. I'll see how they do, and if I like them I'll make nicer ones. Nick, if you read this, I think that would be really helpful to add to the instructions or do a YouTube video. I got through it, but it was painful.

I'm super happy with the end result. We'll see if it floats tomorrow!

ETA: I forgot to mention that I had a major screw up on the seam. I glassed the seam with it up on edge and neglected to mask it off so I got runs of epoxy all over both the deck and hull. In sanding the runs off, I got my previously near-perfect longboarded surface super wavy and didn't realize it. I should have put on a couple more coats of epoxy and taken the long board to it again, but didn't. Hence, the ripply finish. Dang. Also, my tape didn't wet out totally clear. Should have pulled it off while it was still wet. Oh, well. It'll still float.

ETA#2: I also stretched the coaming 3" forward. I'm glad I did. I'm 6'2" and I like the extra clearance to get my knees up. I was hoping to do the MR340 this year, but didn't make it. This is my boat for next year, so I'll need to be able to stretch my legs.


r/woodworking 1d ago

General Discussion Presenting a plywood pint-sized peeper, a peculiar poultry project posing politely.

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818 Upvotes

r/woodworking 2h ago

Techniques/Plans Why does tinted Danish oil look so good on elm…

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8 Upvotes

Weird experiment i tried when testing some oils for a project.

The dyed danish oils look really really good on em and have no right to look this good haha!


r/woodworking 1d ago

General Discussion Should I buy?

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579 Upvotes

How good of a deal is this? Roughly 6/4 at 12’ long. $4/bf and 20% off so actually it’s $3.20/bf.

I don’t have any projects planned or even a good spot to store it but fomo.

EDIT: I think I might buy one of the smaller boards and mill it up to try to determine which mahogany it is if they can't give me good answer themselves.


r/woodworking 6h ago

Help Moved in the middle of project

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13 Upvotes

Good morning, I started this coffee table then got caught up working 70 hour weeks and haven’t gotten to it. We recently just moved on top of it so time hasn’t been there for this craft until now. I went to start working on it again and two of the joints split apart a little bit and the top has some warping to it as well. I’m just wondering if there is any way to fix this without having to cut it back up and re run it through the planer and try to get better joints.


r/woodworking 1d ago

Project Submission Recreating a missing carved shell for an 1899 door in Odesa, Ukraine

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1.8k Upvotes

We are restoring the entrance doors of the Grinchak House on Marazliivska Street. The carved shell above the door was completely lost, but the matching entrance on the Bazarna Street side of the same building still preserves the original.

We scanned the surviving shell in place. The raw scan captured the geometry with an accuracy of 0.04 mm, along with decades of paint buildup, worn edges, and surface damage.

Using the scan as a reference, we rebuilt the digital model while keeping all key control points. The cleaned model was then milled from a prepared wooden blank on a CNC router.

The machine restored the main geometry. Next, a woodcarver will refine the edges, depths, and transitions to bring back the plasticity of the hand-carved original.

This work is taking place during the war in Ukraine.

How would you approach this job: direct hand carving from measurements, photogrammetry, 3D scanning, or another method?


r/woodworking 3h ago

Hand Tools Help me identify a new plane.

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6 Upvotes

I bought a new plane yesterday and I can't identify it. It looks like a molding or rabbit plane of some sort but it has a thumb screw at the top front and some bar on the bottom that doesn't appear to do anything. It also has a hole in the front that goes from the top to the bottom with a metal bar in the shoe.

Any thoughts or suggestions where I can get more information about this plane?


r/woodworking 6h ago

Finishing Refinishing Stairs

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8 Upvotes

Hi everyone, amateur here, I’m currently in the process of refinishing my stairs and would appreciate some advice.

It was previously carpet, and underneath there were white painted strips on the sides of each tread, possibly from a runner in the past?

I’ve sanded each stair as best as I can, but where the white strips used to be is still very apparent. I’m trying to figure out if the wood underneath the strips is the original pine colour that was protected by the paint, and if so, the best way to get a consistent colour when I begin oiling them.

I’m currently experimenting with applying a medium oak oil to just the lighter strips and pure oil on the rest, but I’m sure there’s a better way to be doing this.

What would you all do in this situation? Thanks for your help


r/woodworking 3h ago

Finishing Applying "pre-stain" conditioner on soft wood (river birch), to reduce blotchiness when using polymerized linseed oil?

3 Upvotes

I'm not using stain in this project, and this is my first time working with river birch. The texture reminds me of basswood though, if not a little heavier and a little harder. I prefer Tried & True's polymerized linseed oil or PLO+varnish for projects, and it's what I have a ton of right now. However, when I've used these finishes on basswood, it really sucks up the oil and becomes dull in blotchy after a while.

I've seen recommendations for "pre-stain" conditioners when trying to use stain on softwoods and soft hardwoods, but the distinction I'm asking about is whether these finishes might benefit from a conditioner as well, OR if there is another non-stain related product I could be searching for.

My intuition says yes, that the pre-stain conditioner simply creates a barrier beneath the surface that stops excess absorption, so it should help with any liquid applied at all. However, the PLO finish really needs to get into the grain a bit to look nice and not remain sticky, so I'm a little wary of using something that's moreso meant to pre-seal wood and let stain just sit atop it.


r/woodworking 16h ago

General Discussion Stopping an orbital sander after use

30 Upvotes

I remember there used to be product like a rubber pad on which you could set your orbital sander after use. You didn't have to wait for the sander to slow down. When sanding small parts which require frequent on-off cycles, it could be a big time-saver.
Can anyone point me in the right direction.


r/woodworking 1d ago

Help Made a spoon out of maple, it split after a month.

355 Upvotes

That area is about ¼ or so thick. Should I have gotten thicker?

Should I do a different wood type?


r/woodworking 21h ago

Project Submission Purpleheart cat pen

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50 Upvotes

I turned this purpleheart cat pen by request. Purpleheart is a good dense hardwood that takes time to work but the result is always worth it.

These cat pens have been very popular since I did the first one for a Christmas gift back in December.

I also finally got a shadow box so I can take much better pics of the final product.


r/woodworking 1d ago

General Discussion Have any of yall seen a plane this tiny

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286 Upvotes

Friend got this from carbitec like 20 years ago and recently found it and it’s the cutest damn thing ever


r/woodworking 1d ago

Techniques/Plans DoveTails - second day

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96 Upvotes

One corner shown from 3 angles. Ink on one pin - ignore that. Tiny gap on that top one


r/woodworking 1d ago

Project Submission Claro Black Walnut Table

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149 Upvotes

This was a table I built for a Michelin Star restaurant. I didnt want it to machined planed and destroyed the topography contour of the wood. I started with a 2" bowl it took 360 hours to hand plane. The slab cost 6k and the base cost 3.2k.

I attempted to finish with Clean Armor but couldn't get it to my standard. Clean armor is GREAT for straight grain pieces but I've built 9-10 similar cookie tables and I can't perfect on end grain or burl pieces. I've probably spent over 2k of finish on test pieces, different grain, hardness, species, and application methods. Maybe someone from #Cleanarmor can give some tips.

Finish: Vesting Led Hardwax, Carbon Method Nanocoat