Fine Woodworking 2007 Building Furniture

(National Geographic (Little) Kids) #1

W


hen I was still wet behind the ears as a
furniture maker, I once built a tabletop that
shrank so much against the breadboard ends
that it cracked.
I hadn’t taken into account the amount of
shrinkage the top would experience in the dry
air of the first winter. As it tried to shrink against the pegs of the
breadboard ends, two fine cracks opened up. It didn’t matter
how old the wood was or if it was kiln- or air-dried, it was
doing what wood forever will do—shrink and swell as it loses
or absorbs moisture from the atmosphere.
Despite modern glues, well-engineered joinery, and sealing
finishes, wood’s moisture content demands attention if you want
your work to last. Out of necessity, I’ve developed strategies
for dealing with moisture content as I’m seasoning the stock,
milling the wood, and building my furniture.

Seasoning and milling the stock
When lumber arrives in my shop, I stack it loosely on end against
a wall or on horizontal racks with stickers between the layers
so that air can move through the pile. Then I leave it alone. The
simplest way to reduce potential moisture problems is to let the
wood acclimate to the shop well in advance of starting a project.
In the winter, softwoods can acclimate in a week, and dense
hardwoods in a few weeks. If I need to speed the process, I rough-
cut parts and stack them in the gentle warmth above my shop
heater. Even in the summer, when the atmosphere is at its most
humid, the wood dries further. The longer it adjusts, the better.
For a long time I have relied on empirical methods that I’m sure
past cabinetmakers also used. Dry wood feels warm, and produces
more crumbly plane shavings than wetter wood. For thick stock, I
drill into a waste section to see if the borings seem dry.
Only recently have I also begun to use a moisture meter to know
exactly how quickly the final drying is progressing. A simple meter
that uses two pins inserted into the wood surface costs about $125.
My milling strategy is aimed at producing stable parts with the
same moisture content inside as on the surface. Wood not fully
acclimated, especially thick stock, can be wetter inside than out.
A few days of rain, however, and very high humidity, can leave

Step 1: let new
Stock adjuSt
to your Shop
When bringing wood into the
shop, allow the moisture content
to balance with shop condi-
tions. The easiest way is to
stack boards vertically (above)
or horizontally on racks in the
shop for a few weeks. A moisture
meter can be used to check the
seasoning process by compar-
ing readings from newly arrived
stock (top right) with an average
reading from boards that have
already acclimated to the shop
(bottom right). Finally, mill stock
in stages. Leave extra material
when ripping boards to width
(below) or surfacing them with
the jointer and planer. Varia-
tions in moisture content within
boards can cause them to warp
after milling. Excess material
allows room to correct this later.

14 F I N E W O O D W Or kI Ng Photos: Steve Scott

Living with wood


movement


Shop environment iS the key


b y G a r r e t t H a c k

getting started


FWSIP08BF_GS.indd 14 6/6/07 12:25:29 PM

Free download pdf